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  • F1 Champion Verstappen Calls Sport a ‘Joke’ After Chinese Grand Prix Engine Failure

    F1 Champion Verstappen Calls Sport a ‘Joke’ After Chinese Grand Prix Engine Failure

    SHANGHAI – Formula One champion Max Verstappen delivered scathing criticism of the sport’s current state following his disappointing exit from Sunday’s Chinese Grand Prix due to mechanical failure.

    The four-time world champion’s Red Bull car suffered a power unit malfunction on lap 46, forcing him to slowly return to the garage and ending his race early. Verstappen finished among just 15 drivers who completed the event.

    The Dutch driver has been vocal about his displeasure with F1’s current engine technology, which features enhanced electrical components and requires drivers to carefully manage energy usage throughout races.

    “It’s not about being upset at where I am, because I’m actually fighting even more now,” Verstappen explained to media members. “I would say the same if I was winning races, because I care about the racing product.”

    “For me, it’s a joke,” he stated bluntly, describing the current regulations as “fundamentally flawed.”

    The 71-time race winner has faced unusual challenges this season, spending more time battling for minimal points rather than dominating races as he’s accustomed to doing. Following a qualifying crash at the previous weekend’s Australian Grand Prix, he started Sunday’s race from the back of the field in 20th position.

    His struggles continued during Saturday’s sprint race in China, where he fell from eighth place to 14th before ultimately finishing ninth without earning championship points.

    However, not everyone in the paddock shares Verstappen’s perspective on the sport’s direction. Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff praised the competitive racing displayed between his drivers and Ferrari’s Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc.

    The Ferrari drivers also spoke positively about their on-track battles in a race that ultimately saw Kimi Antonelli claim his first F1 victory for Mercedes.

    “Sometimes we are nostalgic about the good old years, but I think the product is good in itself,” Wolff commented following the race. “The vast majority, through all demographics, like the sport at the moment.”

    The Austrian team boss acknowledged Verstappen’s difficult situation, saying: “Max is really in a horror show. I’m sure for someone like Max, who is a full attack guy, it’s difficult to cope and digest.”

    Verstappen expressed concerns that Formula One might be sacrificing racing integrity to attract new audiences by making passing maneuvers easier.

    “I hope they don’t think like that, because it will eventually ruin the sport. It will come and bite them back in the ass,” he warned. “Maybe some fans like it, but they don’t understand racing.”

  • Strong Winds Expected Across Region Through Early Sunday Morning

    Strong Winds Expected Across Region Through Early Sunday Morning

    The National Weather Service office in Mount Holly, New Jersey has issued a wind advisory affecting the region, beginning Friday, March 15 at 12:47 PM and remaining in effect until Sunday, March 17 at 2:00 AM.

    This extended wind advisory spans nearly 38 hours, indicating sustained periods of strong winds that could impact outdoor activities and potentially cause property damage.

    Residents are advised to secure loose outdoor items and exercise caution when driving, particularly in high-profile vehicles. The advisory suggests winds will be strong enough to warrant official notification from meteorologists.

    The weather service typically issues wind advisories when sustained winds or frequent gusts pose a threat to people and property, though conditions are not expected to reach warning levels.

  • Pixar’s ‘Hoppers’ Maintains Box Office Lead in Second Weekend

    Pixar’s ‘Hoppers’ Maintains Box Office Lead in Second Weekend

    LOS ANGELES (AP) — Disney’s Pixar animation “Hoppers” maintained its dominance at movie theaters nationwide, securing $28.5 million during its second weekend in theaters, based on studio projections released Sunday. Meanwhile, the latest Colleen Hoover book-to-film adaptation “Reminders of Him” exceeded industry predictions.

    Following its opening weekend earnings of $45.3 million, “Hoppers” from The Walt Disney Co. experienced a relatively small 37% decline in its sophomore frame, indicating positive momentum for the animated feature as it heads into March. The Pixar creation tells the story of a young woman who magically becomes a beaver while fighting to protect a pond from developers, and continues drawing viewers thanks to exceptional critical reception (94% on Rotten Tomatoes) and positive audience feedback (earning an “A” CinemaScore rating).

    Although Pixar’s franchise installments typically achieve immediate blockbuster status — such as 2024’s “Inside Out 2” which earned $1.7 billion globally — the studio’s new intellectual properties often require more time to build momentum. Last year’s “Elemental” started with a lackluster $29.6 million opening but ultimately accumulated $496.4 million in worldwide revenue.

    “Hoppers” has generated $164.7 million in international box office receipts so far and has significant ground to cover to reach similar heights, though early indicators appear favorable. The film encountered minimal fresh competition during this weekend period. However, the forthcoming Amazon MGM science fiction epic “Project Hail Mary” will soon occupy IMAX theaters and target the same family demographic.

    Universal Pictures’ “Reminders of Him” claimed the runner-up position with a stronger-than-anticipated $18.3 million opening. The drama features Maika Monroe portraying a woman working to reconstruct her existence following incarceration, marking the third big-screen adaptation of Hoover’s novels after 2024’s “It Ends With Us” (which brought in $351 million globally for Sony) and 2025’s “Regretting You” ($91 million for Paramount).

    “Reminders of Him,” produced on approximately $25 million, received lukewarm critical response (56% on Rotten Tomatoes) and earned a mediocre “B” CinemaScore from viewers. Nevertheless, the movie — featuring the first screenplay co-authored by Hoover herself — demonstrates the bestselling novelist’s continued appeal among cinema audiences.

    “Undertone,” an ultra-low-budget thriller from A24, launched with $9.3 million in ticket sales. Ian Tuason wrote and helmed the production, which industry observers are calling A24’s finest horror offering since Ari Aster’s “Hereditary” from 2018, a film that helped establish the independent studio’s reputation. Created for merely $500,000, “Undertone” emphasizes audio elements in its single-location narrative about a supernatural podcast host (Nina Kiri) tending to her terminally ill mother.

    Following its weak initial performance, Warner Bros.’ “The Bride!” crashed during its second frame, falling 70% to earn only $2.1 million. Maggie Gyllenhaal’s reimagining of “The Bride of Frankenstein” required roughly $80-90 million to create but has collected merely $11.3 million in domestic theaters.

    Academy Awards weekend traditionally sees reduced theater attendance, as Hollywood focuses primarily on Sunday’s Oscar ceremony. However, the trio of moderately successful releases — “Hoppers,” “Reminders of Him,” and “Undertone” — boosted moviegoing activity before the entertainment industry’s premier event.

  • Israel Says Michigan Synagogue Attacker’s Brother Was Hezbollah Commander

    Israel Says Michigan Synagogue Attacker’s Brother Was Hezbollah Commander

    Israeli defense forces announced Sunday that a Hezbollah commander eliminated in a recent airstrike was the sibling of the individual who carried out last week’s assault on a Detroit-area synagogue.

    According to Israeli military statements, Ibrahim Ghazali died in Lebanon alongside three additional family members of the synagogue attacker on March 5 — seven days before officials say Ayman Mohamad Ghazali rammed his vehicle into a prominent synagogue near Detroit and took his own life following gunfire from security personnel.

    Federal investigators from the FBI’s Detroit division, who are handling the synagogue incident, refused to address the Israeli military’s assertions regarding Ibrahim Ghazali.

    “Out of respect for the ongoing investigation, we will continue to refrain from commenting on its substance,” FBI spokesman Jordan Hall said in an email Sunday.

    The Associated Press could not independently confirm the allegation that Ibrahim Ghazali held militant positions.

    Israeli defense officials contend that Ibrahim Ghazali served as a Hezbollah commander responsible for overseeing weaponry for a division that launched rocket attacks against Israel.

    A Lebanese government source, speaking on condition of anonymity due to restrictions on publicly discussing airstrike details, verified Ibrahim Ghazali’s death to the AP, stating that Ghazali’s offspring, Ali and Fatima, along with his sibling Kassim, also perished when the strike targeted their residence shortly after dusk.

    Law enforcement officials indicate that Ayman Ghazali, age 41, executed the synagogue assault after discovering that four family members had been eliminated in the Israeli bombardment.

    Israel has intensified operations against the Iranian-supported militant organization Hezbollah in Lebanon as conflict with Iran has expanded hostilities throughout the Middle East region.

    Last Thursday, Ayman Ghazali remained in his vehicle outside Temple Israel, located near Detroit, for approximately two hours carrying a rifle, industrial-grade fireworks and containers of liquid suspected to be gasoline, before driving into the facility filled with numerous children, according to law enforcement.

    He began shooting his weapon through the front window, engaging in a firefight with an armed security officer. Ghazali ended his own life after becoming trapped in his vehicle when the engine ignited, stated Jennifer Runyan, the special agent overseeing the FBI’s Detroit regional office. No staff members or children within the synagogue sustained injuries, presumably due to enhanced security measures implemented in recent months.

    Federal investigators leading the probe characterized the assault on one of America’s largest Reform Jewish congregations as violence directed at the Jewish community, though they stated insufficient evidence exists currently to classify it as terrorism.

    Ghazali arrived in the United States in 2011 through an immediate family visa as a U.S. citizen’s spouse and obtained American citizenship in 2016, based on Department of Homeland Security records.

    He resided in a one-level brick residence in Dearborn Heights, a Detroit suburb located roughly 38 miles south of the targeted synagogue.

    The Michigan synagogue incident occurred on the same date as a former Army National Guard member, who previously served prison time for attempting to assist the Islamic State, opened fire in a classroom at Old Dominion University in Virginia, resulting in one death and two injuries.

  • African Countries Navigate Delicate Diplomacy Over Russian Military Recruitment

    African Countries Navigate Delicate Diplomacy Over Russian Military Recruitment

    Kenya’s top diplomat is heading to Russia this week facing domestic pressure to persuade Moscow to halt the recruitment of Kenyan nationals for military service, though Nairobi and other African governments are expected to maintain a non-confrontational stance.

    Recent investigations have exposed the extensive recruitment of African citizens into Russia’s military ranks, frequently through intermediaries promising well-paying civilian employment opportunities, sparking outrage across nations including Kenya, Ghana and South Africa.

    While families demand stronger action to secure the return of recruits, African leaders remain cautious about openly choosing sides in Russia’s conflict with Ukraine, particularly since the recruitment controversy has yet to generate significant public demonstrations or political pressure.

    “We want Kenyans stopped – they should not be enlisted at all,” Musalia Mudavadi, Kenya’s minister for foreign affairs, told Reuters ahead of his trip. “We are getting a lot of pressure from some of the affected families who are now gathering more courage to come forward and speak to the issue.”

    Nevertheless, Mudavadi emphasized his “pragmatic and realistic” approach to the matter, noting Russia’s status as a global superpower with longstanding ties to Nairobi.

    “It’s not a confrontation,” he said. “This is about speaking to issues as they are and the distress that they’re causing to the Kenyan people, and we need a joint effort to be able to resolve it.”

    The Russian defense ministry did not respond to requests for comment outside normal business hours.

    Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova announced March 12 that Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov would discuss with Mudavadi the “state and prospects for the development of traditionally friendly Russian-Kenyan relations,” including economic and trade partnerships.

    Ukrainian officials estimate more than 1,700 African fighters are serving alongside Russian forces, though experts believe the actual number could be significantly higher.

    Kenya’s intelligence services report that over 1,000 Kenyan nationals have been recruited, according to an agency assessment. Mudavadi declined to provide specific numbers regarding Kenyans involved in the fighting.

    Ghana announced in February that more than 50 of its citizens had died in the Ukraine conflict after being “lured into battle.” Ghana’s foreign minister, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, told Reuters the actual casualty count might be even greater.

    Russian officials have rejected allegations of illegal recruitment of African nationals for combat in Ukraine.

    Ablakwa confirmed Ghana’s commitment to maintaining diplomatic ties with Russia while taking a firm stance on citizen protection. “But let me be clear: where Ghanaian citizens are being harmed, deceived, or drawn into a war they did not understand, we will speak plainly and we will act,” he said.

    Most African nations are expected to follow South Africa’s measured approach, despite dozens of its citizens being deceived into participating in the Ukrainian conflict.

    “We’re … investigating the conditions under which people left,” Zane Dangor, director general of South Africa’s foreign affairs department, told Reuters.

    “That investigation will also determine if Wagner has been involved,” he said, referencing the Russian mercenary organization previously active in Africa before being replaced by the Kremlin-controlled Africa Corps. Dangor indicated current evidence does not suggest direct Russian state involvement.

    Inpact, a Geneva-based research organization studying Russian recruitment operations, has confirmed multiple recruitment lists it obtained, including one documenting 1,417 continental citizens.

    The organization’s February report identified Cameroon, Egypt and Ghana among the countries with the highest recruitment numbers.

    According to Inpact, African recruitment represents a strategic component of Russia’s efforts to reinforce assault waves designed to overwhelm Ukrainian defense positions.

    “We think we are just scratching the surface with these numbers,” said Lou Osborn, a member of Inpact. Osborn noted that over 40 families have contacted the organization since the report’s publication, corroborating recruitment methods.

    Ablakwa revealed his collaboration with other African nations to address this as a continental challenge.

    “This is bigger than Ghana,” he said. “If Africans are being lured into a foreign war through deception and exploitation, then Africa should respond collectively.”

    Pier Pigou, senior consultant at the International Crisis Group, expressed doubt that this issue would significantly impact Russia-Africa relations without substantial political backlash.

    “For the vast majority of people it’s a case of ‘these dudes are just trying to earn a living. And because their countries don’t provide that for them, they’re going to … take opportunities that arise,’” he said.

  • American Ski Star Shiffrin Dominates World Cup with Another Slalom Victory

    American Ski Star Shiffrin Dominates World Cup with Another Slalom Victory

    American skiing superstar Mikaela Shiffrin solidified her dominance on the World Cup circuit Sunday, claiming another slalom victory that pushed her overall season lead to 140 points.

    The Olympic gold medalist’s triumph in Are, Sweden marked her eighth slalom win out of nine attempts this season, adding to what has already been a record-breaking campaign. Shiffrin has already secured the slalom crystal globe and notched her 109th World Cup victory across all skiing events, setting a new benchmark in the sport.

    Germany’s Emma Aicher finished as the runner-up in Sunday’s competition, while Switzerland’s Wendy Holdener claimed the third spot on the podium.

    Shiffrin demonstrated her technical prowess by leading Aicher by 0.51 seconds after the opening run, then maintained her advantage to win by a total margin of 0.94 seconds across both runs.

    The current World Cup standings show Shiffrin with 1,286 points compared to Aicher’s 1,146, while Switzerland’s Camille Rast sits in third place with 989 points.

    With four competitions still to come at next week’s World Cup finals in Norway, a maximum of 400 points remain available. Shiffrin is pursuing her sixth overall Crystal Globe title as she looks to cap off another dominant season on the slopes.

  • US Secures $57B in Energy Deals with Asia-Pacific Partners

    US Secures $57B in Energy Deals with Asia-Pacific Partners

    Interior Secretary Doug Burgum announced Sunday that Asia-Pacific nations have committed to $57 billion worth of agreements with American companies following a weekend energy conference in Tokyo.

    Speaking during an appearance on Fox News Channel’s “Sunday Morning Futures,” Burgum revealed that 22 separate agreements were reached during the Indo-Pacific Energy Security Forum. The secretary also mentioned that Japan has expressed interest in purchasing additional U.S. oil.

    The investment figure was adjusted upward from an initial $56 billion after one more agreement was completed after the conference concluded, according to Burgum.

    The forum highlighted the importance of providing energy resources to allied nations to prevent them from becoming dependent on hostile countries, Burgum explained.

    He praised Japan’s role in leading a group of countries working to increase global oil supplies.

    “From a Japan standpoint, when they’re dependent on oil coming out of the Strait, that’s a great indication of their partnership with the United States and a great indication of their leadership on the world stage to jump in and say they’re going to release a significant portion of their reserves,” Burgum said.

  • Prince William Posts Touching Mother’s Day Tribute to Late Princess Diana

    Prince William Posts Touching Mother’s Day Tribute to Late Princess Diana

    Britain’s Prince William paid tribute to his deceased mother Princess Diana with an emotional social media message as the United Kingdom observed Mother’s Day on Sunday.

    The 43-year-old prince posted a touching message on Instagram alongside a vintage photograph, writing: “Remembering my mother, today and every day. Thinking of all those who are remembering someone they love today. Happy Mother’s Day.” He concluded the post with his signature initial “W.”

    The accompanying image captures a tender moment between Diana and a young William, then just 2 years old, as they stand together in a flower-filled field at the royal family’s Highgrove estate in Gloucestershire. The photograph dates back to 1984.

    Princess Diana lost her life in a tragic automobile accident in Paris during August 1997. At the time of her death at age 36, William was 15 years old while his younger brother Prince Harry was 12.

    Other members of the royal family also commemorated Mothering Sunday, which falls on the fourth Sunday during Lent in Britain, with their own social media tributes.

    Among these was a vintage black-and-white photograph from 1953 featuring the late Queen Elizabeth II seated on a garden bench at Balmoral Castle in Scotland, accompanied by a young King Charles III and his sister Anne, the Princess Royal, when they were still children.

  • Jailed Brazilian Ex-President Bolsonaro Shows Health Improvement in ICU

    Jailed Brazilian Ex-President Bolsonaro Shows Health Improvement in ICU

    Medical officials at a Brasilia hospital reported Sunday that imprisoned former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro’s kidney condition has shown improvement, though the 70-year-old politician continues to receive intensive care treatment for pneumonia.

    Hospital staff have administered additional antibiotic treatments to the former leader since Saturday, medical personnel confirmed in their latest update.

    Bolsonaro, who held Brazil’s presidency from 2019 through 2022, was transported to DF Star Hospital on Friday from his detention facility, where he is currently serving a 27-year prison term for orchestrating a coup attempt in 2023.

    The former president was moved from local federal police facilities to an expanded detention cell in January. Legal representatives and family members have continuously petitioned Brazil’s Supreme Court to permit him to complete his sentence through home confinement.

    The conservative politician has required multiple hospitalizations following a stabbing incident that occurred during a campaign rally prior to the 2018 presidential race.

    Medical staff at the facility reported that Bolsonaro arrived with elevated body temperature, perspiration, and trembling symptoms, while also noting elevated inflammation indicators in his system.

    Senator Flávio Bolsonaro, the former president’s son, is anticipated to launch a presidential campaign this year challenging current President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

    The courts found Jair Bolsonaro guilty on multiple charges, including orchestrating an armed criminal conspiracy and attempting to forcibly dismantle democratic governance through violence. The former president has maintained his innocence regarding all accusations.

  • Pakistan Launches Overnight Strikes on Afghan Militant Sites Amid Escalating Conflict

    Pakistan Launches Overnight Strikes on Afghan Militant Sites Amid Escalating Conflict

    ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) — Pakistani forces conducted overnight military operations against militant facilities in Afghanistan’s Kandahar region on Sunday, as border hostilities between the neighboring nations continue without signs of de-escalation.

    The cross-border violence, which has featured Pakistani air operations in Afghanistan’s capital city of Kabul, represents the most lethal conflict to date between these South Asian countries. Pakistani officials have characterized the situation as an “open war,” raising alarm about regional security while Middle Eastern conflicts involving the U.S., Israel, and Iran continue to spread.

    Pakistani Information Minister Attaullah Tarar announced via social media that military forces had attacked equipment storage locations and “technical support infrastructure” during nighttime operations in Kandahar.

    Afghan administration spokesperson Zabiullah Mujahid reported that Pakistani forces struck two sites: a daytime security guard facility that was unoccupied during nighttime hours, and a drug treatment facility that sustained minor damage. While he confirmed no deaths occurred, Mujahid stated the attacks demonstrated Pakistan was “continuing to invade and fuel the fire of war.”

    Afghanistan’s Defense Ministry announced it launched a retaliatory strike against a Pakistani military installation in Pakistan’s South Waziristan region on Sunday following the Kandahar attacks. Officials claimed the operation devastated much of the facility’s command headquarters and additional structures, causing significant Pakistani military losses.

    Pakistan’s Information Ministry dismissed the assertion as “propaganda,” stating that a small unmanned aircraft was shot down and “no military installation or infrastructure was hit.”

    Afghan forces also reported conducting operations within Pakistani territory near the borders of Kunar and Nangarhar provinces, alleging they seized a Pakistani military position and killed multiple soldiers. Pakistani officials also denied these allegations.

    Pakistani authorities accuse Afghanistan’s Taliban leadership of providing sanctuary to militant organizations, especially the Pakistani Taliban, known as Tehrik-e-Taliban, which conducts attacks within Pakistan. Afghan officials reject these accusations, maintaining they prohibit their territory from being used for attacks against neighboring nations.

    The current violence began in late February when Afghanistan launched cross-border operations into Pakistan following Pakistani airstrikes within Afghanistan several days prior, which Afghanistan claimed killed only civilians. The hostilities destroyed a ceasefire negotiated by Qatar last October after earlier fighting that resulted in dozens of deaths among soldiers, civilians, and suspected militants.

    On Sunday, mortar fire from Afghanistan destroyed a residence in Bajaur, a northwestern Pakistani district, killing at least four family members and injuring two others, according to local government official Adnan Khan.

    Both nations have blamed each other for civilian targeting, with dozens of deaths reported.

    Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari stated Saturday that Afghanistan’s government had “crossed a red line” by conducting drone attacks on Pakistani civilian areas, and hours afterward the country reportedly launched strikes against an Afghan drone storage facility.

  • Temporary Lane Restrictions on Shilo Church Road Until 3 PM Today

    Temporary Lane Restrictions on Shilo Church Road Until 3 PM Today

    Motorists traveling on Shilo Church Road should plan for potential delays today due to ongoing lane restrictions in the area.

    According to traffic officials, drivers can expect sporadic lane closures along Shilo Church Road in the stretch between US-20 and Johnson Road. These temporary restrictions are scheduled to remain in effect until 3 PM today.

    The intermittent nature of the closures means lanes may open and close periodically throughout the day, potentially causing stop-and-go traffic conditions for vehicles passing through the work zone.

    Drivers are advised to allow extra travel time and consider alternate routes if possible to avoid potential delays in the area.

  • Russian Ship Captain Detained in Sweden Over Suspected False Flag Documents

    Russian Ship Captain Detained in Sweden Over Suspected False Flag Documents

    STOCKHOLM — Swedish authorities detained the Russian captain of an oil tanker on Sunday after a court approved prosecutors’ request to hold him on charges related to fraudulent documentation.

    The Sea Owl 1’s commanding officer, whose identity remains undisclosed, was taken into custody Friday following a coast guard boarding operation near Trelleborg on Sweden’s southern coastline the previous day.

    Legal officials believe the captain used falsified papers, and the Ystad district court granted their petition to keep him detained, according to reports from Swedish news agency TT.

    The vessel was operating under the flag of Comoros, a small island nation located off the eastern coast of Africa. However, Swedish coast guard officials believe the ship lacks proper registration in that country’s maritime records, meaning no legitimate flag state can verify the vessel’s safety standards.

    According to coast guard reports, the tanker appears on European Union sanctions lists and had been traveling from Brazil toward Russia. While the ship previously carried oil between these nations, it appeared to be empty during Thursday’s inspection.

    This marks the second suspicious vessel intercepted by Swedish authorities within a week’s time, both suspected of operating under fraudulent flags. The cargo vessel “Caffa,” crewed primarily by Russians, faces allegations of transporting stolen grain while appearing on Ukraine’s sanctions registry. That ship’s captain has also been detained on similar document fraud charges.

    Swedish officials announced last year they would intensify insurance verification procedures for foreign vessels as part of efforts to crack down on Russia’s “shadow fleet” — a collection of older ships used to move oil, gas, and allegedly stolen Ukrainian agricultural products.

  • Tech Billionaire Peter Thiel Holds Private Religious Conference in Rome

    Tech Billionaire Peter Thiel Holds Private Religious Conference in Rome

    Silicon Valley billionaire and venture capitalist Peter Thiel began hosting a private conference in Rome on Sunday, featuring closed-door discussions about the concept of the Antichrist. The secretive gathering has sparked criticism from Catholic Church leaders and religious commentators.

    The invitation-only event, scheduled to continue through Wednesday, excludes media coverage and organizers have not revealed its location. According to media reports, attendees include individuals from academic institutions, technology companies, and religious organizations.

    Thiel, who co-founded Palantir Technologies — an artificial intelligence software firm with extensive connections to U.S. defense and intelligence operations — has increasingly focused on religious and philosophical topics in recent years.

    The 58-year-old tech mogul organized a similar series of discussions in San Francisco last year, examining the potential emergence of an Antichrist figure on the world stage. Thiel has expressed particular concern about an Antichrist who might establish global governance by promising solutions to nuclear threats, artificial intelligence risks, or climate catastrophes.

    Raised in an Evangelical Christian household, Thiel has stated that his Christian faith influences his perspective on world events.

    His presence in Rome has attracted notice from the Roman Catholic Church, which under Pope Leo, the first American pontiff, has criticized certain right-wing policies associated with former President Trump, whom Thiel previously supported. The Pope has also issued warnings about artificial intelligence dangers.

    Catholic educational institutions in Rome have dismissed media speculation suggesting they might be hosting Thiel’s conference. Additionally, the pope’s official schedule shows no planned meeting with the tech entrepreneur.

    Father Paolo Benanti, who serves as the pope’s advisor on artificial intelligence matters, published a critical essay on Saturday describing Thiel as functioning like a “political theologian” within Silicon Valley.

    “Thiel’s entire action can… be read as a prolonged act of heresy against the liberal consensus: a challenge to the very foundations of civil coexistence, which he now considers outdated,” Benanti wrote on Le Grand Continent website.

    The essay carried the provocative headline: “American heresy: should Peter Thiel be burned at the stake?”

    L’Avvenire, a publication owned by the Italian bishops’ conference, also ran several articles this week expressing strong criticism of Thiel.

    One piece argued that technology executives should not determine their own ethical boundaries, emphasizing that governments must maintain democratic supervision of digital platforms and combat the proliferation of false information.

    Thiel maintains strong connections with Washington political figures, including Vice President JD Vance, who converted to Catholicism. His Rome visit follows recent trips to Italy by other prominent conservative movement figures, including Steve Bannon, Elon Musk, and Vance.

    Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s official schedule indicates no planned meeting with Thiel during his visit.

  • Duke and Duchess of Sussex Fire Back at Royal Family Author’s Latest Claims

    Duke and Duchess of Sussex Fire Back at Royal Family Author’s Latest Claims

    The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have delivered a scathing response to writer Tom Bower following the release of excerpts from his latest book about Britain’s royal family, calling his work nothing more than wild theories and dramatic storytelling.

    The couple released a harsh statement Saturday, asserting that Bower “has long crossed the line from criticism into fixation.”

    Excerpts from Bower’s new publication appeared in the Times of London Friday, where he made several explosive allegations. Among them, the writer claimed Queen Camilla reportedly told an acquaintance that Meghan had “brainwashed” Prince Harry. Bower also suggested that Prince William and Catherine viewed Meghan “as a threat rather than an ally” during rising tensions before Harry and Meghan’s departure from Britain to establish their life in America.

    “This is someone who has publicly stated, ‘the monarchy in fact depends on actually obliterating the Sussexes from our state of life,’ language that speaks for itself,” the couple’s statement declared.

    “He has made a career out of constructing ever more elaborate theories about people he does not know and has never met,” their response added. “Those interested in facts will look elsewhere; those seeking deranged conspiracy and melodrama know exactly where to find him.”

    The published excerpts also contained harsh commentary regarding the couple’s finances, their charitable endeavors, and Harry’s Invictus Games, the yearly athletic event he established for military veterans who have been wounded, injured, or fallen ill during service.

    This marks Bower’s second major publication focusing on the Sussexes, following his 2022 release “Revenge: Meghan, Harry, And the War Between the Windsors.”

  • Pope Intensifies Middle East Peace Calls, Directly Appeals to War Leaders

    Pope Intensifies Middle East Peace Calls, Directly Appeals to War Leaders

    ROME (AP) — In his most forceful statement to date, Pope Leo XIV issued an urgent plea Sunday for an immediate end to Middle East hostilities, making a direct appeal to the conflict’s leaders.

    “On behalf of the Christians of the Middle East and all women and men of good will, I appeal to those responsible for this conflict,” Leo said. “Cease fire so that avenues for dialogue may be reopened. Violence can never lead to the justice, stability, and peace that the people are waiting for.”

    While the pontiff avoided naming specific nations during his Sunday noon blessing, America’s first pope referenced strikes against educational facilities, seemingly alluding to the missile attack on an Iranian elementary school during the conflict’s early stages that claimed more than 165 lives, including numerous children.

    According to U.S. officials, faulty intelligence may have contributed to America’s involvement in the strike, with an investigation currently underway.

    The Vatican has prominently featured the devastating Minab attack, displaying an overhead photograph of mass burial preparations for young casualties on the front page of its official publication, L’Osservatore Romano, on March 6 beneath the banner “The Face of War.”

    The pope expressed solidarity with families who lost loved ones in strikes “which have hit schools, hospitals and residential centers.” He voiced special worry about conditions in Lebanon, where humanitarian organizations are sounding alarms about an emerging crisis.

    Southern Lebanon’s Christian populations hold special significance for the Vatican, as they have historically served as a cornerstone for Christian presence across the predominantly Muslim region.

    Throughout the two weeks since the U.S.-Israeli conflict began, the pontiff has maintained relatively restrained appeals for diplomatic solutions and dialogue, seemingly trying to avoid positioning himself as an American political opponent to President Donald Trump. His avoidance of naming specific countries aligns with the Vatican’s longstanding diplomatic neutrality practices.

    During a Friday address to clergy participating in a Vatican course on confession, Leo described the sacrament as a means of restoring harmony and peace.

    “One might well ask: do those Christians who bear grave responsibility in armed conflicts have the humility and courage to make a serious examination of conscience and to go to confession?” he said.

    While Leo has maintained indirect and non-partisan messaging to prevent escalating tensions, several American cardinals and the Vatican’s top diplomat have been more outspoken.

    Washington Archbishop Cardinal Robert McElroy declared the conflict morally indefensible. Chicago’s Cardinal Blase Cupich criticized the White House’s use of video game footage in war-related social media posts as “sickening.”

    Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin dismissed Washington’s “preventive war” justification while affirming this week that the Holy See maintains open communication channels.

    “The Holy See speaks with everyone, and when necessary we speak also with the Americans, with the Israelis and show them what to us are the solutions,” he said.

  • Pakistan Launches Overnight Strikes on Taliban Sites in Afghanistan

    Pakistan Launches Overnight Strikes on Taliban Sites in Afghanistan

    Pakistani military forces launched nighttime operations against Taliban facilities and suspected militant locations in Afghanistan’s Kandahar province, according to Pakistan’s Information Minister who announced the strikes on social media Sunday.

    The overnight military action specifically focused on Taliban installations and what Pakistani officials described as locations used by terrorist organizations within Afghan territory.

    Afghan government representative Zabihullah Mujahid acknowledged that the military operations took place but reported that no individuals were killed or injured during the strikes.

    The cross-border military action represents the latest development in ongoing tensions between Pakistan and the Taliban-controlled Afghan government regarding security concerns along their shared border.

  • Pope Leo Calls for End to Iran Conflict, Condemns ‘Horrific Violence’

    Pope Leo Calls for End to Iran Conflict, Condemns ‘Horrific Violence’

    VATICAN CITY, March 15 – During his Sunday address at St. Peter’s Square, Pope Leo delivered a passionate call for an immediate halt to the Iran conflict, condemning what he described as “horrific violence” that has claimed thousands of civilian lives and displaced countless others throughout the region.

    The pontiff’s appeal came as the U.S.-Israeli military action against Iran reached its third week. Pope Leo, who holds the distinction of being the first American to hold the papal office, emphasized that military action cannot deliver the justice, stability, and peace that Middle Eastern populations desperately need.

    Speaking to gathered faithful during his traditional weekly Angelus prayer, the pope declared: “For two weeks, the peoples of the Middle East have been suffering the atrocious violence of war.”

    “In the name of Christians in the Middle East and of all women and men of good will, I appeal to those responsible for this conflict: Cease fire!” Pope Leo proclaimed.

    The Holy Father went on to acknowledge the human toll of the fighting, stating: “Thousands of innocent people have been killed, and many more have been forced to leave their homes. I renew my closeness to all those who have lost their loved ones in the attacks.”

    Pope Leo also addressed the deteriorating conditions in Lebanon, where Israeli forces are engaged with Hezbollah, the Iranian-supported militant organization. He described the Lebanese situation as a source of “great concern.”

    “I hope for paths of dialogue that can support the country’s authorities in implementing lasting solutions to the serious crisis currently underway, for the common good of all the Lebanese people,” the pope concluded.

  • Maryland County Halts New Sewer Connections Due to System Overload

    Maryland County Halts New Sewer Connections Due to System Overload

    Officials in Anne Arundel County have declared an immediate halt to new sewer connections beginning March 2, 2026, citing overwhelming demand on the region’s wastewater treatment systems.

    The Department of Public Works issued the emergency restrictions after the county hit maximum flow limits within the Baltimore City Sewer Service Area, putting strain on aging infrastructure shared between multiple jurisdictions.

    Properties that tie into the Baltimore County Patapsco Interceptor and Sewage Pumping Station will face the most significant impact from these new rules.

    County officials say that while daily average flows remain within acceptable ranges, deteriorating pipes and excessive water infiltration during storms have pushed peak usage beyond what current agreements between the counties allow.

    Baltimore City and Baltimore County cannot provide Anne Arundel County with additional wastewater capacity due to existing legal settlements, creating a backlog for new construction projects.

    Under the emergency measures, county officials will stop approving capacity requests for any new developments in the affected service area.

    The county will also pause authorization for new building permits and tenant improvements that would connect to the overloaded infrastructure.

    Developers who already secured capacity allocations measured in Equivalent Dwelling Units will keep their approvals, but no new allocations will be granted during the moratorium.

    County officials plan to make exceptions for properties with failing septic systems that need immediate connection to public sewer lines. Building permits requiring one or more capacity units will undergo individual review.

    Construction projects and permit applications that had not received official capacity approval before the announcement must now wait indefinitely.

    These stalled projects cannot move forward until the county obtains additional wastewater capacity or officials modify or remove the restrictions entirely.

  • Investigation Reveals Israeli Organization Behind Secret Gaza Evacuation Flights

    Investigation Reveals Israeli Organization Behind Secret Gaza Evacuation Flights

    TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) — When a aircraft carrying approximately 150 Palestinians from Gaza touched down in South Africa last November, it caught everyone off guard.

    This wasn’t an isolated incident. Beginning in May, no fewer than three aircraft loaded with Gaza inhabitants who had registered to depart the conflict-ravaged territory have arrived in Indonesia and South Africa.

    An Associated Press investigation has revealed that an Israeli organization, whose leader strongly endorsed former President Donald Trump’s plan to relocate Palestinians from Gaza, is responsible for these flights. This discovery raises additional concerns about the true intentions behind evacuating hundreds of individuals from the territory.

    At that time, South African Foreign Minister Ronald Lamola described the flights as having a “clear agenda to cleanse out the Palestinians out of Gaza and the West Bank.”

    According to contracts, passenger manifests, text communications, financial records, and conversations with over two dozen Israelis, Palestinians and others connected to the journeys, Ad Kan — an Israeli entity established by military personnel and former intelligence operatives — operated through another organization to obscure its Israeli ties while coordinating the flights.

    Multiple passengers who escaped after more than two years of catastrophic warfare that has devastated Gaza stated they were unaware of who orchestrated their departure. However, they expressed little concern about this detail, they explained, as long as they could escape.

    “There was famine, and we had no options. My children were almost killed,” explained a 37-year-old Palestinian who reached South Africa in November. Like other passengers, he requested anonymity due to fears of potential retaliation. “Death and destruction was everywhere, all day, for two years, and nobody came to the rescue.”

    Ad Kan maintained separation from the flights. The evacuations were coordinated by a firm called Al-Majd, which presents itself on its website as a humanitarian entity “supporting Palestinian lives” and delivering assistance to Muslim communities experiencing conflict.

    Nevertheless, examining Ad Kan’s background and its founder, Gilad Ach, indicates the Israeli organization may have been motivated, at least partially, by alternative objectives.

    “Ad Kan,” which translates to “enough is enough” in Hebrew, has spent years operating secretly to penetrate organizations and reveal what they claim are antisemitic or anti-Israel activities.

    Ach, an Israeli combat reservist, is a West Bank settlement advocate who strongly backed Trump’s proposal last year to relocate 2 million Palestinians from Gaza.

    Following Trump’s announcement of his proposal, Ach released a document outlining his implementation strategy for the “voluntary exit.” The report suggested Israel should complete Palestinian emigration from Gaza within six to eight months and work with the U.S. to secure receiving nations. It claimed the migration of all Palestinians was “entirely feasible,” that they desired to leave, and that clearing the territory of its Palestinian population served Israeli interests.

    Trump subsequently withdrew his plan — which faced widespread international criticism and allegations from Palestinians, rights organizations and even the U.N. secretary-general that such a proposal could constitute “ethnic cleansing” — and stated Palestinians could stay in Gaza.

    However, far-right Israeli organizations, including members of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s governing coalition, continue advocating for Gaza’s Palestinian removal in hopes Israel could eventually resettle the region. With U.S. knowledge, Israel’s government has contacted several nations — Somaliland, South Sudan and Sudan — hoping to facilitate Gaza emigration.

    Israel established the Voluntary Emigration Bureau early last year, operated by Israel’s Defense Ministry.

    After the war commenced in 2023, Ach created an organization called The Israeli Reservists Generation of Victory. In a November 2024 conversation with Arutz Sheva, a religious nationalist news outlet supporting the West Bank settlement movement, Ach said the group’s message included the “emigration of our enemies.”

    His organization also distributed advertisements on Israeli buses showing Trump’s portrait alongside Hebrew text reading: “Victory = Voluntary migration … This bus could be full of Gazans. Listen to Trump, let them out!”

    In a conversation with right-wing publication the Jewish News Syndicate shortly after the war started, Ach said Gaza victory meant claiming part of the territory and opening borders for departures. “They lost their territory, they lost population, this is a clear victory,” he stated.

    Ach refused an interview for this report and texted AP that he was proud leading organizations supporting the rights of Gaza Palestinians wanting to relocate to safer global locations, away from Hamas. He rejected South Africa’s claim that the flights aimed to cleanse Gaza and the West Bank of Palestinians. He described them as humanitarian flights and said those who departed requested assistance, with some covering partial costs.

    He highlighted “profound hypocrisy,” with nations refusing to accept Palestinian refugees.

    “Their continued presence in Gaza, under dire conditions, serves as a tool to pressure Israel internationally and allows Hamas to maintain its rule over this suffering population,” he stated.

    Ach did not address questions about using Al-Majd to hide Israeli connections.

    Critics argue such Gaza emigration isn’t voluntary after the war rendered much of the territory uninhabitable. Rights organizations also stress people must be permitted to return, and Israel has a decades-long history of complicating Palestinian returns to Gaza.

    AP interviewed six Palestinians who departed Gaza via the flights.

    Some reported first hearing about a company transferring people from Gaza in early 2025. Some discovered advertisements online or on social media or were directed to Al-Majd’s website by friends.

    With combat ongoing and much of Gaza in ruins, some said they were uncertain of their destination. They simply wanted to escape.

    Months before the aircraft arrived in Johannesburg last November, an earlier May flight transported nearly 60 Palestinians from Israel through Hungary to Indonesia and several other destinations. A second October flight carried approximately 170 people from Israel to South Africa via Kenya, according to flight organizers, tracking data and Palestinians who used the service.

    The six Palestinians who spoke with AP said they paid up to $2,000 per person through bank and cryptocurrency transfers.

    They said the website indicated transportation to South Africa, Indonesia, or Malaysia but provided no choice option. When flights were ready, Palestinians received messages directing them to meeting locations where buses transported them from Gaza to Israel, where they were searched and permitted to bring limited belongings aboard.

    American-Israeli businessman Moti Kahana signed an August contract, shared with AP, to coordinate a flight for Ad Kan.

    Kahana, who has experience evacuating people from conflict areas including Afghanistan, Ukraine and Syria, said he was contacted to help arrange transportation for over 300 Palestinians to Indonesia from Ramon airport in southern Israel. The Ad Kan contract specified his company would provide “flight rescue service” for a minimum $750,000 payment.

    However, during planning, the destination changed to South Africa, he said, and his flight involvement ended.

    After the second South Africa-bound flight arrived in November, the government canceled its 90-day visa exemptions for Palestinian passport holders, citing “deliberate and ongoing abuse” by Israelis connected to emigration efforts.

    Kahana said Ach informed him about Ad Kan’s Al-Majd connection, describing it as operated by both Arabs and Israelis in Israel but avoiding promotion of its Israeli ties.

    “It’s the same people, the same company, different names,” Kahana explained. “They have a group of Arab-speaking people that answer the phone, and they don’t want to show Israel involvement; they have like an Arab face to it.”

    Kahana said Ach’s team provided him a spreadsheet listing flight passengers. The document — reviewed by AP — includes names of at least 13 people whose families confirmed they registered and paid through Al-Majd and flew to South Africa.

    Al-Majd’s website claims it was established in 2010 in Germany with an east Jerusalem office, without providing an address. The company doesn’t appear in online databases for registered German charities or businesses.

    It remains unclear whether Ad Kan was collaborating directly with Israel’s government, but Palestinians require Israeli permission to leave Gaza. Muayad Saidam, a Palestinian listed on the group’s website as its Gaza humanitarian project manager, told AP in a phone call to Al-Majd’s listed number that he didn’t know Ad Kan or Ach but acknowledged that Palestinian travel arrangements must be made with Israeli authorities. He refused to provide additional details.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office and COGAT, the defense agency that facilitates Palestinian departures from Gaza, declined to comment on the flights. COGAT has previously stated it permits Palestinian departures from Gaza through Israel if they possess destination country visas.

    Netanyahu’s office, COGAT and Ach also refused to answer AP’s questions about whether departed Palestinians would be permitted to return.

    Families who traveled to South Africa told AP they weren’t aware Israelis organized the flights but that ultimately, it didn’t matter.

    “I agreed to the flight, and I didn’t know the destination,” said a Palestinian who used Al-Majd to send his wife and son to South Africa.

    “All I cared about was getting my family out of Gaza and saving them.”

  • Four Family Members Killed in West Bank Shooting by Israeli Forces

    Four Family Members Killed in West Bank Shooting by Israeli Forces

    TAMMUN, West Bank (AP) — Four members of a Palestinian family, including two young children, were fatally shot by Israeli military forces in the northern West Bank, according to the Palestinian Authority’s Health Ministry.

    Palestinian officials report the Odeh family was out purchasing new clothing for Eid al-Fitr celebrations, which mark the conclusion of Ramadan, when the deadly shooting took place Saturday evening. Israeli authorities have announced they are conducting an investigation into the incident.

    According to the Palestinian Red Crescent rescue service, Ali and Waed Odeh along with two of their four children sustained fatal head wounds from gunfire. The couple’s two remaining children suffered shrapnel injuries and received medical attention from emergency responders after they were eventually allowed access to the scene. The Red Crescent has criticized Israeli forces for preventing ambulances from reaching the location promptly.

    In a joint statement released Sunday, Israeli military and police officials said their forces discharged weapons when a vehicle sped toward them in Tammun. The forces were reportedly tracking individuals suspected of involvement in “terrorist activity,” and the incident remains under official review.

    The Odeh family represents the most recent victims in the occupied West Bank, where at least eight Palestinians have been killed by Israeli settlers and military personnel since the Iran conflict began.

    Following the February 28 attacks on Iran by Israel and the United States, Israeli officials have imposed movement restrictions throughout the West Bank, periodically shutting down hundreds of checkpoints and gates along roads used by local residents, emergency vehicles, and commercial transport. These barriers have severely limited mobility and complicated emergency response efforts, the Red Crescent informed The Associated Press recently.

    Israeli human rights organization Yesh Din reported Wednesday that they have documented 109 cases of settler violence across dozens of Palestinian communities in the occupied West Bank since the war’s beginning.

    Current casualty figures remain below 2025 levels — which marked a record year for violence that started with Israel’s invasion of northern West Bank cities identified by the military as militant bases. Israeli forces continue to maintain operations in those areas.

    The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs has documented 18 Palestinian deaths in the occupied West Bank since early 2026, with eight killed by Israeli settlers.

  • Trump Administration Reduces Public Access to Immigration Enforcement Data

    Trump Administration Reduces Public Access to Immigration Enforcement Data

    WASHINGTON — While promoting aggressive immigration enforcement targets including deporting one million individuals and achieving zero border releases, the Trump administration has significantly decreased the availability of comprehensive, verified immigration data compared to previous administrations.

    This reduction in statistical transparency regarding one of Trump’s most controversial second-term policies has left researchers, legal advocates, attorneys and news organizations without crucial information needed to evaluate the Republican administration’s claims.

    “They aren’t publishing the data,” stated Mike Howell, director of the conservative Oversight Project, which advocates for increased deportations. According to Howell, the Department of Homeland Security has instead issued figures through press statements “that purport to be statistics with no statistical backup and the numbers have jumped all over the place.”

    As mass deportations take priority, enhanced restrictions and stepped-up enforcement have resulted in increased immigration arrests, detentions and removals.

    However, locating the data that previously tracked these developments has become challenging. This represents a continuation of earlier administration efforts to restrict government information access by eliminating federal databases or dismissing key oversight officials, including last year’s removal of the chief jobs data supervisor.

    The Office of Homeland Security Statistics handles publication of data from Homeland Security departments, including deportation numbers and nationalities of removed individuals, creating a complete overview of immigration patterns at borders and within the United States.

    Initially called the Office of Immigration Statistics, this office has monitored such information since 1872. Under its current structure, established during the Biden presidency, it began issuing monthly updates that enabled researchers to monitor developments nearly immediately.

    However, critical enforcement statistics on its website remain unchanged since early last year. A message where monthly updates appeared states the page “is delayed while it is under review.”

    “It’s the most timely data. It’s the most reliable data,” explained Austin Kocher, a Syracuse University research professor who monitors immigration data patterns, regarding the monthly updates. “It has the most omniscient view of immigration enforcement across the entire agency.”

    An interactive platform launched by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in December 2023 previously allowed users to examine arrest targets, their nationalities, criminal backgrounds and deportation statistics. ICE described it as a “new era in transparency.”

    Despite plans for quarterly updates, the most recent information dates to January 2025. The agency’s yearly report, usually published in December, remained unpublished as of mid-March.

    Additional agencies also release immigration-related data, with some continuing regular publication, including U.S. Customs and Border Protection statistics on border encounters and Department of Justice immigration court information.

    However, specialists indicate other data has slowed significantly.

    The State Department’s latest visa issuance information dates to August. Important statistics from U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services have not been refreshed since October.

    The absent data previously helped researchers examine policy impacts. Attorneys could reference these figures in legal proceedings. Journalists utilized them as essential tools for government accountability regarding public statements and important trend reporting.

    “We’re all a little bit in the dark about exactly how immigration enforcement is operating at a time when it’s taking new and unprecedented forms,” noted Julia Gelatt, associate director of the U.S. Immigration Policy Program at the Migration Policy Institute.

    DHS did not respond to specific questions about discontinuing certain data releases.

    “This is the most transparent Administration in history, we release new data multiple times a week and upon reporter request,” the department stated.

    Numbers the administration has published are contradictory and cannot be verified.

    In a January 20 news statement, DHS claimed it had deported over 675,000 individuals since Trump’s return to office. One day later, a second statement listed the number at 622,000. During March 4 congressional testimony, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem cited 700,000.

    Meanwhile, ICE, a DHS agency, also publishes removal statistics as part of a comprehensive data release required by Congress. An Associated Press examination of these numbers showed approximately 400,000 removals during Trump’s first year.

    DHS has claimed 2.2 million people in the U.S. illegally have departed voluntarily, but the department has provided no methodology for this count. Specialists have questioned this figure’s origin, noting DHS has not historically monitored such departures.

    The department did not address questions about this data’s source.

    With primary data sources suspended, researchers, advocates and others must depend on information the administration is required to report or that emerges through legal proceedings.

    Publishing ICE detention statistics — including detention numbers, duration and criminal history — is congressionally mandated and typically released biweekly. However, these releases have experienced delays and data gets replaced with each new publication, complicating access for those requiring it.

    The University of California, Berkeley’s Deportation Data Project, a research program, successfully obtained data about ICE arrests through Freedom of Information Act litigation, including nationalities, conviction status and arrest locations.

    Graeme Blair, project co-director, said every administration has faced immigration enforcement transparency challenges, and given the Trump administration’s ambitious enforcement objectives, the team sought to secure and verify information the government might not publicly share.

    “Given the scale of what they were talking about doing, it seemed really important to be able to understand, to be able to double check those numbers,” he explained.

    However, limitations exist, he noted. The lawsuit-obtained data only extends through October 15. It does not include recent operations like the Minneapolis enforcement action, where federal immigration officers fatally shot two protesters, resulting in widespread demonstrations and enforcement tactic scrutiny.

    The data shortage represents one of few issues drawing bipartisan criticism.

    “We deserve to know the numbers, just like we deserve to know who’s in our country and who needs to leave,” Howell stated.

  • News Rating Firm Claims Trump Administration Targeting Its Business

    News Rating Firm Claims Trump Administration Targeting Its Business

    A news credibility rating service has taken the Trump administration to federal court, claiming government regulators are conducting a politically motivated campaign to destroy its business operations.

    NewsGuard Technologies operates with relatively little public attention, focusing on evaluating the trustworthiness of various news organizations. However, the company has now become another target in the current administration’s expanding conflicts with media entities.

    The legal battle has escalated with NewsGuard filing suit against the Federal Trade Commission and Chairman Andrew Ferguson to halt what it calls a vindictive government probe. Federal regulators claim the rating service works to silence conservative voices, while NewsGuard maintains it faces retaliation for refusing to bow to political pressure.

    The Trump administration’s media confrontations have multiplied since taking office in January 2025. Current legal battles include disputes with The Associated Press over Gulf of Mexico naming preferences, a settlement with CBS News regarding “60 Minutes” editorial practices, litigation against The Wall Street Journal concerning Trump-Epstein coverage, and ongoing conflicts with The New York Times over Pentagon reporting limitations.

    In documents filed last month at U.S. District Court in Washington D.C., NewsGuard alleges Trump’s FTC is “brazenly using its power not for any issue concerning trade or commerce but rather to censor speech simply because it disagreed with NewsGuard’s judgments about the reliability of news sources.”

    Federal trade officials dismiss these claims as “untethered from both law and fact.”

    Chairman Ferguson’s FTC mirrors the Federal Communications Commission under Brendan Carr – traditionally quiet agencies now actively pursuing Trump administration priorities, especially regarding media oversight. The FCC has initiated media company investigations and recently indicated plans to enforce “equal time” broadcasting regulations for political television appearances.

    Ferguson openly acknowledges his guidance source, stating in a July interview: “I am a law enforcer, and I will follow the law. But the policy priorities are set by the man the people chose to run this government.”

    Media Matters for America, a liberal advocacy organization, previously faced similar FTC scrutiny. A federal judge blocked that investigation last summer, ruling the inquiry into advertising boycott campaigns violated the group’s constitutional speech protections.

    Though NewsGuard lacks widespread name recognition, significant financial interests affect news organizations favored by the president. The venture launched in 2018 under founders Steven Brill, who created Court TV, and Gordon Crovitz, formerly with The Wall Street Journal. NewsGuard employs journalists to evaluate thousands of news websites and outlets, assigning credibility scores based on journalistic reliability and accuracy standards.

    Individual subscriptions cost $4.95 monthly, though most revenue comes from advertising consultants helping brands avoid problematic news sites, plus artificial intelligence companies seeking trustworthy information sources.

    The rating service drew hostility from Trump-supporting network Newsmax after assigning its website a score of 20 out of 100 points. NewsGuard explains “this website is unreliable because it severely violates basic journalism standards.” According to the lawsuit, Newsmax has repeatedly pressured Republican officials and regulators to silence NewsGuard’s operations.

    Newsmax spokesman Bill Daddi responded: “NewsGuard was started by Steve Brill to target conservative media and get ad agencies to deny them advertising revenue as a means of censorship. Brill is a Democratic Party activist and donor over many decades with a long history of advocating for liberal causes. He is not a respected journalist and in no way should be running a ratings service used by major ad agencies.”

    Brill counters that his sole political involvement was working for Republican John Lindsay during his New York City mayoral tenure in the late 1960s and early 1970s while attending college and law school. “I have been a journalist ever since,” Brill stated, emphasizing he has never contributed money to political candidates.

    The rating service defends its methodology using specific standards including accuracy verification, source diversity, news-opinion separation, and error correction practices. Addressing liberal bias allegations, NewsGuard points to instances where Fox News received higher ratings than former MSNBC programming.

    However, the conservative Media Research Center has published research suggesting NewsGuard favors liberal-leaning outlets in its scoring system. FTC court filings indicate the investigation began after congressional researchers linked the company’s services to “coordinated actions to demonize disfavored media entities.”

    Regulators have demanded extensive company records including internal communications, financial statements, and customer information dating to NewsGuard’s establishment. The company considers these demands financially burdensome and fears the government will use subscriber data to target clients.

    As part of approving the merger between major media buying companies Omnicom and IPG, the FTC banned the combined entity from utilizing news rating services. Officials claim this prevents advertising decisions based on political considerations, though NewsGuard reports losing business as a result.

    “The whole idea that any speaker has to justify to the government that it’s not biased is a really troubling thought,” Brill explained in an interview. “We have a constitutional right to be biased. It just so happens that we started the company on the core principle that we were going to be totally apolitical.”

    The FTC press office did not respond to requests for comment. In legal documents, the agency describes conducting a comprehensive investigation into potential antitrust violations involving advertiser boycotts, noting it has issued over a dozen similar information requests beyond NewsGuard’s case. Officials call the company’s accusations “completely meritless.”

    Regarding NewsGuard’s delayed legal response eight months after receiving the information order, FTC attorneys questioned the timing.

    “We tried to cooperate in the belief that the more that we told them what we do, the more likely it would be that they would decide that they didn’t have any case,” Brill explained. “We soon realized that they weren’t worried about the merits.”

    NewsGuard argues FTC actions “will continue until NewsGuard knuckles under.” When asked whether he believes the government seeks to eliminate his company entirely, Brill declined further comment.

  • Delaware Family’s Nearly 80-Year Legacy of Service at the White House

    Delaware Family’s Nearly 80-Year Legacy of Service at the White House

    John Wrory Ficklin was just seven years old when he discovered his father held an extraordinary position of trust and responsibility.

    The year was 1963, and America grieved the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Young Wrory sat with his mother and brother in their Washington apartment, watching the somber funeral proceedings unfold on television, when his mother suddenly drew in her breath.

    There on the screen stood his father, James Woodson Ficklin, dressed in formal morning attire and positioned alongside Kennedy’s coffin with the White House ushers. Though he served as a White House butler, Jackie Kennedy had specifically requested his presence among the ushers for that historic day.

    James Woodson Ficklin dedicated an extraordinary 44 years to the White House residence staff. His son, Wrory Ficklin, also built an impressive White House legacy, spending four decades with the National Security Council.

    While presidents typically serve four or eight-year terms, the Ficklin family maintained an almost constant presence at the White House for nearly 80 years. Woodson Ficklin, his wife, several siblings, and son Wrory served under 13 different presidents, spanning from Franklin D. Roosevelt through Barack Obama.

    This single family stood beside America’s leaders for one-third of the nation’s 250-year history.

    When Wrory retired in 2015, he became the final Ficklin to work full-time at the White House, ending a family service record he chronicles in his book, “An Unusual Path: Three Generations from Slavery to the White House.”

    “The book is my family’s history, it’s African American history and it’s our country’s history,” Wrory told The Associated Press during an interview. “My dad and I both stand on my grandfather’s shoulders, and I like to think that we both contributed a lot to our country.”

    Wrory describes their saga as a “truly American story” that begins with his grandfather, James Strother Ficklin, born into slavery around 1854 in Virginia’s Rappahannock County.

    During the Civil War, Strother served as a water carrier for Confederate forces. Following emancipation, he performed various tasks for his former owners.

    After losing his first wife during childbirth, Strother remarried in 1894 and relocated to Youngstown, Ohio, seeking to escape Virginia’s racial hostility while pursuing opportunities in the thriving coal and steel sectors. Historical records indicate the family eventually returned to Rappahannock County, though the reasons remain unclear.

    By 1901, Strother and his second wife, Helen, had accumulated sufficient savings to purchase 37 acres in Amissville, Virginia. He constructed a home and cultivated crops to support his family. Following Helen’s death during childbirth, Strother wed Vallie Lee Davenport in 1907. Together, they raised 10 children — five daughters and five sons.

    John Woodson Ficklin was among those sons.

    At age 15 in 1934, Woodson Ficklin moved to Washington to live with his older sister and her spouse. He balanced various jobs while attending evening high school classes, earning his diploma in 1939 — the same year his older brother Charles began working as a White House butler. Charles helped secure Woodson a part-time role washing dishes and handling tasks the butlers couldn’t complete themselves.

    World War II military service temporarily interrupted their White House careers, but both brothers received promotions upon their return. Charles Ficklin advanced to head butler while Woodson Ficklin became a butler. On his second day in the butler role, Woodson Ficklin served breakfast to President Harry Truman and first lady Bess Truman.

    Additional promotions came during Dwight Eisenhower’s presidency, with Charles Ficklin ascending to maître d’ — the highest butler position — while Woodson Ficklin became head butler, overseeing six full-time butlers.

    When Charles Ficklin retired in March 1967, Woodson Ficklin again stepped into his brother’s role.

    As maître d’, Woodson Ficklin managed the planning and coordination of White House social functions, from intimate luncheons and formal state dinners to birthday celebrations and casual South Lawn barbecues.

    His responsibilities encompassed visits from British royalty, annual Christmas celebrations, Tricia Nixon’s 1971 White House wedding, and Gerald Ford’s daughter Susan’s decision to hold her high school prom at the executive mansion.

    Throughout his tenure, Woodson Ficklin gained the confidence and respect of presidents and first ladies who depended on his professional knowledge. Many sent appreciation letters following successfully executed events.

    In October 1969, first lady Patricia Nixon wrote about “the great number of complimentary remarks we receive following each White House social event,” according to a letter copy featured in the book. “Our family is most grateful to you for the time and interest you devote to make each occasion so enjoyable and memorable for our guests and for us.”

    President Jimmy Carter sent a March 1979 letter thanking Woodson Ficklin and his staff for their work during the Egypt-Israel peace treaty signing ceremony.

    “Everything was perfect and we are grateful,” Carter wrote.

    Woodson Ficklin stepped down in May 1983. In what may represent the greatest tribute to his 44-year service, the Reagans invited him and his wife, Nancy, as guests to that year’s state dinner honoring Bahrain’s emir.

    He likely became the first White House residence staff member to attend a state dinner as a guest, generating significant media attention. Woodson Ficklin dined at the first lady’s table and later told reporters she “put me at ease and made me feel like a guest.” When asked about the evening’s service, he responded, “Those are my boys. I trained them.”

    Woodson Ficklin passed away in December 1984 at age 65.

    “Seeing my Dad on television was a big deal, and to see him participating in our president’s funeral service was beyond my youthful comprehension,” Wrory Ficklin wrote. He noted that years elapsed before he grasped “the severity and the importance” of his father’s contributions.

    Despite this, Wrory Ficklin also pursued meaningful White House work, starting with a high school summer position delivering confidential documents between the White House and Watergate special prosecutor. He also assisted his father in the pantry during state dinners and major events.

    Wrory Ficklin joined the NSC staff in 1975, launching a 40-year career that overlapped with his father and other relatives. He initially worked evening shifts as a clerk while attending college during daytime hours, and by 1987 was responsible for training new personnel.

    During Obama’s administration, Wrory Ficklin earned promotion to special assistant to the president for national security affairs. Before retiring in 2015, he made a special request to his supervisor, national security adviser Susan Rice: Could he attend a state dinner, following his father’s example?

    Wrory Ficklin and his wife, Patrice, received invitations to the 2015 state dinner for Chinese President Xi Jinping. With slight modifications, he wore the same tuxedo jacket and cummerbund his father had worn in 1983.

    He described the dinner as his career’s pinnacle.

    “Just to experience firsthand the quality of the service, the precision of the butlers, the type of service that they provided, was a legacy to my dad, actually,” Wrory Ficklin said during the interview.

  • Family Caregivers Bear Heavy Load as America’s Senior Population Grows

    Family Caregivers Bear Heavy Load as America’s Senior Population Grows

    Family members across the nation are increasingly taking on the responsibility of caring for elderly relatives as America experiences unprecedented demographic shifts toward an older population.

    The weight of providing care for the country’s growing senior population is primarily resting on the shoulders of family caregivers, creating significant challenges that impact both their daily routines and psychological wellbeing.

    This demographic transformation is placing unprecedented demands on those who step forward to provide assistance and support for aging family members, often requiring substantial personal sacrifices and lifestyle adjustments.

  • Canada, Nordic Nations Form Alliance to Reduce US Dependence

    Canada, Nordic Nations Form Alliance to Reduce US Dependence

    Six world leaders gathered in Oslo on Sunday to forge a new partnership aimed at strengthening military cooperation and reducing dependence on traditional alliances, with Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney spearheading the initiative.

    The summit brought together the heads of government from Canada, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, and Iceland to establish enhanced collaboration on defense manufacturing and procurement strategies. This meeting represents part of Carney’s broader strategy to diversify Canada’s international relationships beyond its traditional reliance on the United States.

    Carney has been actively pursuing partnerships with nations across Asia, the Middle East, and Europe as he works to establish what he terms a coalition of ‘middle power’ countries that could reshape global trade relationships.

    Speaking to media following the six-nation summit, Carney emphasized the economic benefits of coordinated spending. “We all agree that if we individually spend that money or we spend it in an uncoordinated way, it’s not going to be value for taxpayers. It also will not protect our people as much as we should,” he explained.

    The Canadian leader clarified that this new partnership wouldn’t eliminate existing relationships with the United States. “We will still do a lot of procurement with the United States… but in all cases looking to procure much more in partnership. And it’s a much broader range of countries with whom we can partner,” Carney stated.

    The leaders also committed to maintaining their support for Ukraine through various forms of aid, including economic, civilian, military, and humanitarian assistance.

    Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen offered a stark assessment of current global dynamics during the press conference. “The old world order is gone and will probably not come back,” she declared.

    “So we have to build something new and it has to be a world order that is built on the values that we represent,” Frederiksen added.

    Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Stoere, who served as host for the gathering, highlighted the dual benefits of the enhanced cooperation, noting it would strengthen security measures while simultaneously opening doors for economic expansion.

  • Iran Detains Dozens Suspected of Spying for Israel Amid Ongoing Airstrikes

    Iran Detains Dozens Suspected of Spying for Israel Amid Ongoing Airstrikes

    Iranian officials have taken into custody dozens of individuals suspected of providing intelligence to Israel across multiple regions of the country, state media outlets reported Sunday, while military strikes by Israeli and American forces persist against Iranian targets.

    According to the semi-official Tasnim news agency, authorities in Iran’s northwestern region detained 20 individuals Sunday following accusations from provincial prosecutors that they transmitted location data about Iranian military and security facilities to Israeli forces.

    Additionally, officials in northeastern Iran, an area that has seen fewer airstrikes, apprehended 10 suspects on Sunday. Some of those detained are alleged to have gathered intelligence on critical locations and economic infrastructure, Tasnim reported.

    A regional division of the Revolutionary Guards’ intelligence unit stated: “As the Zionist enemy (Israel) and the U.S. are attempting to invade Iran, they simultaneously activate mercenaries and spies to carry out riots as the next step,” according to Tasnim’s reporting.

    The Student News Network also reported Sunday that authorities in Lorestan province, located in western Iran, had detained three individuals for “seeking to disturb public opinion (…) and burn mourning symbols.”

    A source familiar with Israeli military operations told Reuters this week that Israel has shifted tactics to target security checkpoints using intelligence provided by local informants, marking a new development in its campaign against Iran.

    Prior to the current military action by the U.S. and Israel against Iran, widespread demonstrations against the government occurred in January. These protests were suppressed in what became the most violent government crackdown since the Islamic Republic was established.

    Iranian leadership attributed responsibility for what they characterized as “violent riots” designed to topple the clerical government to Israel and the United States.

  • Piece of Iranian Missile Damages US Consul Building in Israel

    Piece of Iranian Missile Damages US Consul Building in Israel

    Israeli news sources reported Sunday that debris from an Iranian missile impacted a building that serves as housing for the United States consul in Israel.

    The initial reports did not include additional specifics about the incident or any potential damage assessment.

  • Hungarian Political Rivals Hold Massive Rallies Before Crucial April Election

    Hungarian Political Rivals Hold Massive Rallies Before Crucial April Election

    Competing political factions in Hungary organized major demonstrations on Sunday as the nation’s contentious election campaign intensified before voters head to the polls on April 12.

    Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who has held power for over a decade, confronts what analysts consider his most difficult reelection battle following three years of economic stagnation, rising living costs, and the emergence of a formidable pro-European Union opponent in Peter Magyar.

    Both Orban’s Fidesz party and Magyar’s Tisza movement organized massive demonstrations through Budapest to commemorate Hungary’s March 15 national holiday while mobilizing their base, with polling data indicating Tisza maintains a substantial lead.

    The incumbent has framed the upcoming election as a decision between conflict and stability, claiming opposition forces want to involve Hungary in the ongoing war in Ukraine that began with Russia’s invasion in February 2022. Opposition leaders have rejected these allegations.

    However, Orban’s messaging continues to connect with his base, as supporters assembled in Budapest’s streets before marching to parliament for the longtime nationalist leader’s address.

    “Hungarians, young or old should not be sent to the front lines, because this is a senseless war,” said Maria Erdelyi, who attended the rally. “This is only about money and nothing else.”

    The prime minister has consistently clashed with European Union leadership regarding Ukraine policy and numerous other matters. Going against Brussels’ position, he has preserved friendly relations with Moscow, declined to provide weapons to Ukraine, and maintains that Kyiv should not become an EU member.

    Supporter Jozsef Lados praised Orban as “Europe’s best politician,” arguing Hungary should continue with the current leader rather than taking a chance on Magyar, whom he characterized as an “adventurer.”

    Magyar has rejected Orban’s campaign messaging as ridiculous “propaganda,” though Tisza has taken a measured approach regarding Ukraine, stating opposition to expedited EU membership for Kyiv and promising a binding public vote on the matter if victorious.

  • Ukraine’s Zelenskyy Awaits US-Russia Agreement on Peace Talk Location

    Ukraine’s Zelenskyy Awaits US-Russia Agreement on Peace Talk Location

    KYIV, Ukraine — Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced Sunday that his country stands prepared for upcoming three-way peace negotiations aimed at ending Russia’s invasion that has lasted over four years, though the ball remains in the court of Washington and Moscow to determine meeting logistics.

    According to Zelenskyy, the United States offered to host discussions involving American, Ukrainian and Russian diplomatic teams, featuring US representatives Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, however Russia declined to participate with their own delegation.

    “We are waiting for a response from the Americans. Either they will change the country where we meet, or the Russians must confirm the U.S,” Zelenskyy stated during Saturday’s media briefing. “We are not blocking any of these initiatives. We want a trilateral meeting to take place.”

    Washington has delayed its planned talks between the warring nations due to Middle East conflicts. The Iran conflict, which began February 28 after US-Israeli military action against Iran and expanded throughout the region, has shifted global attention away from Ukraine’s struggle against Russia’s superior military forces.

    During his press conference, Zelenskyy also cautioned about a “very high” possibility that the Iran conflict could deplete air defense supplies that Ukraine relies on to defend against Russian missile attacks.

    The Ukrainian president acknowledged he doesn’t have complete information about current stockpile levels and revealed Friday discussions with French President Emmanuel Macron in Paris regarding whether SAMP/T defense systems could replace US-manufactured Patriot missiles for stopping ballistic threats. He indicated Ukraine would be “first in line” to evaluate any workable substitute.

    Zelenskyy also seemed to counter recent statements by US President Donald Trump dismissing the value of Ukrainian drone technology.

    “No, we don’t need their help on drone defense,” Trump commented during a Fox News Radio interview broadcast Friday.

    The Ukrainian leader disclosed that Washington had contacted Ukraine “several times” seeking help for an unnamed nation or support for American personnel, though he provided no additional details. He noted these requests came from multiple US military organizations to Ukraine’s Defense Ministry and other military commanders.

    “All our institutions received these requests, and we responded to them,” Zelenskyy explained.

    He revealed proposing a defense partnership agreement to Washington last year valued between $35 billion and $50 billion, which would have provided US officials access to technology from approximately 200 Ukrainian companies specializing in drones, artificial intelligence and electronic warfare, with half the production designated for partners, mainly the United States.

    The Ukrainian president said American military leadership showed significant enthusiasm for the arrangement, and Trump himself appeared open to the idea.

    “We received a message from them, and directly from the president as well, that they are interested,” Zelenskyy informed reporters. “We did not sign the document with President Trump. I do not have an answer as to why. Perhaps it will happen later, but I am not sure.”

  • Hungarian PM Faces Toughest Challenge in Decades as Rival Rallies Fill Budapest

    Hungarian PM Faces Toughest Challenge in Decades as Rival Rallies Fill Budapest

    BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) — Hungary’s capital witnessed a dramatic political showdown Sunday as Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and his chief rival Péter Magyar organized massive competing demonstrations just four weeks before crucial national elections.

    The dueling rallies in Budapest drew hundreds of thousands of supporters for both Orbán’s nationalist Fidesz party and Magyar’s center-right Tisza movement, serving as a critical test of political strength as the campaign reaches its final stretch.

    Orbán, 62, who has governed since 2010 and seeks his fifth straight electoral win, confronts his most serious challenge in twenty years as Magyar has rapidly emerged to threaten what appeared to be an unbreakable hold on power by the pro-Russian leader.

    During the pro-government demonstration that concluded with remarks from the prime minister, supporter Anikó Menyhárt explained Orbán’s appeal while crowds assembled on a Danube River bridge. “God, homeland, family,” she stated. “Only this government is able to secure these three things for the future,” she said.

    Both political leaders had urged their followers to participate in Sunday’s events, which coincided with Hungary’s March 15 national holiday honoring the country’s 1848 uprising against Habsburg rule. Political analysts closely monitored turnout numbers as a potential indicator of performance in the April 12 elections.

    Magyar’s supporters organized their own procession through downtown Budapest later Sunday. Tisza leadership proclaimed it would become Hungary’s “biggest ever political event.”

    Economic stagnation, declining public services, and rising living costs — combined with mounting corruption accusations against the government — have contributed to increasing public dissatisfaction with Orbán’s authoritarian leadership approach.

    The longtime leader has built his campaign around warnings about threats he claims the European Union and Ukraine pose to Hungary, while Magyar, a 44-year-old attorney and former Fidesz member who departed the party in 2024, has concentrated on improving everyday life for Hungarian citizens.

    Through intensive campaigning in Hungary’s rural regions, traditionally Orbán’s political base, Magyar has promoted his plan to rebuild Hungary’s weakened democratic institutions and redirect the nation toward Western allies while distancing it from Moscow.

    In a social media video released early Sunday, Magyar declared his party “would like to give back to every Hungarian what the outgoing government has taken away: our belief in our freedom, and the feeling that our homeland truly belongs to every Hungarian.”

    Independent polls show Tisza leading Fidesz, with a February Medián survey published by HVG news site indicating Magyar’s party held a 20-point lead among committed voters.

    However, the election outcome remains uncertain as Fidesz works to mobilize its substantial rural support base and utilizes its influence over state broadcasters and extensive network of allied media organizations to spread its messaging.

    Magyar has cautioned supporters about potential disinformation efforts, responding to media reports suggesting Russian intelligence agencies may attempt to influence the election in Orbán’s favor through manipulated recordings designed to damage his credibility.

    Orbán has intensified his anti-Ukraine messaging, claiming Kyiv, the EU, and Tisza are conspiring to remove his administration and install a government more sympathetic to Ukrainian interests.

    His campaign’s core argument warns that a new government would financially ruin Hungary by supporting Ukraine against Russia’s invasion — which he has refused to do — and would sacrifice Hungarian youth in combat. The campaign has featured extensive misinformation and heavily relied on artificial intelligence-generated images and videos.

    Adding to political tensions, Hungary’s government announced this week it would release a classified national security document that Orbán claims will demonstrate Tisza received improper funding from Ukraine — an allegation Magyar has firmly rejected.

  • Trade Negotiations Begin in Paris Ahead of Planned Trump-Xi Meeting

    Trade Negotiations Begin in Paris Ahead of Planned Trump-Xi Meeting

    BEIJING (AP) — Economic negotiations between the United States and China commenced in Paris on Sunday, according to China’s state news service Xinhua.

    The discussions, headed by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng, are designed to lay groundwork for President Donald Trump’s planned state visit to Beijing for a meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping in approximately two weeks. The White House announced Trump’s China trip is scheduled for March 31 through April 2, though Chinese officials have yet to provide official confirmation.

    Speaking Thursday, Bessent stated his team would continue producing outcomes that prioritize America’s agricultural sector, workforce, and business community. China’s commerce ministry announced Friday that both nations plan to address “trade and economic issues of mutual concern.”

    This upcoming China visit would mark Trump’s first presidential trip there since his 2017 visit during his initial term. The meeting comes five months following the leaders’ encounter in Busan, South Korea, where they established a one-year pause in their trade conflict that had previously escalated tariffs to triple-digit levels before both countries stepped back.

    However, commercial disputes continue creating friction. On Friday, China’s commerce ministry criticized the Trump administration’s latest trade probe targeting 16 nations, including China. This investigation follows a Supreme Court decision that overturned Trump’s broad international tariffs from last year and could lead to additional tariffs.

    The Iran conflict represents another potential discussion topic, particularly as global concerns mount regarding oil pricing and supply chains. Trump stated Saturday he expects China, France, Japan, South Korea, the United Kingdom, and other nations to deploy naval vessels to maintain the Strait of Hormuz as “open and safe.”

    Prior to Sunday’s negotiations, Gary Ng, a senior economist with French bank Natixis and research fellow at the Central European Institute of Asian Studies, described the Paris gathering as likely the most significant bilateral meeting before the Xi-Trump summit.

    The central question involves “whether China and the U.S. can agree on what is agreed and manage disagreement. Iran is a new factor, but Beijing is more concerned about the flip-flopping of U.S. policies,” he said.

    Last week, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi characterized the coming period as a “big year” for China-U.S. relations. Though Wang didn’t confirm the state visit, he noted that “the agenda of high-level exchange is already on the table.”

    Bessent and He have spearheaded trade discussions between the nations since last year, conducting meetings across Geneva, London, Stockholm, Madrid, and Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

  • Israel Denies Plans for Lebanon Talks, Missile Shortage Reports

    Israel Denies Plans for Lebanon Talks, Missile Shortage Reports

    Israel’s Foreign Minister Gideon Saar rejected weekend media reports on Sunday, denying that his country plans immediate direct negotiations with Lebanon or has warned the United States about depleted missile defense supplies.

    Speaking from Zazir in northern Israel on March 15, Saar addressed two separate news reports that emerged over the weekend. Israel’s Haaretz newspaper had reported Saturday that direct negotiations between Israel and Lebanon were anticipated in the near future. Additionally, Semafor reported that Israeli officials had notified Washington about critically depleted ballistic missile interceptor stockpiles.

    When questioned about both media reports, Saar provided a clear response: “For the two questions, the answers is no.”

    The foreign minister’s statements contradict the weekend reporting that suggested diplomatic progress and potential military supply concerns for the Israeli government.

  • Yemen’s Houthis Stay Out of Middle East War While Other Iran Allies Join Fight

    Yemen’s Houthis Stay Out of Middle East War While Other Iran Allies Join Fight

    CAIRO (AP) — While the Middle East conflict expands and other Iran-supported groups jump into the fighting, Yemen’s Houthi militants continue watching from the sidelines, sparking questions about their strategy and when the experienced fighters might enter the war.

    Tehran has launched retaliatory strikes against American and Israeli targets using missiles and drones, hitting U.S. military installations and sites across Gulf nations, disrupting commercial shipping lanes, restricting fuel deliveries and putting regional aviation at risk.

    In his inaugural written message since taking over after his father’s death in the war’s initial strikes, Iran’s new supreme leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei indicated Thursday that Tehran might expand the conflict to additional battlegrounds — suggesting to experts that Houthi participation could be imminent.

    The Houthis have stayed out of the fighting due to concerns about targeted killings of their commanders, internal Yemeni political splits, and questions about weapons resupply, according to regional specialists.

    However, this stance could shift as Iran looks to apply greater pressure on international oil transportation routes through possible Houthi operations, given the group’s demonstrated ability to successfully strike petroleum infrastructure across the region, experts noted.

    Tehran has extended its regional reach through allied forces operating in Gaza, Syria, Lebanon, Iraq and with Yemen’s Houthis.

    Several key Iranian partners have already entered the current fighting, including Hezbollah which renewed attacks against Israel just two days after Iran was struck — only 15 months following the end of the previous Israel-Hezbollah conflict that concluded with a November 2024 ceasefire. Iraqi militias associated with the Islamic Resistance have taken responsibility for drone attacks on American facilities in Irbil.

    In contrast, the Houthis have limited their response to public demonstrations and statements criticizing the Iran conflict, a marked difference from their extensive missile and drone campaigns against Israel and Red Sea shipping following Hamas’s Oct. 7, 2023 assault on Israel that triggered the Gaza war.

    Here’s an examination of Houthi military strength and their position in the current crisis.

    Equipped with Iranian weapons, the Houthis captured much of northern Yemen including the capital Sanaa in 2014, forcing the country’s internationally recognized leadership into exile. A Saudi-led military alliance supporting Yemen’s government joined the fighting in 2015, leading to an ongoing but largely deadlocked civil war.

    Though the Houthis maintain some political and religious connections with Iran, they practice a different branch of Shiite Islam and operate independently from Iran’s supreme leader, unlike Lebanon’s Hezbollah militants and various Iran-supported Iraqi armed groups.

    Nevertheless, they remain crucial to Iran’s regional strategy and the current conflict is unlikely to diminish that role, according to Ahmed Nagi, a senior Yemen specialist at the International Crisis Group think tank.

    “From Tehran’s perspective, the Houthis have proven themselves to be a capable and effective front, able to generate real pressure,” Nagi said.

    He explained that Houthi leadership’s choice to stay away from the conflict represents a strategic decision made in full coordination with Iranian officials.

    Two Houthi representatives from the organization’s media and political departments told The Associated Press that the rebels’ ammunition reserves are depleted following their operations during the Israel-Hamas conflict. The Iran war has additionally disrupted weapons shipments, according to these sources, who requested anonymity as they lacked authorization to speak with journalists.

    However, the group maintains substantial drone stockpiles, according to another official who spoke anonymously to address the sensitive weapons topic.

    Nagi reported that the Houthis appear to be strengthening their forces through expanded recruitment, domestic weapons manufacturing, and deploying additional troops to Yemen’s Red Sea coastal areas, indicating preparation for potential escalation.

    “The decision is not about unwillingness to intervene, but about timing,” Nagi said. “Iran’s broader strategy seems to be to avoid throwing all its cards on the table at once, instead using its partners and capabilities gradually as the confrontation evolves.”

    The Houthis would likely participate if the conflict expands further, Nagi added, or if they see an existential danger to Iran, such as major losses in military strength.

    Houthi commander Abdulmalik al-Houthi has consistently stated the group stands ready to act, declaring their “hands are on the trigger,” though the specific nature of such involvement remains unclear.

    “Houthis, of course, are always ready for any war,” said Farea al-Muslimi, a research fellow at the Chatham House think tank in London. “Some weaponry moved in different areas inside Yemen recently … but it’s still not clear whether it’s for a military escalation.”

    Should the Houthis join the war, they would most likely restart attacks on Red Sea and Gulf of Aden shipping while simultaneously targeting Israel, Nagi explained. They might also participate in Iran’s strikes against Gulf nations, focusing on American military facilities and interests.

    Ship attacks during the Israel-Hamas war devastated Red Sea commerce, disrupting the flow of approximately $1 trillion in annual trade that previously passed through the waterway. The rebels additionally launched drone strikes at Israel.

    If the Houthis enter the Iran conflict, oil tankers would probably be their main targets, analysts predicted, since maritime attacks offer immediate leverage and would demonstrate escalation while affecting energy distribution networks.

    Strikes on petroleum facilities could also be considered. The Houthis have previously attacked Saudi Arabian oil infrastructure during their extended fight against the Saudi-led coalition.

    American military installations in the region could also become targets, Nagi suggested.

    Abdel-Bari Taher, a political expert and former Yemen press syndicate leader, explained that any war participation decision is influenced by Yemen’s internal conditions, including recent fatal fighting in southern Yemen, public resistance in Sanaa to joining the conflict, and increased caution among Houthi leaders following prominent assassinations.

    The two Houthi officials from the group’s media and political wings reported that the U.S. has issued warnings through Omani intermediaries against war participation. They stated that Houthi political and security commanders have been informed that their mobile phones are being monitored by American and Israeli intelligence. Due to assassination fears, Houthi leaders have been ordered to avoid public appearances, the officials revealed.

    “Despite these constraints and the complex domestic and regional dynamics, Houthi involvement in the conflict remains a possibility,” Taher said.

    Al-Muslimi, the Chatham House expert, argued that the Houthis lack sufficient military resources or internal Yemeni motivations that would compel them to enter the war, and the group appears dedicated to maintaining a U.S.-brokered ceasefire negotiated through Oman last year.

    “They hope to fight, especially with Israel, but they can’t be the ones to fire the first shot,” al-Muslimi said.

    He suggested the Houthis would probably require a domestic Yemeni justification to join the fighting — a rationale that would boost support among their local supporters.

    Al-Muslimi observed: The Houthis “are a local group that Iran uses and supports, but didn’t create.”

  • Taiwan Reports Spike in Chinese Military Activity After Weeks of Calm

    Taiwan Reports Spike in Chinese Military Activity After Weeks of Calm

    Taiwan’s defense ministry reported a dramatic increase in Chinese military activity near the island over the weekend, ending a period of relative calm that had puzzled regional security experts.

    Officials detected 26 Chinese military aircraft operating around Taiwan on Saturday, with 16 of those planes crossing into the island’s northern, central and southwestern Air Defense Identification Zone. Additionally, seven Chinese naval vessels were observed in surrounding waters.

    The weekend’s heightened activity marks a stark contrast to recent weeks, when Chinese military flights had dropped to unusually low levels, leaving defense analysts wondering about Beijing’s intentions.

    From February 27 through March 5, Taiwan recorded no Chinese military aircraft crossing the median line into its defense zone. While two planes were spotted on March 6, the following four days saw zero incursions. Small numbers of flights only resumed between Wednesday and Friday.

    The reduction in military activity occurred during China’s annual legislative session. Though such flights have historically decreased during major political events and holidays, this year’s decline was notably more pronounced than previous instances.

    Security experts believe the legislative meeting alone cannot explain the recent decrease. Some analysts point to possible efforts by Beijing to ease tensions with Washington ahead of a planned visit by U.S. President Donald Trump. The White House announced Trump would visit China from March 31 to April 2, though Beijing has yet to officially confirm the trip.

    Other observers suggest the lull may reflect changes in China’s military training programs, with forces potentially transitioning to new joint training exercises between different branches.

    Beijing has repeatedly threatened to take control of Taiwan through military force if deemed necessary. In recent years, Chinese warplanes and naval ships have conducted near-daily operations in the area surrounding the island.

    Taiwan’s military leadership has indicated it will not alter its defensive preparations despite the temporary reduction in Chinese aircraft activity.

    Defense Minister Wellington Koo previously observed that while aerial operations decreased, Chinese naval forces continued regular patrols in regional waters.

    The two governments have operated independently since 1949, when Communist forces gained control of mainland China after a civil war. Nationalist forces retreated to Taiwan, which eventually developed into a democratic society after decades under martial law.

  • Major Airlines Demand Congress End Shutdown, Pay TSA Workers

    Major Airlines Demand Congress End Shutdown, Pay TSA Workers

    WASHINGTON – Top executives from America’s largest airlines sent an urgent message to Congress on Sunday, demanding lawmakers quickly resolve a nearly month-long government shutdown that has left tens of thousands of airport security workers without paychecks.

    The 29-day partial shutdown has impacted 50,000 Transportation Security Administration employees who continue working despite not receiving pay, according to the airline leaders’ letter.

    Growing numbers of TSA workers have been calling out sick, creating significant disruptions at airports nationwide during what is typically a busy travel period for spring break vacations.

    “Too many travelers are having to wait in extraordinarily long – and painfully slow – lines at checkpoints,” wrote the chief executives of American Airlines, United Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Southwest Airlines, JetBlue Airways, Alaska Air and other carriers in their joint letter to lawmakers.

    The airline leaders demanded immediate action from Congress. “First, leaders should immediately come together to reach an agreement to fund the Department of Homeland Security. Then they need to act so this problem never happens again,” they stated.

    This marks the second major shutdown to impact air travel in recent months. A 43-day government closure last fall caused widespread flight disruptions and forced federal aviation officials to mandate a 10% reduction in flights at major airports.

    “Once again air travel is the political football amid another government shutdown,” the executives complained in their letter.

    The coalition of airline and cargo company leaders – including senior officials from FedEx, UPS and Atlas Air – pushed for new legislation that would guarantee payment for essential aviation workers during future government shutdowns.

    Congressional efforts to resolve the funding crisis have stalled, with senators from both political parties failing to reach agreement Thursday on competing proposals to restore TSA funding. The agency reported that more than 300 officers have resigned since the shutdown started.

    The Department of Homeland Security lost its funding on February 13 when Congress couldn’t agree on immigration enforcement changes that Democrats were seeking.

    The timing couldn’t be worse for airlines, which are anticipating their busiest spring travel season on record. Industry projections show 171 million passengers are expected to fly during the two-month period, representing a 4% increase from last year.

    Several major airports have already experienced severe delays. Houston Hobby and New Orleans airports reported security checkpoint waits exceeding two hours last week due to TSA staffing shortages, while Newark airport announced higher-than-normal delays on Saturday.

    “Americans – who live in your districts and home states – are tired of long lines at airports, travel delays and flight cancellations caused by shutdown after shutdown,” the airline executives wrote to lawmakers.

    Some airports have been forced to close security checkpoints, while others are raising funds to help unpaid TSA employees purchase food and basic necessities as they continue working without compensation.

  • Ugandan Opposition Leader Flees Country After Disputed Election

    Ugandan Opposition Leader Flees Country After Disputed Election

    KAMPALA, March 15 — Robert Kyagulanyi, the Ugandan opposition figure known by his stage name Bobi Wine, announced he has temporarily departed his homeland following two months of concealment after January’s contested presidential election that extended Yoweri Museveni’s grip on power.

    The former musician turned political activist challenged the election results, claiming fraudulent practices occurred, and had been concealing himself since escaping his residence in Uganda’s capital city of Kampala.

    Through a five-minute video statement shared on X this Saturday, Wine revealed he had departed Uganda for “critical engagements outside Uganda,” though he did not reveal his current location or specify the nature of these meetings.

    “At the right time I will come back and continue with the cause,” he stated in the message.

    The entertainment industry veteran who transitioned into politics has claimed that government security personnel hampered his campaign efforts by preventing his political gatherings and detaining his followers.

    In Saturday’s recorded statement, Wine described how security personnel had established checkpoints and launched search operations in attempts to locate him.

    Government officials and military representatives in Uganda have not yet provided responses to requests for commentary regarding Wine’s announcement.

    General Muhoozi Kainerugaba, Uganda’s military commander and Museveni’s son, has posted on social media platforms indicating the armed forces are searching for Wine, though the reasons and potential criminal charges remain unclear.

    Wine declared on Saturday that Museveni had “usurped the will of the people.” He explained that during his time abroad, he would meet with international partners before returning to advance what he described as efforts toward freedom and democratic governance.

    The 81-year-old Museveni has maintained control over Uganda since 1986 and has consistently secured electoral victories that opposition movements and human rights organizations claim have been tainted by threats and brutality, charges that government officials reject.

  • Gas Prices Expected to Keep Rising as Middle East War Disrupts Oil Supply

    Gas Prices Expected to Keep Rising as Middle East War Disrupts Oil Supply

    Gasoline prices at Delaware pumps could face additional pressure as crude oil costs are expected to climb further when markets open Monday, driven by an escalating three-week conflict involving the United States, Israel and Iran that has put critical oil infrastructure in jeopardy.

    The ongoing warfare has resulted in Iran shutting down the Strait of Hormuz, creating what experts describe as the world’s most significant supply disruption currently affecting global oil markets.

    President Donald Trump has issued warnings of additional military action targeting Iran’s Kharg Island oil export facility, prompting Tehran to promise continued retaliation against U.S. and Israeli forces.

    Both Brent and West Texas Intermediate crude oil contracts have experienced dramatic price increases, causing volatility across international financial markets. The two benchmark oils have jumped over 40% during March alone, reaching their peak values since 2022 following the U.S.-Israeli military campaign that led Iran to block shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, a critical passage for approximately 20% of worldwide oil supplies.

    The President has called upon China, France, Japan, South Korea, Britain and other nations to send naval vessels to help protect the strategic waterway.

    Saturday saw American forces target military installations on Kharg Island, which Iran quickly answered with drone strikes against a major oil terminal in the United Arab Emirates.

    “This marks an escalation in the conflict,” stated JP Morgan analysts led by Natasha Kaneva.

    “Until now, the region’s oil infrastructure has largely been spared.”

    The analysts identified several other vulnerable energy facilities in the Gulf region, including the UAE’s Fujairah terminal, along with Saudi Arabia’s Ras Tanura export facility and Abqaiq processing plants, all considered critical and highly exposed targets.

    Despite the attacks, oil loading activities at Fujairah have restarted, according to a local industry source who spoke with Reuters Sunday.

    The Fujairah facility, located outside the Strait of Hormuz, handles approximately one million barrels daily of the UAE’s primary Murban crude oil, representing roughly 1% of global demand.

    The International Energy Agency projects worldwide oil supply will drop by 8 million barrels per day in March due to shipping disruptions, while Middle Eastern producers have reduced output by at least 10 million barrels per day.

    In response to the price surge, the IEA last week approved releasing a historic 400 million barrels from member nations’ strategic reserves. Japan is scheduled to begin its oil release Monday.

    Diplomatic efforts remain stalled as the Trump administration has rejected attempts by Middle Eastern allies to initiate peace talks, according to three sources with knowledge of the situation. Iran has also dismissed any ceasefire possibilities until American and Israeli attacks cease, reducing prospects for a swift resolution to the conflict.

  • Your Delmarva Forecast: Sunday, March 15, 2026

    Your Delmarva Forecast: Sunday, March 15, 2026

    Good morning, Delmarva! We’re starting this Sunday with partly sunny skies and a pleasant high near 55 degrees. You’ll want to secure any loose outdoor items today as we’re seeing east winds picking up between 5 to 15 mph, with some gusts reaching up to 30 mph this afternoon. The weather story changes dramatically as we head into tonight. Rain moves in, so if you have evening plans, keep that umbrella handy! Temperatures will drop to around 48 degrees. Monday brings a wild weather ride across the peninsula. We’ll see our temperatures climb to a warm 69 degrees, but don’t let that fool you – light rain develops in the morning, followed by showers and thunderstorms throughout the day. Monday night could get quite active with more storms expected and a dramatic temperature crash down to 32 degrees. This is definitely a day to stay weather-aware tomorrow, folks. Keep an eye on the radar and have multiple ways to receive weather warnings. Stay safe out there, Delmarva, and I’ll see you tomorrow with your updated forecast!
  • Ukraine Seeks Payment for Sharing Drone Defense Expertise with Middle East Nations

    Ukraine Seeks Payment for Sharing Drone Defense Expertise with Middle East Nations

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced Sunday that his nation expects financial compensation and advanced technology in exchange for providing drone defense expertise to Middle Eastern countries facing Iranian attacks.

    Speaking to reporters in Kyiv on March 15, Zelenskyy revealed that Ukraine has deployed specialist teams to four regional nations to share knowledge gained from nightly battles against Russian drone strikes. Each deployment consists of several dozen experts who will evaluate current defenses and demonstrate effective countermeasures.

    Middle Eastern nations, particularly Gulf states, have been burning through costly air defense missiles to stop Iranian attack drones and are now turning to Ukraine for more efficient solutions. Ukrainian forces have developed expertise using less expensive methods, including smaller interceptor drones and electronic jamming systems to neutralize threats.

    The Ukrainian president disclosed that specialist teams have been sent to Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, and Saudi Arabia, with another group working at a U.S. military installation in Jordan. Nearly a dozen countries worldwide have requested similar assistance from Ukraine.

    Zelenskyy emphasized the limited scope of Ukraine’s involvement, stating: “This is not about being involved in operations. We are not at war with Iran. This is about protection and a thorough, complete assessment on our part of how to counter the Shaheds,” referring to Iran’s signature attack drones.

    The Ukrainian leader acknowledged that compensation terms remain under negotiation but made clear his country’s expectations. “Honestly, for us today, both the technology and the funding are important,” Zelenskyy said.

    Meanwhile, Zelenskyy expressed uncertainty about finalizing a separate drone cooperation agreement with the United States, which Ukraine has been pursuing for several months.

  • Trump Threatens Additional Iran Strikes, Calls for Allied Naval Support in Oil Crisis

    Trump Threatens Additional Iran Strikes, Calls for Allied Naval Support in Oil Crisis

    President Donald Trump has intensified his stance against Iran, issuing threats of additional military strikes against the nation’s crucial Kharg Island oil facility while calling on international partners to send naval forces to protect vital shipping routes through the Strait of Hormuz.

    During a Saturday interview with NBC News, Trump made provocative comments about the ongoing military campaign, stating “We may hit it a few more times just for fun” when discussing potential future attacks on Iran’s primary oil export terminal. The president claimed American forces had “totally demolished” significant portions of the facility.

    These statements represent a notable shift in Trump’s rhetoric, as he had previously indicated that U.S. operations would focus exclusively on military installations rather than energy infrastructure. The comments have undermined ongoing diplomatic initiatives, with administration officials reportedly rejecting mediation attempts from Middle Eastern partners, according to three sources familiar with the situation.

    The military confrontation, which began on February 28 when Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu launched joint operations, has entered its third week with no clear resolution in sight. Iran’s ability to block passage through the Strait of Hormuz – a waterway that handles approximately 20% of global oil shipments – has created an international emergency that threatens worldwide economic stability.

    Global energy markets have experienced unprecedented disruption as the conflict has effectively shut down this critical maritime corridor. The crisis has caused dramatic price increases and widespread concern among governments and financial institutions worldwide.

    Trump took to social media Saturday to demand international action, posting: “The Countries of the World that receive Oil through the Hormuz Strait must take care of that passage, and we will help — A LOT! The U.S. will also coordinate with those Countries so that everything goes quickly, smoothly, and well.”

    Iran’s leadership has promised strong retaliation for any attacks on its energy sector. Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi warned that his country would respond forcefully to strikes against oil facilities.

    Iranian Revolutionary Guards announced Sunday that they had launched coordinated missile and drone attacks against Israeli targets and three American military installations in the region. Officials described these strikes as initial payback for workers killed during attacks on Iranian industrial sites. Israeli defense forces reported they were actively intercepting incoming projectiles.

    Regional tensions expanded further when Saudi Arabia’s military intercepted and destroyed ten drones targeting Riyadh and eastern provinces. However, Iran’s Revolutionary Guards denied involvement in these particular attacks, according to the Fars news agency.

    Operations at Fujairah’s major ship refueling facility in the United Arab Emirates have restarted following Saturday’s drone strike and resulting fire, industry sources confirmed.

    The escalating situation prompted Washington to issue evacuation advisories for American citizens currently in Iraq.

    Casualty reports indicate the three-week conflict has claimed over 2,000 lives, with the majority of deaths occurring in Iran, based on official government statements and state media coverage. A Saturday airstrike on a refrigeration and heating equipment factory in Isfahan killed at least 15 people, according to Fars news agency reports.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy informed CNN that Russia has been providing Iran with Shahed drone technology for use against American and Israeli forces. These unmanned aircraft have been connected to various regional attacks, though their exact origins are often unclear.

    Trump specifically called on China, France, Japan, South Korea, and Britain to deploy naval vessels to secure the Strait of Hormuz through his Truth Social platform. None of these nations immediately agreed to the request.

    Japanese ruling party policy leader Takayuki Kobayashi told NHK public television that while he wouldn’t completely dismiss the possibility, “the (legal) threshold is very high.” Japan’s post-war constitution limits military deployment to situations where national survival is at stake, requiring activation of unused 2015 security legislation.

    South Korea’s presidential administration stated it would make a decision following a “careful review” of Trump’s request.

    French officials are working to build a coalition for securing the strait once conditions stabilize, while British representatives are exploring various options with allies to protect commercial shipping, according to government sources.

    Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, who assumed power after his father’s death, has declared that the Strait of Hormuz should remain closed to international traffic.

    Trump indicated that Iran appears willing to negotiate an end to hostilities but added that “the terms aren’t good enough yet,” suggesting continued military action until more favorable conditions emerge.

  • Gaza Family of Three Among Four Killed in Sunday Israeli Airstrike

    Gaza Family of Three Among Four Killed in Sunday Israeli Airstrike

    Medical authorities in Gaza confirmed Sunday that four Palestinians lost their lives in an Israeli airstrike, including a young boy and his pregnant mother.

    The bombing targeted a residence in Nuseirat, a densely populated refugee camp located in central Gaza, according to staff at the nearby Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital. Hospital officials reported that a family of three – a husband, wife, and their young son – perished in the attack. Medical personnel at Awda hospital in Nuseirat confirmed the fourth victim was brought to their facility.

    Israeli military officials have not yet responded to requests for comment regarding the incident.

    These casualties add to the growing death toll of Palestinians in the coastal territory following an October ceasefire agreement that aimed to end more than two years of warfare between Israeli forces and Hamas militants in Gaza.

    Although major combat operations have decreased, the truce period has witnessed nearly continuous Israeli military action. Israeli forces have conducted numerous aerial bombardments and regularly opened fire on Palestinians approaching military-controlled areas, resulting in over 650 Palestinian deaths, Gaza health authorities report.

    Israeli officials maintain their actions target ceasefire violations or sought-after militants. However, Gaza Health Ministry data indicates approximately half of those killed have been women and children.

    The recent victims join more than 72,200 Palestinians who have died in the conflict that began after Hamas-led fighters launched an assault on southern Israel on October 7, 2023. That initial attack resulted in over 1,200 Israeli deaths and the capture of more than 250 hostages.

    The health ministry, operating under Hamas leadership, keeps comprehensive casualty documentation that United Nations agencies and independent analysts consider generally credible. However, their records do not distinguish between civilian and militant casualties.

    Armed groups have conducted attacks against Israeli troops, and Israel cites these incidents and other truce violations as justification for its military responses. Four Israeli soldiers have died since the ceasefire took effect.

  • Congo Presidential Election Could Extend Leader’s Four-Decade Rule

    Congo Presidential Election Could Extend Leader’s Four-Decade Rule

    Citizens across the Republic of Congo headed to polling stations Sunday to choose their next president, with longtime leader Dennis Sassou N’Guesso seeking to extend his grip on power for another term.

    Approximately three million registered voters have the opportunity to participate in the election, though the atmosphere has been characterized by widespread disinterest among younger citizens who anticipate another victory for Sassou N’Guesso. Opposition groups have urged voters to stay away from the polls. Voting is scheduled to conclude at 7 p.m.

    While six other contenders are competing against Sassou N’Guesso for leadership of this oil-wealthy Central African nation – which holds some of sub-Saharan Africa’s most substantial petroleum reserves – political experts believe none pose a serious threat to the leader who has governed for four decades.

    The election campaign revealed stark disparities between Sassou N’Guesso and his rivals, as the sitting president was the sole candidate who conducted nationwide tours to seek voter support. Throughout Brazzaville, the nation’s capital, streets are lined with images of Sassou N’Guesso.

    Two prominent political parties have refused to participate in the voting process, citing concerns about electoral irregularities and unfair practices.

    Representing the Congolese Party of Labor, Sassou N’Guesso initially assumed leadership in 1979 before stepping aside in 1992 when he facilitated the nation’s inaugural multi-party democratic elections. He regained control as a military commander after a four-month armed conflict in 1997.

    Following a 2015 constitutional vote, restrictions on presidential age limits and term lengths were eliminated, clearing the path for his continued candidacy.

    The nation faces significant economic challenges, including substantial foreign debt that represents 94.5% of its gross domestic product based on World Bank data, along with rising joblessness among youth. Over half of the country’s 5.7 million residents live below the poverty line, and 47% of citizens are younger than 18.

    This election continues a pattern of elderly African leaders maintaining their positions well into advanced age. Among African presidents, Sassou N’Guesso ranks third in length of service, trailing only Paul Biya of Cameroon and Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo of Equatorial Guinea.

  • French Municipal Elections Begin Ahead of 2027 Presidential Race

    French Municipal Elections Begin Ahead of 2027 Presidential Race

    Citizens across France participated in Sunday’s opening round of municipal elections, selecting local government leaders in communities ranging from small towns to major metropolitan areas. The outcome serves as an important gauge for political organizations preparing for the 2027 presidential contest to replace Emmanuel Macron.

    While these elections center on local issues, political observers will examine the results for early signals about party strength heading into the presidential campaign. Macron will complete his final term as president in 2027, and a runoff election is scheduled for March 22.

    Several high-profile mayoral contests are drawing particular interest, especially in Paris. Current Socialist Mayor Anne Hidalgo, who won office in 2014 and secured reelection in 2020, chose not to pursue a third term after leading the capital through challenging times including the 2015 terrorist attacks and the successful 2024 Paris Olympics.

    The race in Marseille, the nation’s second-largest city, appears competitive according to polling data. Current left-leaning Mayor Benoît Payan faces a strong challenge from Franck Allisio, representing the far-right National Rally party along with his municipal slate.

    Political analysts will pay close attention to National Rally’s municipal performance as a potential indicator of Marine Le Pen’s party gaining strength before 2027. However, Le Pen herself may face obstacles to another presidential bid.

    A French court found Le Pen guilty of embezzlement charges last year and imposed a five-year ban on holding public office. Le Pen, whose father Jean-Marie Le Pen founded the far-right National Front and faced multiple convictions for antisemitism, discrimination and inciting racial violence, awaits a crucial appeals court decision.

    Le Pen’s hopes rest on a favorable appeals court ruling scheduled for July 7. An unfavorable decision could end her presidential aspirations entirely.

    Sunday’s ballots feature more than 904,000 candidates competing for municipal positions across approximately 35,000 communities throughout France. Communities where no clear winner emerges will proceed to the second voting round to determine final outcomes.

  • Kazakhstan Citizens Vote on Constitution Changes That Could Extend President’s Rule

    Kazakhstan Citizens Vote on Constitution Changes That Could Extend President’s Rule

    Citizens of Kazakhstan cast ballots Sunday on constitutional amendments that could consolidate President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev’s authority in the largest nation in Central Asia.

    The proposed changes would combine Kazakhstan’s bicameral parliament into a single legislative body and grant the president authority to name all government officials, while also bringing back the position of vice-president.

    Tokayev has championed this second round of constitutional modifications in four years, defending the changes as necessary for rapid decision-making in today’s fast-paced global environment. However, political observers suggest the amendments may create an avenue for extending his presidency beyond its scheduled conclusion.

    The 72-year-old leader, who previously worked as a Soviet administrator and Kazakh foreign representative with United Nations experience, faces current restrictions limiting him to a single seven-year presidency ending in 2029. Political experts suspect Tokayev may leverage the referendum to restart presidential term calculations.

    “If the transition of power doesn’t go as Tokayev would like … then he will be able to say that with the adoption of the new Constitution, we have reset presidential term limits,” analyst Temur Umarov, a fellow at the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center, told The Associated Press. “The new constitution could provide Tokayev with a loophole for reelection to another term.”

  • Japan Taps Oil Reserves as Middle East Conflict Disrupts Global Energy Markets

    Japan Taps Oil Reserves as Middle East Conflict Disrupts Global Energy Markets

    Japan will begin drawing from its strategic petroleum reserves Monday in response to supply disruptions caused by the ongoing U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, marking the first time since the Ukraine crisis that Tokyo has accessed these emergency stockpiles.

    The island nation plans to release a historic 80 million barrels of crude oil – equivalent to approximately 45 days of domestic consumption – as fuel costs climb nationwide due to interrupted shipments through the critical Strait of Hormuz waterway.

    This drawdown will decrease Japan’s national petroleum reserves by 17 percent, with officials directing domestic refineries to utilize the released crude to maintain adequate fuel supplies across the country. The action is part of a broader 400-million-barrel global release coordinated through the International Energy Agency aimed at stabilizing markets amid wartime volatility.

    According to Yuriy Humber, who heads the Tokyo-based Yuri Group consulting firm, Japan’s decision reflects the severity of current supply concerns.

    “The reserves can help stabilise supplies and prices in the short term but they mainly buy time. They can’t fully offset a prolonged disruption in the Strait of Hormuz,” Humber explained.

    The Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry indicated that an additional 12 million barrels held jointly by Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Kuwait within Japan could also be released beyond the announced 80 million barrels.

    Japan established its emergency oil stockpiling program in 1978 following the Arab oil embargo crisis of the mid-1970s. The G7 member nation, which depends on Middle Eastern sources for roughly 90 percent of its petroleum needs, currently maintains reserves sufficient for 254 days of consumption.

    Beginning Monday, Japan will tap private sector reserves equivalent to 15 days of usage, followed by state stockpiles representing one month’s supply starting later this month, METI officials confirmed.

    As companies prepare to access these emergency supplies, METI Minister Ryosei Akazawa noted efforts to secure alternative sources from the United States, Central Asian nations, South American producers, and Gulf states with shipping routes that avoid the Strait of Hormuz chokepoint.

    Currently, the U.S. provides approximately 4 percent of Japan’s oil imports, with purchases increasing after Tokyo largely ceased Russian energy imports following Moscow’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine – the previous occasion when Japan accessed its strategic reserves.

    U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin emphasized America’s role as an alternative supplier during the current crisis.

    “When you look at the conflict in the Middle East … you’re reminded of all that crude oil that has gone from Alaska to Japan was never targeted with a successful terrorist attack,” Zeldin told Reuters.

    “This conflict … is a reminder that along the Indo-Pacific, a lot of other nations can look to the United States, where we have the resources,” he added.

  • Russian Oil Facility Catches Fire After Drone Wreckage Falls on Site

    Russian Oil Facility Catches Fire After Drone Wreckage Falls on Site

    Russian officials reported Sunday that an oil facility in the Krasnodar region caught fire when wreckage from a destroyed drone crashed onto the property.

    Initial reports indicate no one was hurt in the incident.

    The affected oil facility sits near Tikhoretsk, the same area where Ukrainian drones hit an oil pumping station last Thursday. Emergency crews put out that earlier fire by Friday.

    Officials have not confirmed whether Sunday’s incident involved the same facility that was targeted earlier in the week.

    The Tikhoretsk location serves as one of southern Russia’s most significant oil distribution centers and represents the sole supply pathway for petroleum products reaching Novorossiysk, a crucial Black Sea port.

    This incident continues a pattern of drone attacks targeting energy infrastructure and port facilities throughout the region.

  • Doncic Nails Game-Winner as Lakers Edge Nuggets in Overtime Thriller

    Doncic Nails Game-Winner as Lakers Edge Nuggets in Overtime Thriller

    A dramatic baseline shot by Luka Doncic with just half a second remaining lifted the Los Angeles Lakers to a thrilling 127-125 overtime victory over the Denver Nuggets on Saturday evening at home.

    Doncic recorded his eighth triple-double of the campaign with 30 points, 13 assists, and 11 rebounds. The victory marked the Lakers’ fifth consecutive win and secured their season series triumph over Denver.

    Austin Reaves led all scorers with 32 points and delivered a crucial basket in the closing moments of regulation to force overtime. Marcus Smart contributed 21 points while LeBron James added 17 for Los Angeles. Smart’s fifth three-pointer of the evening put the Lakers ahead 125-123 with 31 seconds remaining in the extra period. Nikola Jokic answered with a tying basket with 15.1 seconds on the clock, setting the stage for Doncic’s decisive 17-foot fadeaway.

    Jokic recorded 24 points, 16 rebounds, and 14 assists for his 27th triple-double this season and fifth in his past six contests. Christian Braun scored 12 points for Denver.

    Spurs 115, Hornets 102

    Victor Wembanyama dominated with 32 points, 12 rebounds, eight assists, and four blocked shots in his first game back from a calf injury, powering San Antonio past Charlotte in a matchup of two surging teams.

    De’Aaron Fox contributed 17 points for the Spurs, while Stephon Castle recorded 15 points and 10 assists. Keldon Johnson tallied 13 points and Luke Kornet added 10 for San Antonio, which improved to 17-2 since February began.

    Miles Bridges paced Charlotte with 22 points, followed by Kon Knueppel with 20, Coby White with 18 off the bench, and LaMelo Ball with 17. The defeat ended the Hornets’ two-game winning streak, though they remain 8-3 since February 22.

    Magic 121, Heat 117

    Paolo Banchero tallied 27 points, eight rebounds, and seven assists as Orlando captured its fifth straight victory over Miami.

    Despite building a 22-point advantage, Orlando needed clutch free throws from Wendell Carter Jr. with 11 seconds left and two more from Banchero with 7.8 seconds remaining to seal the win. Desmond Bane scored 21 points for the Magic, who extended their winning streak to seven games. Carter finished with 15 points, Jalen Suggs had 14, and Jamal Cain contributed 12 as Orlando completed a perfect 5-0 season series sweep.

    Miami’s seven-game winning streak came to an end despite strong performances from Bam Adebayo (20 points, seven rebounds, four steals, two blocks) and Jaime Jaquez Jr. (22 points, seven assists, three steals). Reserve Norman Powell scored 20 points, while Pelle Larsson added 13 of his 15 points in the final quarter.

    Celtics 111, Wizards 100

    Neemias Queta posted a game-high 24 points and grabbed 10 rebounds to help Boston snap a two-game skid with a victory over Washington.

    Jayson Tatum provided 20 points, 14 rebounds, and seven assists for the Celtics, while Jaylen Brown scored 16 points. Derrick White and Luka Garza each added 15 points, with Garza coming off the bench. Boston dominated the boards 55-38 and collected 19 offensive rebounds.

    The defeat extended Washington’s losing streak to 11 games, including nine consecutive road losses. Tristan Vukcevic connected on 6 of 7 three-point attempts to lead the Wizards with 22 points. Reserve Jamir Watkins scored 15 points, and Trae Young had 11 points with six assists.

    Hawks 122, Bucks 99

    CJ McCollum erupted for 30 points and connected on seven three-pointers as Atlanta stretched its winning streak to nine games with a dominant victory over Milwaukee.

    Jalen Johnson recorded his 12th triple-double of the season with 23 points, 12 assists, and 10 rebounds as Atlanta achieved its longest winning streak since a 19-game run during the 2014-15 campaign.

    Ryan Rollins scored 22 points with eight assists for Milwaukee, which suffered its eighth loss in nine games. Kevin Porter Jr. added 18 points, seven assists, and seven rebounds.

    76ers 104, Nets 97

    Quentin Grimes poured in 28 points to lead Philadelphia to a home victory over Brooklyn.

    Adem Bona added nine points, 10 rebounds, and three blocks for Philadelphia, which continued playing without key players Tyrese Maxey (finger), Joel Embiid (oblique), and Paul George (suspension). VJ Edgecombe scored 16 points with seven assists for the Sixers, who had lost five of their previous seven contests. Justin Edwards chipped in 19 points.

    Brooklyn dropped its 13th game in 15 tries despite erasing a 28-point second-half deficit. Danny Wolf led the Nets with 15 points and 10 rebounds, as Brooklyn also played without several key contributors, including leading scorer Michael Porter Jr. due to an ankle injury.

    Kings 118, Clippers 109

    DeMar DeRozan scored 27 points and Precious Achiuwa added 25 points with 13 rebounds as Sacramento earned a road victory over Los Angeles in Inglewood.

    Maxime Raynaud contributed 23 points, while Russell Westbrook recorded 12 points, 12 rebounds, and 10 assists against his former team as the Kings won their third game in four tries, continuing to recover from a devastating 2-20 stretch. Sacramento was playing just their second road game in a 10-game span and improved to 3-3 during this stretch.

    Kawhi Leonard scored 31 points for the Clippers, tying the franchise record with his 45th consecutive game of at least 20 points. Leonard briefly left the game in the first half with a cut above his left eye and exited for good with 9:27 remaining after rolling his left ankle.

  • Kings’ Kopitar Sets Franchise Record in Wild 6-4 Loss to Devils

    Kings’ Kopitar Sets Franchise Record in Wild 6-4 Loss to Devils

    Los Angeles Kings captain Anze Kopitar reached a historic milestone Saturday night, claiming the franchise record for most career points, though his achievement came during a thrilling 6-4 defeat to the New Jersey Devils in Newark.

    Kopitar found the net twice to reach 1,308 career points, surpassing Marcel Dionne’s long-standing Kings record. The veteran center, who recently announced this 20th season with Los Angeles will be his last, has accumulated 450 goals and 858 assists across 1,505 NHL games.

    Jack Hughes delivered the decisive blow for New Jersey, netting the go-ahead score late in the final period to cap off an exciting comeback victory. Nico Hischier led the Devils’ offensive charge with two goals in a four-point night, while Arseny Gritsyuk and Timo Meier each contributed a goal and assist. Cody Glass rounded out the scoring for New Jersey, which ended a two-game losing streak behind Jake Allen’s 27-save performance.

    Despite the loss, Los Angeles received strong contributions from Artemi Panarin, who recorded three points including one goal, and Taylor Ward, who also scored. Brandt Clarke distributed three assists for the Kings, who remain in contention for the Western Conference’s final wild-card position. Anton Forsberg made 22 stops in the losing effort.

    Elsewhere around the NHL, Winnipeg moved closer to playoff contention with a 3-1 victory over league-leading Colorado. Connor Hellebuyck was stellar between the pipes with 28 saves, while Kyle Connor provided a goal and assist. Alex Iafallo and Cole Perfetti also scored for the Jets, who now sit five points behind the second wild-card spot in the Western Conference.

    Dallas extended their franchise-record point streak to 15 games (14-0-1) with a 3-2 overtime victory over Detroit. Thomas Harley scored the winner 2:06 into the extra period, while Wyatt Johnston contributed a goal and assist for the Stars.

    Vegas claimed first place in the Pacific Division by blanking Chicago 4-0 at home. Pavel Dorofeyev scored twice and added an assist, marking his second consecutive three-point performance. Adin Hill earned his first shutout of the season with 21 saves as the Golden Knights leapfrogged Anaheim atop the division standings.

    Boston ended a seven-game road winless streak with a shootout victory over Washington, decided in the ninth round by Fraser Minten’s lone goal. Charlie McAvoy scored twice for the Bruins to extend his point streak to six games.

    Pittsburgh rallied from an early two-goal deficit to defeat Utah 4-3, with Noel Acciari providing the game-winner with less than 12 minutes remaining. San Jose continued their recent success with a 4-2 victory over Montreal, led by Macklin Celebrini’s two goals and assist.

    Buffalo defeated Toronto 3-2 in a shootout, with Alex Tuch scoring the decisive goal. The Sabres have now won nine of their last 10 games. Carolina maintained their Eastern Conference lead with a 4-2 victory over Tampa Bay, highlighted by Jordan Martinook’s third-period winner.

    Ottawa shut out Anaheim 2-0 behind Linus Ullmark’s 23-save performance, while New York Rangers held off Minnesota 4-2 despite Igor Shesterkin facing a career-high 46 shots. The Islanders secured a crucial 3-2 victory over Calgary to maintain their playoff positioning, and Columbus extended their point streak to nine games with a shootout win over Philadelphia.

    Seattle snapped a four-game losing streak with a 5-2 victory over Vancouver, as new acquisition Bobby McMann scored twice in his debut with the Kraken.

  • Duke’s Boozer Named ACC Tournament MVP Despite Tough Night Against Virginia

    Duke’s Boozer Named ACC Tournament MVP Despite Tough Night Against Virginia

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. — In Saturday night’s ACC Tournament championship game, Duke freshman Cameron Boozer repeatedly drove toward the basket with a conference title hanging in the balance. However, the star player encountered an unfamiliar challenge each time he attacked.

    Virginia’s Ugonna Onyenso consistently rejected his attempts at the rim.

    “Well,” Boozer acknowledged, “I definitely got frustrated.”

    The matchup between the 6-foot-10, 250-pound Boozer and the 7-foot, 245-pound Onyenso became a central storyline as top-ranked Duke defeated No. 10 Virginia 74-70 to claim the ACC Tournament crown. Onyenso proved instrumental in limiting the highly-regarded NBA prospect to his most difficult shooting night of the campaign.

    Coming into Saturday’s contest, Boozer ranked eighth in the nation with 22.8 points per game while converting 57.9% of his field goal attempts. He managed just 13 points on 3-of-17 shooting — both season lows — as Onyenso rejected four of his shots, including three in the second half.

    Despite the offensive struggles, Boozer collected eight rebounds and eight assists to earn tournament MVP recognition, though he battled throughout the evening while trying to establish the interior presence that has powered Duke’s dominance since January.

    Onyenso recorded nine blocks, seven coming after halftime, surpassing former Wake Forest standout and NBA legend Tim Duncan’s single-tournament blocked shots record.

    “First of all I’ve got give props to him,” Boozer said. “He’s a great defender, great shot blocker. I think there’s a lot I can learn from this game, but I just want to keep attacking, keep attacking, figure it out, find other ways to win. Obviously, my shot wasn’t falling. I wasn’t getting in a rhythm. But just had to find a way.”

    Boozer’s 17.6% shooting performance marked his worst efficiency of the season, falling below his previous low of 25% (3-for-12) against Texas in the same venue during the season opener. The three made field goals represented only his third such limited output all year.

    Virginia has now held Boozer to 6-of-26 shooting (23.1%) across their two meetings, including a contest at Duke’s Cameron Indoor Stadium two weeks earlier.

    Nevertheless, the Blue Devils (32-2) emerged victorious in both encounters and now enter March Madness positioned for a No. 1 seed.

    “One thing with me is I’m really good with my timing, so when we played them at Duke, I was a little bit off,” Onyenso said. “So coming into today’s game, I was like, okay, this is what I’ve got to do, steel my feet, don’t jump. That really helped me with my timing.

    “Cam, he does a lot of shot faking. That’s his thing. So being able to stay on my feet when he shot faked really helped me with my timing.”

    Boozer typically challenges opposing big men with his ability to stretch beyond the three-point line and serve as a facilitator, sometimes functioning like a point guard in Duke’s offensive schemes. This versatility allows him to create movement with his dribbling before using his strength to score through contact with post moves and spins in the paint.

    When he doesn’t convert, he frequently draws fouls and gets to the free-throw line.

    However, Onyenso consistently neutralized these options in ways no other opponent has managed this season, including No. 3 Michigan’s talented frontcourt in a high-profile non-conference matchup last month. He also stayed out of foul trouble, picking up just one personal foul with 6:33 remaining in the second half, despite Boozer’s aggressive attacks and physical play.

    “Look, we’re going to continue to go to him regardless of how he’s playing,” coach Jon Scheyer said while standing on the court surrounded by confetti as players began cutting down the nets. “He didn’t have his best stuff. But in fairness to him, we rely on him so heavily. We played three games in a row. They’re loaded up, they have a great frontcourt.”

    Appropriately, Boozer delivered the crucial play that helped Duke secure the victory, coming as he challenged Onyenso again in the final 30 seconds while the Blue Devils protected a two-point advantage. Onyenso blocked the attempt — his 21st rejection across the three Charlotte games — but Boozer grabbed the offensive rebound.

    Rather than forcing another shot, Boozer passed the ball out to run clock. Isaiah Evans subsequently made two free throws to extend the lead to 72-68, and Boozer sealed the championship with two foul shots with 3.9 seconds left, giving Scheyer his third ACC Tournament title in four seasons as head coach.

    “Give them credit, because they protect the rim probably better than anybody we’ve played,” Scheyer said. “You just believe he’s going to come through, and he did.”

  • Dangerous Black Rain Falls on Iran After Oil Facility Strikes

    Dangerous Black Rain Falls on Iran After Oil Facility Strikes

    Hazardous precipitation contaminated with toxic chemicals has fallen near Tehran after military strikes targeted Iranian petroleum facilities, creating serious public health concerns according to international health authorities.

    Citizens in Iran’s capital reported eye irritation and respiratory difficulties when the contaminated, dark-colored rainfall occurred following attacks on multiple fuel storage sites and a petroleum refinery last week.

    Dark smoke columns have been observed throughout the region during two weeks of ongoing conflict, as Iran responds to military strikes by launching drone and missile attacks against oil and gas infrastructure belonging to neighboring Persian Gulf nations.

    According to experts, rainfall can remove dangerous chemicals from the air relatively quickly, though individuals who come into contact with contaminated precipitation should take safety measures to prevent immediate and future health complications.

    This phenomenon happens when particles of soot, ash and harmful chemicals mix with atmospheric moisture before returning to the ground during rainfall. Such events typically follow fires at petroleum refineries or oil fields, and may also result from forest fires, volcanic activity and industrial contamination.

    Experts explained that tiny soot particles developed when petroleum hydrocarbons underwent incomplete combustion in Iran. Oil fires also create substances known as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, or PAHs, along with harmful gases including sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides that produce acid rain, according to Peter Adams, who teaches civil and environmental engineering at Carnegie Mellon University.

    These microscopic soot particles, measuring roughly 40 times thinner than human hair width, can penetrate deeply into lung tissue and enter blood circulation, potentially causing respiratory and cardiac issues that may result in early death, experts warned. Contact with PAHs may elevate cancer risks.

    The World Health Organization and Iranian health and environmental agencies recommended that people remain inside and use protective masks. Officials cautioned that the precipitation contained high acid levels that could cause skin burns and respiratory damage.

    “We can definitely expect acute health effects from an event like this,” said V. Faye McNeill, a chemical engineering professor at Columbia University who specializes in atmospheric chemistry.

    Standard air quality problems can already trigger health complications and increase hospital admissions, particularly affecting seniors, young people and those with existing medical conditions, she explained. “But this is a higher level, so there likely are health problems going on right now because of it.”

    Some Iranian residents worry that the contaminated rainfall, which also includes heavy metals, might pollute water supply reservoirs and local waterways.

    Fuel storage tanks typically burn out within hours. However, oil fields can continue burning for months, similar to what occurred in Kuwait during the Gulf War 25 years ago, Adams noted.

    For fires that extinguish more rapidly, most particles and chemicals will scatter in the wind and clear from the atmosphere within approximately three to seven days, Adams explained.

    “So if we don’t create more problems, at least what’s in the atmosphere is going to go away,” even though long-term health dangers remain, Adams stated.

    “But we don’t know what’s going to happen with future strikes and whether other tanks will be struck or whether oil fields will be struck,” he continued. “I’m less concerned about longer-term or regional stuff, but it’s a real mess for the people in the immediate vicinity.”

  • Venezuela Upsets Defending Champion Japan 8-5 in World Baseball Classic Quarterfinals

    Venezuela Upsets Defending Champion Japan 8-5 in World Baseball Classic Quarterfinals

    In a major upset at the World Baseball Classic quarterfinals on Saturday, Venezuela knocked out defending champion Japan with an 8-5 victory, while Italy secured their spot in the final four by defeating Puerto Rico 8-6.

    The action started early in Miami when Venezuela’s Ronald Acuna Jr. connected for a solo homer against Yoshinobu Yamamoto in the opening frame, but Japan’s superstar Shohei Ohtani responded right back with his own solo blast off Ranger Suarez.

    Japan appeared to take control in the third inning when Shota Morishita delivered a three-run blast, putting the defending champions ahead 5-2. However, Venezuela battled back as Maikel Garcia crushed a two-run homer in the fifth inning, cutting the deficit to just one run.

    The game’s turning point came in the sixth inning with Ezequiel Tovar and Gleyber Torres on the basepaths. Wilyer Abreu stepped up and launched a massive 409-foot three-run homer that sent the crowd into a frenzy and gave Venezuela a 7-5 advantage.

    Venezuela added insurance in the eighth inning when Ezequiel Torres crossed home plate for another run. From there, Venezuela’s relief pitchers dominated, retiring 13 consecutive Japanese batters during one stretch before Angel Zerpa finished off the upset by striking out Ohtani.

    “Its very hard to describe what went through my mind when I hit that home run,” Abreu told reporters afterward. “It was definitely one of the best moments in my career.”

    The victory marks Venezuela’s first semifinal appearance since 2009 and also guarantees them a spot in the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics. Meanwhile, Japan, winners of three previous World Baseball Classic titles, suffered their first-ever failure to reach the tournament’s final four.

    In Houston at Daikin Park, underdog Italy continued their remarkable run by outlasting Puerto Rico without relying on the home run ball. The Italians, who entered the tournament having already upset both the United States and Mexico to finish pool play undefeated at 4-0, quickly erased an early 1-0 deficit.

    Italy knocked Puerto Rican ace Seth Lugo out of the game in the first inning and never trailed again, building a 4-1 advantage. JJ D’Orazio contributed three RBIs while Andrew Fischer added two more. A decisive four-run fourth inning extended Italy’s lead to 8-2 and essentially put the game away, with all nine Italian starters managing to reach base safely.

    Puerto Rico made things interesting late in the contest, highlighted by Christian Vazquez’s two-run hit in the eighth that brought them within 8-6. However, reliever Greg Weissert closed out the victory by getting five of the final six batters he faced, earning his third save of the tournament.

    “This team has been building character in the last couple of days,” said Italy manager Francisco Cervelli, a former MLB catcher born in Venezuela. “We have the same mission, which is to continue until the last day of the tournament.”

    Venezuela and Italy will face off in Monday’s semifinal in Miami, while the United States takes on the Dominican Republic in Sunday’s other semifinal matchup.

  • Four Palestinians, Including Two Young Children, Killed in West Bank Shooting

    Four Palestinians, Including Two Young Children, Killed in West Bank Shooting

    JERUSALEM – Palestinian health officials reported Sunday that Israeli forces fatally shot four members of a Palestinian family, including two young children, as they traveled by vehicle through the occupied West Bank.

    The victims were identified as parents aged 35 and 37, along with their children, ages 5 and 7. All four suffered fatal gunshot wounds to the head in the village of Tammun, according to Palestinian health authorities. Two additional children from the same family were wounded in the incident.

    Israeli military officials stated they are investigating the reported deaths.

    Separately, Palestinian health officials confirmed that another Palestinian was fatally attacked by settlers during overnight violence.

    According to rights organizations and medical personnel, Israeli settlers in the West Bank are exploiting movement restrictions put in place during the ongoing U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran to launch attacks against Palestinians. These groups report that military checkpoints are preventing emergency medical vehicles from quickly reaching those who have been injured.

    Palestinian health ministry data shows that settlers have been responsible for the deaths of at least five Palestinians in the West Bank since the Iran conflict started on February 28.

  • Caribbean Newspapers Close as Social Media Changes How People Get News

    Caribbean Newspapers Close as Social Media Changes How People Get News

    SAN JOSÉ, Costa Rica (AP) — Carlon Augustus, who grew up in Trinidad and Tobago, recalls his grandparents purchasing newspapers every day. The 32-year-old now relies on social media platforms to stay informed about current events.

    For Augustus, accessing information immediately drives his news consumption habits.

    “Everything is on social media now. Whatever happens today, you don’t have to wait to get the papers tomorrow,” he explained.

    Publishers cite changing reader preferences similar to Augustus’s as the main factor behind the closure of two established Caribbean publications this year: Guyana’s Stabroek News and Trinidad and Tobago’s Newsday.

    Stabroek News published its last print edition on Sunday and ceased online operations. The publication launched in November 1986, one year after its founder received permission from Guyana’s president to establish an independent news organization. Guyana would not hold its first democratic elections in nearly three decades for another six years.

    Trinidad and Tobago’s Newsday ceased both print and digital operations in January.

    “That is definitely a loss to the country, to our democracy, where particularly in this age of social media, credible professional media houses are needed more than ever,” stated Judy Raymond, who previously served as Newsday’s editor-in-chief.

    Caribbean publications, which have documented government corruption, political turmoil, devastating hurricanes and unique human interest stories, have faced difficulties maintaining readership — mirroring challenges affecting print journalism globally — and cannot compete with social media personalities and digital platforms.

    The shuttering of these publications particularly impacts the media landscape because both operated independently, providing diverse perspectives while remaining less vulnerable to pressure from advertisers or influential figures, according to Kiran Maharaj, president and cofounder of the Media Institute of the Caribbean.

    “You have now a narrowing of that,” she observed.

    Stabroek News earned recognition for reliable, unbiased reporting and established editorial standards copied throughout the Caribbean. The publication attracted renowned writers for opinion pieces, including Guyanese poets Martin Carter and Ian McDonald, and provided extensive coverage of the historic October 1992 elections that restored democratic governance.

    The newspaper also emerged as a venue for public discourse following years under authoritarian leadership.

    “Its letters page provided perhaps the most open and democratic public forum in Guyana,” attorney Christopher Ram wrote in a recent commentary published by the paper.

    “Over time that column became something of an informal national meeting place where academics, trade unionists, political figures, public servants, businesspeople and ordinary citizens debated, as equals, matters of public importance.”

    Stabroek News held the position as Guyana’s leading newspaper. Three other publications remain in the country: one operates under government control, another maintains close ties to the current administration, and the third recently surveyed website users about their willingness to pay for digital content.

    Early Ward, a 76-year-old retired beverage industry manager from Guyana, expressed sadness about Stabroek News ending publication.

    “I have been reading newspapers since the 50s and prefer to have one in my hand to hold and to move around with and read anytime,” he shared.

    Ward now depends on television and social media for news updates.

    Trinidad and Tobago’s Newsday launched in 1993, pledging to serve the most isolated areas of the dual-island nation where two established competitors continue operating: the Trinidad and Tobago Guardian and the Trinidad Express.

    The publication attracted working-class readers and quickly gained recognition as reporters broke major stories ahead of competitors and legislators cited its articles during parliamentary sessions.

    Newsday distinguished itself through coverage of Tobago, the smaller and less economically developed island, and by highlighting voices of disadvantaged residents, Raymond noted. She led the publication as editor-in-chief from 2017 to 2022.

    She described one of her most rewarding responsibilities as assisting people because “they are desperate and officialdom has not helped them and they don’t have anybody else to turn to.”

    Caribbean newspapers enjoyed strong financial support and represented social status from the 1970s through the mid-1990s, said journalist Wesley Gibbings, vice president of the Jamaica-based Media Institute of the Caribbean.

    “People would be seen walking with a physical copy of newspapers,” he remembered. “It was almost a prestigious thing to be the one with the newspaper.”

    Technology companies like Google then began capturing advertising dollars and revenue while using content from traditional news organizations, Gibbings explained.

    “The danger signs have been up for a very long time,” he pointed out. “We are in a watershed period right now, and the crashes will continue.”

    Daily News Limited, Newsday’s publisher, closed due to multiple simultaneous challenges, according to managing director Grant Taylor, who noted print advertising revenue dropped 75% during the past ten years.

    Raymond, who established Newsday’s digital operations in early 2018, suggested the publication “could have worked harder at broadening the revenue stream from online publications.”

    Looking back, she questioned whether converting Newsday to an online-only format might have sustained operations. However, citing Loop News, a regional digital news platform that closed last July, she acknowledged that digital-only publishing would not have ensured Newsday’s continuation.

    Regarding Stabroek News, ownership reported the government contributed only $7.5 million toward approximately $90 million in outstanding advertising bills from the previous year.

    However, the publication clarified that unpaid invoices and reduced government advertising were not primary causes of closure: “Readership patterns have changed dramatically, and fewer readers are willing to purchase printed editions — or even pay for electronic versions.”

    In a recent letter to Stabroek News, Lurlene Nestor lamented its closure, “especially during this period of Guyana’s history, where allegations of massive public corruption are rife, coupled with a situation where the nation’s important resources, such as gold and oil, appear to be either corruptly exploited or used as personal political bargaining chips.”

    Anand Persaud, Stabroek News’ editor-in-chief, shared similar concerns while expressing pride in the publication’s work.

    “We leave at this stage,” he stated, “because we want to make sure our independence is not on the line.”

  • Vietnam Holds Parliamentary Elections Following Communist Party Leadership Vote

    Vietnam Holds Parliamentary Elections Following Communist Party Leadership Vote

    HANOI, Vietnam (AP) — Vietnamese citizens participated in legislative elections Sunday to choose representatives for a new National Assembly, occurring two months following the Communist Party’s decision to keep To Lam in the nation’s highest political position.

    Approximately 79 million eligible citizens nationwide had the opportunity to select 500 lawmakers from a pool of 864 candidates for the National Assembly, which serves as a legislative body that typically endorses party decisions. The Communist Party screens and approves all candidates beforehand, guaranteeing the legislature stays in line with party objectives.

    Political activities remain under strict Communist Party oversight, with officials maintaining that unified leadership enables the nation to focus on long-range development objectives without political interference.

    The newly elected National Assembly will likely focus on carrying out policy initiatives established during the recent congress, emphasizing continued economic expansion and maintaining political order.

    These elections occurred after the Communist Party’s national congress in January, a significant political gathering conducted every five years to determine leadership positions and establish policy directions. During this congress, Lam secured reelection as general secretary, which represents the highest authority within the political framework.

    “We have the people’s support in this election,” Lam stated following his vote in Hanoi, characterizing the election as a national celebration where citizens select representatives to oversee development and protect the nation’s sovereignty and stability.

    The Vietnamese economy has experienced significant expansion during the previous decade, fueled by export manufacturing, international investment, and its increasing importance in worldwide supply networks. The nation has established itself as an alternative manufacturing destination as businesses seek options beyond China, drawing major electronics and clothing producers.

    Officials have established an aggressive goal of achieving 10% or greater yearly economic expansion during the upcoming five years, positioning private enterprise as central to its development approach in a significant change for the communist nation. Government planners are now adjusting the economy to advance toward more valuable industries, updated manufacturing processes, and expanded implementation of science, technology, and digital innovations.

    Vietnamese officials also confront difficulties as the country’s export-focused economy deals with uncertainty from increasing trade conflicts, including tariffs implemented by U.S. President Donald Trump.

    Participation rates in Vietnamese elections typically remain elevated, frequently surpassing 90%, with voting locations established in urban areas, countryside communities, and isolated regions to promote citizen involvement.

    “As a voter in this election, I believe I will be able to choose candidates with morals, dedication and competence to serve the country, bringing development and prosperity to our country and our people,” stated retired official Doan Thi Bich.

    The newly elected National Assembly will likely hold its initial session in April to officially confirm important government positions and start executing the policy framework established during the party congress.

  • Trump Calls on Allies for Naval Support as Iran-US Tensions Escalate

    Trump Calls on Allies for Naval Support as Iran-US Tensions Escalate

    CAIRO (AP) — President Donald Trump has called upon international partners to deploy naval vessels to protect the strategically important Strait of Hormuz, as Iran issued unprecedented evacuation orders for three ports in the United Arab Emirates amid continuing hostilities with the United States and Israel.

    This marks the first instance where Iran has directly threatened civilian infrastructure belonging to a neighboring nation during the current conflict.

    Iranian officials accused the United States of utilizing “ports, docks and hideouts” within the UAE to launch attacks against Kharg Island, which houses Iran’s primary oil export terminal, though no evidence was provided to support these claims. Tehran called for civilians to evacuate areas where it claims American forces are positioned.

    The humanitarian situation in Lebanon continues to deteriorate, with casualties exceeding 800 deaths and approximately 850,000 people forced from their homes as Israeli forces conduct extensive operations targeting Iran-supported Hezbollah fighters.

    Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi stated that American forces struck both Kharg Island and Abu Musa Island from UAE locations in Ras Al-Khaimah and near Dubai, describing the situation as perilous. He added that Iran “will try to be careful not to attack any populated area” in those regions.

    U.S. Central Command declined to comment on Iran’s allegations. UAE presidential diplomatic advisor Anwar Gargash responded on social media, stating his nation maintains the right to self-defense while “still prioritizes reason and logic, and continues exercising restraint.”

    Throughout the conflict, Iran has launched numerous missiles and drones toward Gulf Arab nations, claiming to target American assets despite reported impacts on civilian facilities including airports and oil installations.

    Regarding maritime access, Araghchi declared the Strait of Hormuz remains closed only to “those who are attacking us and their allies.”

    With worldwide concerns mounting over petroleum costs and availability, Trump announced Saturday his expectation that China, France, Japan, South Korea, Britain and other nations would contribute warships to maintain the strait “open and safe.” The United Kingdom responded by indicating discussions with partners about various “options” for protecting maritime commerce.

    In a social media statement, Araghchi called on regional neighbors to “expel foreign aggressors” while characterizing Trump’s appeal as “begging.”

    Iran’s unified military leadership repeated Saturday its warning to target American-connected “oil, economic and energy infrastructures” throughout the region should the Islamic Republic’s petroleum facilities face attack.

    According to Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency, the Kharg Island strikes did not harm oil infrastructure, instead hitting an air defense installation, naval facility, airport control tower and an offshore petroleum company’s helicopter storage building.

    The Pentagon announced Saturday the identities of six military personnel killed when their refueling aircraft crashed Thursday during Iran-related operations.

    The fallen service members were identified as Major John A. Klinner, 33; Captain Ariana G. Savino, 31; Technical Sergeant Ashley B. Pruitt, 34; Captain Seth R. Koval, 38; Captain Curtis J. Angst, 30; and Technical Sergeant Tyler H. Simmons, 28.

    The crash occurred in western Iraq following an undisclosed incident involving two aircraft in “friendly airspace,” according to U.S. Central Command. The second aircraft landed without incident.

    A missile attack struck a helicopter landing area within the U.S. Embassy grounds in Baghdad Saturday. No group immediately took responsibility for the strike. The embassy facility, among the world’s largest American diplomatic installations, has faced repeated attacks from rockets and drones launched by Iran-affiliated militant groups.

    The State Department has again advised American citizens in Iraq to depart “now” by land transportation, as commercial aviation remains unavailable. Officials noted that Iran and Iran-aligned armed groups “may continue to target” U.S. nationals, interests and infrastructure.

  • Trump Calls for Allied Naval Support as Iran Issues UAE Port Evacuation Warning

    Trump Calls for Allied Naval Support as Iran Issues UAE Port Evacuation Warning

    President Donald Trump has called upon allied nations to deploy naval vessels to protect the strategically crucial Strait of Hormuz, as tensions escalate with Iran issuing evacuation orders for three major ports in the United Arab Emirates amid ongoing regional conflicts.

    This represents the first instance where Iran has directly threatened civilian infrastructure belonging to a neighboring nation, targeting the Middle East’s most active commercial port along with two additional UAE facilities.

    Iranian officials accused the United States of utilizing UAE “ports, docks and hideouts” to conduct military strikes against Kharg Island, which houses Iran’s primary oil export terminal, though no supporting evidence was presented with these claims.

    The conflict has also intensified Lebanon’s humanitarian emergency through Israel’s military campaign against Hezbollah, resulting in approximately 800 fatalities and forcing over 850,000 people from their homes.

    Recent developments include the Pentagon’s Saturday announcement identifying six military personnel who perished when their refueling aircraft went down Thursday during operations targeting Iran.

    The fallen service members have been named as Maj. John A. Klinner, 33; Capt. Ariana G. Savino, 31; Tech. Sgt. Ashley B. Pruitt, 34; Capt. Seth R. Koval, 38; Capt. Curtis J. Angst, 30; and Tech. Sgt. Tyler H. Simmons, 28, according to military officials.

    The fatal incident occurred in western Iraq following what U.S. Central Command described as an unspecified event involving two military aircraft in “friendly airspace,” with the second plane successfully completing its landing.

    Early Sunday morning brought reports from Israeli defense forces of another Iranian missile barrage directed at Israel, with warning sirens activating across Tel Aviv and residents reporting explosive sounds overhead.

  • China’s Spy Agency Backs First-Ever Movie to Boost National Security Awareness

    China’s Spy Agency Backs First-Ever Movie to Boost National Security Awareness

    A high-speed pursuit through towering glass buildings in Shenzhen culminated when a drone struck down a fleeing operative, creating one of the most memorable sequences in China’s latest blockbuster thriller. This dramatic scene from “Scare Out” has captivated audiences worldwide, including American viewers, but represents something unprecedented in Chinese cinema.

    The film marks a historic first as the initial movie to receive official endorsement from China’s Ministry of State Security, the nation’s powerful and traditionally secretive intelligence organization. This represents a significant departure for a country where security agencies typically maintain tight control over information sharing.

    Oscar-nominated filmmaker Zhang Yimou helmed the production, which the MSS describes as being “led and created” by the intelligence service. The agency hopes the film will enhance citizens’ ability to protect the nation from security threats. The movie debuted in Chinese theaters on February 17, coinciding with Chinese New Year celebrations.

    In promotional materials shared across social media platforms, the MSS stated the production seeks to “strengthen the people’s defense line” and “echo the needs of the times of national security education.”

    While this marks the agency’s first foray into film production, the MSS has increasingly opened its operations to public view in recent years. The organization began its social media presence approximately two years ago on WeChat, China’s dominant messaging platform, declaring that “Counterespionage requires the mobilization of the entire society.”

    The ministry now maintains an almost daily posting schedule, frequently highlighting real-world cases. Recent examples include a travel influencer who allegedly recruited a university student to photograph military installations, and a military enthusiast who purchased classified defense documents for under one dollar at a local recycling center.

    The agency has also produced comic books, brief video clips, and short films as part of its public outreach efforts.

    “Scare Out” features prominent actors Jackson Yee and Zhu Yilong in a storyline centered on hunting down a double agent within China’s intelligence apparatus who has been compromising classified information about an advanced fighter aircraft.

    “Spies are just there around you,” Zhang remarked in an MSS-produced promotional trailer.

    Security analysts suggest the MSS is working to increase visibility while encouraging citizens to report potentially suspicious behavior they observe.

    “It wants to build public and popular support to encourage people to share information,” explained Sheena Greitens, an associate professor at the University of Texas at Austin.

    “(It’s) a very sophisticated effort to mobilize Chinese citizens and make national security entertaining and fun to support,” she continued.

    Writing in the People’s Daily, the Chinese Communist Party’s primary publication and the nation’s largest newspaper, Zhang revealed: “State security officers accompanied us throughout the whole filming process to make sure the film is close to reality.”

    The director has previously earned Oscar recognition for acclaimed works including “Ju Dou,” “Raise The Red Lantern,” and “Hero.”

    Social media speculation suggests the storyline draws from an actual incident involving a researcher who allegedly transmitted information about China’s J-35 fighter aircraft to foreign entities.

    The Associated Press received no response to requests for comment from the MSS.

    Since its theatrical release, the production has screened in the United States, Canada, and Australia. Box office receipts have reached 1.1 billion yuan (approximately $160 million) within its first two weeks.

    Alice Jin, a 28-year-old e-commerce professional in Washington, attended the screening hoping she wouldn’t “fall asleep.” She found it “better than I expected,” noting: “I had no idea what it (MSS) was before.”

    Wang Lehang, a 25-year-old student, commented: “I love watching movies, so a movie on patriotism education definitely works better on me.” He added it was “better than a lecture.”

    International audiences have enjoyed espionage entertainment for generations, with the inaugural James Bond film premiering more than sixty years ago.

    The CIA, frequently depicted in Hollywood productions including the Jason Bourne series, is recognized for collaborating with entertainment industry professionals to influence how the agency appears in popular media.

    Western productions typically focus on “here’s where the trouble is coming from,” while China is simultaneously “highlighting to people internally that they don’t side with the West,” observed Liam McLoughlin, senior lecturer in politics at Edge Hill University in northwest England.

    The film’s debut coincides with CIA recruitment campaigns on social media platforms specifically targeting Chinese officials for potential intelligence cooperation with the United States.

    “Do you have information about China’s top leaders? Are you a military officer, or do you work with the military?” asks a recent recruitment video in Mandarin. “Please contact us. We want to understand the truth.”

    China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs has condemned these recruitment efforts, pledging to implement all necessary countermeasures to prevent infiltration attempts.

  • Massive St. Patrick’s Day Parade Draws Thousands to Boston Streets

    Massive St. Patrick’s Day Parade Draws Thousands to Boston Streets

    BOSTON — Large crowds filled the streets of South Boston Sunday as the city hosted its yearly St. Patrick’s Day parade, ranking among America’s biggest Irish cultural celebrations.

    The annual event attracts spectators from throughout Massachusetts and neighboring states, featuring musical groups, decorated floats, military veterans, and community organizations parading through South Boston’s streets.

    Municipal leaders reported weeks of advance planning had taken place, with law enforcement, transportation authorities, and emergency responders working together on crowd control and safety measures for the massive gathering.

    The parade represents a significant yearly custom in Boston, which has strong Irish cultural ties, and typically occurs alongside Evacuation Day observances that honor the 1776 withdrawal of British forces from the city.

    Authorities advised parade-goers to prepare for street closures and packed public transportation systems as visitors flood the area during the day-long festivities.

    The previous year’s celebration attracted tens of thousands of participants and viewers, showcasing numerous marching contingents.

    Sunday’s festivities were scheduled to start late morning and run through the afternoon hours.

  • Trump Faces Political Pressure Two Weeks Into Iran Conflict

    Trump Faces Political Pressure Two Weeks Into Iran Conflict

    WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — President Donald Trump is confronting significant political challenges following two weeks of military operations against Iran by the United States and Israel.

    The president has become increasingly frustrated with media reporting while struggling to articulate to Americans his rationale for initiating the conflict or his strategy for concluding it. Public anxiety over U.S. military deaths, climbing fuel costs, and declining stock markets has left even some Trump allies questioning his approach, leading to a drop in his approval ratings.

    The conflict has unexpectedly benefited Russia, as Trump administration officials relaxed certain sanctions on Russian petroleum exports. This policy shift, coupled with higher global oil prices, has undermined years of efforts to limit President Vladimir Putin’s financial resources for his war in Ukraine.

    Democratic leaders, who were struggling politically after Trump’s 2024 electoral victory, have united in opposition to the president’s Iran strategy. They’re pointing to economic instability as evidence that Republicans have broken their campaign promises to reduce costs for American families ahead of November’s midterm elections.

    “I think Democrats are well-positioned for this November and the midterms,” said Kelly Dietrich, CEO of the National Democratic Training Committee, which trains party backers to run for office and staff campaigns.

    Dietrich criticized the administration’s approach, saying the past two weeks demonstrate failed long-term planning. “They’re flying by the seat of their pants, and rest of us are paying the price,” he said.

    Over the weekend, Trump spent time at his West Palm Beach golf course before hosting a private fundraising event for his MAGA Inc. super PAC at Mar-a-Lago. The previous weekend, he also played golf at another South Florida property just one day after attending the solemn ceremony for six American service members killed in the Iran conflict. Military casualties have continued to mount this week.

    The president has intensified his criticism of news media coverage, posting Saturday: “Media actually want us to lose the War.” His broadcast regulator subsequently threatened to revoke television licenses unless outlets “correct course.”

    Trump, who did not inform allies beyond Israel about his military plans for Iran, acknowledged for the first time that the U.S. would require international assistance to ensure oil tankers can navigate the Strait of Hormuz. Transportation through this critical waterway has been severely disrupted, causing chaos in global energy markets.

    Iranian officials have announced plans to continue targeting energy infrastructure and maintain their effective blockade of the strait as a bargaining chip against the United States and Israel. Twenty percent of globally traded petroleum passes through this waterway.

    “Many Countries, especially those who are affected by Iran’s attempted closure of the Hormuz Strait, will be sending War Ships, in conjunction with the United States of America, to keep the Strait open and safe,” Trump wrote on Saturday, later adding, “this should have always been a team effort.”

    However, uncertainty remains about whether this multinational effort is already underway or merely Trump’s hope for future cooperation. He also wrote: “Hopefully China, France, Japan, South Korea, the UK, and others, that are affected” will “send Ships to the area so that the Hormuz Strait will no longer” be threatened by Iran.

    The White House declined to elaborate on Trump’s statements. Britain’s defense ministry responded Saturday: “We are currently discussing with our allies and partners a range of options to ensure the security of shipping in the region” without providing specifics.

    At the war’s outset, Trump promised that American naval vessels would provide protection for tankers traveling through the waterway. This escort service has not yet begun. “It’ll happen soon. Very soon,” he stated while boarding Air Force One for Florida on Friday evening.

    These ongoing concerns about the strait contradict Trump’s recent declaration at a Kentucky campaign event that, “We’ve won.”

    “You know, you never like to say too early you won. We won,” he said. “We won the, in the first hour, it was over.”

    The Treasury Department announced a 30-day suspension of Russian sanctions this week, designed to release stranded Russian oil shipments and address supply shortages created by the Iran conflict.

    This decision comes despite expert analysis showing that rising oil prices from Persian Gulf production disruptions are helping Russia’s economy. Moscow depends heavily on petroleum revenue to fund its Ukrainian war effort, and sanctions had been increasingly effective.

    Several key American allies have condemned the sanctions relief as empowering Putin. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called the policy change “not the right decision” and “certainly does not help peace” because it leads to a “strengthening of Russia’s position.”

    As midterm campaigns intensify, Trump addressed concerns Friday evening about voters facing high gasoline prices.

    “You’re going to see a very big decrease in the prices of gasoline, gas, anything having to do with energy, as soon as this is ended,” Trump said.

    Extended conflict duration will amplify questions about midterm election outcomes. Senator Rand Paul, a Kentucky Republican, warned on Fox News Channel this week that continued high fuel and oil prices could result in “a disastrous election” for the GOP.

    The Iran situation has also created divisions within Trump’s “Make America Great Again” coalition, splitting supporters who back the military action from others who point out Trump campaigned on ending wars.

    Prominent conservative voices, including Tucker Carlson and Megyn Kelly, have strongly criticized Trump. The president maintains that he created the MAGA movement and that supporters will follow his leadership on any issue.

    This political instability has some Democrats predicting midterm gains comparable to the 2018 “blue wave” election during Trump’s first presidency.

    “Democrats just have to keep reminding people that he made a promise to bring prices down, and they’re still going up,” Democratic strategist Brad Bannon said of Trump. “And now they’re going to go up even more because prices in gasoline can increase prices of everything else, including at the grocery store.”

  • Chinese Military Aircraft Resume Large-Scale Flights Near Taiwan After 2-Week Pause

    Chinese Military Aircraft Resume Large-Scale Flights Near Taiwan After 2-Week Pause

    Taiwan’s defense officials announced Sunday that Chinese military aircraft have resumed large-scale operations around the island following a puzzling two-week break that left analysts questioning Beijing’s strategy.

    According to Taiwan’s defense ministry, 26 Chinese military planes were spotted in the Taiwan Strait during a 24-hour monitoring period. This marks the most significant aerial activity since February 25, when Taiwanese forces tracked 30 aircraft during what Beijing described as a “joint combat readiness patrol.”

    The island nation typically observes daily Chinese military aircraft movements, including fighter jets, drones, and other warplanes circling its territory, as Beijing considers the democratically-run island part of its sovereign territory. Weather conditions usually account for any brief interruptions in these flights.

    However, from February 27 through March 7, Taiwan documented a complete halt in Chinese aircraft activity. When flights resumed on March 7, only two planes were detected in Taiwan’s southwestern airspace, followed by minimal sporadic incidents.

    Chinese officials have remained silent about the reasoning behind the temporary suspension and declined to provide comment when contacted Sunday.

    Tensions escalated over the weekend when China’s Taiwan Affairs Office issued a sharp rebuke to Taiwan President Lai Ching-te following his Saturday speech advocating for increased defense expenditures and democratic protection.

    “People like Lai Ching-te should not miscalculate; if they dare to take reckless risks, they will dig their own grave,” a spokesperson for the office declared.

    Taipei-based officials and regional experts have proposed various theories for the aircraft withdrawal, ranging from Beijing’s potential strategy adjustment before U.S. President Donald Trump’s scheduled China visit from March 31, to President Xi Jinping’s ongoing removal of high-ranking Chinese military commanders.

    Taiwan Defense Minister Wellington Koo emphasized that despite the temporary aircraft absence, Chinese naval vessels continued patrolling around the island, maintaining the overall security threat.

    Taiwan’s leadership continues to dispute Beijing’s territorial claims over the island.

  • Giants Add WR Darnell Mooney on $10M Contract After Falcons Release

    Giants Add WR Darnell Mooney on $10M Contract After Falcons Release

    Multiple reports indicate the New York Giants have reached an agreement with wide receiver Darnell Mooney on a one-year deal valued at up to $10 million, according to Saturday sources.

    Atlanta cut ties with the 28-year-old Mooney earlier this month in a cost-cutting move, despite the receiver being under contract through a three-year, $39 million deal he inked in March 2024. The Falcons faced an $18.4 million salary cap hit from Mooney but freed up $7.42 million by releasing him.

    New York’s receiving corps took a hit this week when their top pass-catcher from 2025, Wan’Dale Robinson, departed for Tennessee in free agency. Robinson led the team with 92 catches for 1,014 yards last season. The Giants have since brought in former Steelers wideout Calvin Austin and retained Gunner Olszewski to complement existing targets Malik Nabers and Darius Slayton.

    During his debut campaign with Atlanta in 2024, Mooney hauled in 64 passes for 992 yards and reached a personal-best five touchdown receptions across 16 starts. His 2025 production dipped to 32 catches for 443 yards and one score over 15 starts, as injuries limited his availability. A broken collarbone sidelined him for the season opener, while a hamstring issue cost him two additional contests.

    Throughout his NFL tenure spanning five seasons with Chicago (2020-23) and Atlanta, Mooney has accumulated 309 receptions for 4,028 yards and 17 touchdowns across 91 games with 80 starts.

    The Bears selected Mooney during the fifth round of the 2020 draft following his collegiate career at Tulane University.

  • Ukraine’s Zelenskyy: Russia Now Providing Iran with Shahed Drones for Attacks

    Ukraine’s Zelenskyy: Russia Now Providing Iran with Shahed Drones for Attacks

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has accused Russia of providing Iran with Shahed drones for attacks targeting the United States and Israel, according to a CNN interview segment broadcast Saturday.

    Speaking with CNN’s Fareed Zakaria, Zelenskyy declared it is “100% facts” that Iran has deployed Russian-manufactured Shahed drones against American military installations.

    While Shahed drones have been connected to additional strikes throughout the Middle East region, the origin of their production has not always been definitively established.

    Iran originally developed the Shahed drone technology as a cost-effective substitute for costly missile systems. These unmanned aircraft gained widespread attention during Russia’s military campaign in Ukraine, where Ukrainian officials report that Russian forces have deployed thousands of these drones since autumn 2022.

    While Iran initially supplied these drones to Russia, Moscow has since established its own Shahed production capabilities. Various military forces worldwide have now incorporated Shahed-style drone technology, including American armed forces, which have indicated these weapons are being utilized in current operations targeting Iran.

  • Israeli Emergency Medics Rush Into Missile Strike Zones While Others Seek Shelter

    Israeli Emergency Medics Rush Into Missile Strike Zones While Others Seek Shelter

    While most Israelis rushed to protective shelters during air raid warnings, emergency medical volunteers with Magen David Adom made the opposite choice – heading directly into harm’s way to rescue others.

    “People in Israel go to shelters when the sirens sound. But Magen David Adom volunteers go out of the shelters and save others,” explained Uri Shacham, who serves as chief of staff for the organization.

    This stark difference in response highlighted the crucial wartime mission of MDA, Israel’s national emergency medical and blood service organization, during the June 2025 conflict when Iranian rockets and unmanned aircraft targeted Israeli urban areas. The service was forced to execute emergency protocols it had spent years developing – deploying medical personnel into active strike zones while maintaining continuous emergency healthcare operations amid ongoing attacks.

    Operating from its central command center in Ramla to damaged residential buildings in Bat Yam, MDA’s response system depended on swift emergency dispatch procedures, extensive preparedness training, reinforced operational facilities, and a nationwide network of volunteer emergency responders.

  • Kim Jong Un Watches Rocket Test with Daughter as Tensions Rise

    Kim Jong Un Watches Rocket Test with Daughter as Tensions Rise

    North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un supervised a weapons demonstration with his teenage daughter by his side over the weekend, according to state-controlled media reports from Sunday. The missile firing exercise seems to be North Korea’s answer to current joint military exercises between the United States and South Korea, which Pyongyang considers preparation for an attack.

    State media outlet Korean Central News Agency announced that Kim witnessed a combat exercise featuring a dozen 600mm-caliber, high-precision rocket launchers along North Korea’s eastern coastline on Saturday.

    Military officials in South Korea confirmed they tracked approximately 10 ballistic missiles launched from the Pyongyang area toward eastern waters on Saturday. South Korea’s national security council condemned the missile launches as aggressive actions that break United Nations Security Council rules prohibiting North Korean ballistic missile activities.

    According to KCNA, Kim stated the exercise would subject adversaries within the 420-kilometer (260-mile) attack zone to anxiety and provide them with a clear picture of tactical nuclear weapons’ devastating capabilities. His comments appeared directed at South Korea and American forces based there.

    “Should this weapon system be deployed, enemy military facilities within range would face complete destruction,” Kim declared, as reported by KCNA.

    State media photographs depicted Kim and his daughter, identified as Kim Ju Ae and approximately 13 years old, standing beside massive olive-colored launcher vehicles while observing weapons being fired. The young girl has been present at various prominent occasions including missile demonstrations and military ceremonies since late 2022, leading analysts to believe she may be positioned as Kim’s successor.

    Military analysts note that North Korea’s oversized rocket systems create ambiguity between traditional artillery and ballistic missiles since they generate independent propulsion and receive guidance during flight. Pyongyang has claimed certain versions of these weapons can carry nuclear payloads.

    The annual U.S.-South Korean Freedom Shield exercise, conducted through computer simulation at command centers, continues until March 19. North Korea typically responds to these training operations with weapon testing and aggressive statements.

  • Baseball Stars Make History with Back-to-Back Leadoff Homers in World Classic

    Baseball Stars Make History with Back-to-Back Leadoff Homers in World Classic

    MIAMI — Baseball history was made Saturday night when two superstar players launched back-to-back leadoff home runs during a World Baseball Classic quarterfinal matchup, marking the first time this feat has occurred in tournament play.

    Ronald Acuña Jr. wasted no time getting his team on the scoreboard, connecting on just the second delivery from World Series MVP Yoshinobu Yamamoto. The Atlanta Braves outfielder sent a fastball soaring 401 feet into right-center field for his second tournament home run.

    Japan’s Shohei Ohtani answered immediately in the bottom half of the inning, crushing a 2-1 slider from Ranger Suárez that traveled 427 feet to center field. The ball rocketed off Ohtani’s bat at 113.6 mph, prompting the Los Angeles Dodgers star to admire his work before flipping his bat and gesturing enthusiastically toward his teammates in the dugout. The blast evened the score at 1-1 for the defending tournament champions and marked Ohtani’s third WBC home run.

    According to Elias Sports Bureau records, no regular season or playoff game has ever featured leadoff home runs hit by two MVP award winners in the same contest.

    The 31-year-old Ohtani brings impressive credentials to the tournament, having earned four MVP awards while helping guide the Dodgers to their last two World Series championships.

    Acuña, 28, captured the 2023 National League MVP honor and was instrumental in the Braves’ 2021 World Series victory.

  • Pentagon Names Six Airmen Lost in Iraq Aircraft Accident

    Pentagon Names Six Airmen Lost in Iraq Aircraft Accident

    WASHINGTON – Pentagon officials released Saturday the identities of six American Air Force personnel who perished in an aircraft accident over Iraq.

    The service members were aboard a KC-135 aerial refueling aircraft conducting operations in support of U.S. military strikes against Iran. Military officials stated the incident involved a collision with another aircraft but was not caused by enemy fire or friendly fire, and remains under investigation.

    Half of the fallen airmen served with the 6th Air Refueling Wing at MacDill Air Force Base near Tampa, Florida. They were Major John A. Klinner, 33, from Auburn, Alabama; Captain Ariana G. Savino, 31, from Covington, Washington; and Technical Sergeant Ashley B. Pruitt, 34, from Bardstown, Kentucky.

    The remaining three personnel were members of the 121st Air Refueling Wing stationed at Rickenbacker Air National Guard Base in Columbus, Ohio. Those airmen were Captain Seth R. Koval, 38, from Mooresville, Indiana; Captain Curtis J. Angst, 30, from Wilmington, Ohio; and Technical Sergeant Tyler H. Simmons, 28, from Columbus, Ohio.

  • Wilmington Woman Missing Since Saturday, Police Issue Gold Alert

    Wilmington Woman Missing Since Saturday, Police Issue Gold Alert

    New Castle County police have activated a Gold Alert as they search for a 46-year-old woman who vanished from her Wilmington area residence over the weekend.

    Kristin Willis was last observed at approximately 11:00 a.m. on Saturday, March 14, 2026, near the Presidential Drive area within the Greenville Place Apartments complex. Law enforcement officials report they have conducted thorough search operations but have been unsuccessful in locating Willis or establishing contact with her.

    The Gold Alert system is typically used for missing adults who may be in danger due to age, health conditions, or other circumstances that could put them at risk.

  • France’s Municipal Elections Test Far-Right Power Before Presidential Race

    France’s Municipal Elections Test Far-Right Power Before Presidential Race

    Citizens across France are casting ballots today in municipal elections that political observers view as a critical measure of far-right influence before the nation’s upcoming presidential campaign.

    The voting, which began at 8 a.m. local time and concludes at 8 p.m., will determine leadership for nearly 35,000 communities ranging from major metropolitan areas to small villages. French mayors hold the distinction of being the country’s most trusted elected representatives.

    These local contests carry significant weight since they occur just ahead of the 2027 presidential election, where polling suggests the far-right National Rally could emerge victorious.

    The National Rally, known for its anti-immigration stance and skepticism toward European Union policies, has historically faced challenges in winning municipal races. While the party has fielded candidates in hundreds of communities, it doesn’t anticipate sweeping victories but aims to demonstrate rising support through strategic wins in key locations.

    “If the people of Marseille make a brave choice … it will embolden and enlighten the French on the choice they will make next year,” stated Franck Allisio, the National Rally’s candidate in France’s second-largest city.

    Allisio finds himself in a statistical tie with current Socialist Mayor Benoit Payan in first-round polling, giving the National Rally an unprecedented opportunity to control a major French urban center.

    While municipal elections typically center on neighborhood concerns, polling data indicates security ranks as voters’ primary concern this cycle, aligning closely with the National Rally’s emphasis on law and order.

    The party is also competing seriously in Toulon, a southern city with 180,000 residents, and could potentially win in Menton, a Mediterranean coastal community where Louis Sarkozy, son of former President Nicolas Sarkozy, is running with centrist party support.

    A crucial factor will be the coalition agreements the National Rally negotiates with other parties between voting rounds. This election may mark the end of France’s long-standing tradition of isolating far-right parties, as some mainstream conservative politicians show willingness to cooperate.

    Left-wing parties performed strongly in the previous 2020 municipal elections but now face national weakness. Political watchers will closely monitor whether they can retain control of Paris and other cities they previously captured, including Nantes for the Socialists and Lyon and Strasbourg for the Green Party.

    The potential for mainstream left-wing parties to form alliances with the radical-left France Unbowed movement between voting rounds also remains a significant question.

    Communities where no candidate list receives more than 50% of votes will hold a second round on March 22. While the second round may provide clearer insights than initial voting, both phases carry high stakes given the approaching April 2027 presidential election.

    “People want to turn the page and they want to turn it with us,” said Louis Aliot, the National Rally mayor of Perpignan.

  • Medvedev Ends Alcaraz’s Indian Wells Title Defense, Faces Sinner in Final

    Medvedev Ends Alcaraz’s Indian Wells Title Defense, Faces Sinner in Final

    INDIAN WELLS, California – World No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz saw his hopes of capturing a third straight Indian Wells championship come to an end Thursday as Daniil Medvedev delivered a commanding performance, defeating the Spanish star 6-3, 7-6(3) in the semifinals.

    The victory sets up a championship showdown between Medvedev and Italy’s Jannik Sinner, who dominated Alexander Zverev 6-2, 6-4 in the other semifinal match. Sinner’s impressive display included eight aces and 18 winners while making only 13 unforced errors – eight fewer than his German opponent.

    The second-ranked Sinner controlled the net effectively, winning seven of eight points there, and continued his recent dominance over Zverev with a sixth straight victory. Despite Zverev taking an early advantage in the first set, Sinner responded with two breaks to capture the opener, then secured another crucial break at 4-3 in the second set to close out the match.

    The 24-year-old Italian has maintained perfect form throughout the tournament, advancing to the final without losing a single set – a streak that highlights his mastery on hard court surfaces.

    In his semifinal battle, Medvedev executed a tactical approach against Alcaraz, securing an early break to establish a 3-1 advantage in the first set and maintaining that edge to take the opener.

    The second set delivered much more drama as Alcaraz elevated his play, breaking the Russian’s serve to build a 3-1 lead. However, the 30-year-old Medvedev showed his resilience, capitalizing on several unforced errors from the Spaniard to even the score at 3-3.

    Both players exchanged powerful shots in an entertaining battle that eventually required a tiebreaker, where Medvedev proved decisive in securing his spot in Sunday’s final.

  • Bell Secures Top Starting Position for Vegas NASCAR Race

    Bell Secures Top Starting Position for Vegas NASCAR Race

    Christopher Bell secured the top starting position for Sunday’s Pennzoil 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway after posting a lightning-fast qualifying speed of 187.156 mph during Saturday’s time trials.

    The driver completed his run around the 1.5-mile track in 28.853 seconds, edging out Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Denny Hamlin, who qualified second with a speed of 186.188 mph. Bell’s margin of victory was 0.150 seconds.

    This marks Bell’s first pole award of the current season, his fourth at the Las Vegas venue, and the 15th pole position of his NASCAR Cup Series career.

    Toyota dominated qualifying as Ty Gibbs from JGR earned the third starting spot with a speed of 185.803 mph, while 23XI Racing’s Bubba Wallace claimed fourth at 185.771 mph. This represents only the seventh time Toyota has captured the top four qualifying positions in NASCAR Cup Series competition, with their last such performance occurring at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in 2023.

    Las Vegas has been particularly favorable for Toyota recently, as this marks the second consecutive race at the track where Toyota drivers have locked up the first three starting positions. Last fall, Hamlin, Chase Briscoe, and Bell accomplished that feat.

    “It was pretty simple, really,” Bell explained regarding his pole-winning performance. “It takes a lot of commitment here at Las Vegas Motor Speedway to qualify well. My team got their Ps and Qs right. We had a lot of grip, and I held my foot down, and we won the pole.”

    Bell’s machine handled the challenging Turn 1 surface irregularities better than many competitors, which proved crucial to his success.

    “It’s a compromise,” Bell noted about the track’s unique challenges. “Every time you come to Las Vegas Motor Speedway, it’s a compromise of getting your car to have as much grip as you can have in (Turns) 3 and 4 without the bump hindering you in (Turns) 1 and 2.”

    “Anytime you make the car drive better across the bumps, you’re giving up performance on the smooth part of the race track, and my team nailed it,” he added.

    Current series champion Kyle Larson qualified fifth at 185.548 mph, leading all Chevrolet entries. Phoenix race winner Ryan Blaney captured sixth position at 185.185 mph as the fastest Ford qualifier.

    Points leader Tyler Reddick, who has won the season’s first three races, will begin Sunday’s race from seventh position. Ryan Preece, William Byron, and Chris Buescher round out the top ten starting positions.

    Last year’s Las Vegas race winner Josh Berry struggled in qualifying, earning only the 32nd starting position in his Wood Brothers Racing Ford.

    Bell has shown strong performance when starting from the pole, finishing in the top ten in his last seven pole-winning races. His previous two pole positions at Las Vegas in 2023 and 2024 both resulted in runner-up finishes.

  • Australia Sends Troops to Help Communities Devastated by Flooding

    Australia Sends Troops to Help Communities Devastated by Flooding

    Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced Sunday that military personnel will be sent to assist communities devastated by severe flooding in the nation’s northern region.

    The Prime Minister confirmed that his center-left administration has authorized the deployment of Australian Defence Force members to support areas surrounding Katherine, a Northern Territory community located approximately 164 miles south of Darwin, the territory’s capital.

    “To everyone doing it tough right now, know we are with you through the response and through the recovery,” Albanese posted on social media platform X.

    Emergency Services Minister Kristy McBain confirmed during television interviews that military support will continue for as long as two weeks.

    Officials dealing with flooding caused by torrential rainfall across the Northern Territory and adjacent Queensland state announced earlier this week that they had found two bodies during their search for missing Chinese backpackers who disappeared in Queensland’s Gympie area floods.

    According to Australia’s national science agency, climate change is making severe short-duration rainfall events increasingly powerful across the continent.

  • Salisbury University Softball Suffers Twin Defeats at Margie Knight Classic

    Salisbury University Softball Suffers Twin Defeats at Margie Knight Classic

    SALISBURY, Md. – Salisbury University’s softball team endured a difficult Saturday during their home Margie Knight Classic tournament at Henry S. Parker Athletic Complex, suffering defeats in both scheduled matchups.

    The Sea Gulls first faced 24th-ranked Randolph-Macon College in a contest that ended after just five innings with Salisbury on the losing end. The team then battled Muhlenberg College in their second game of the day, coming up just short in a narrow 6-5 defeat.

    The double-header losses occurred during the tournament hosted on Salisbury’s home field, adding disappointment to what was meant to be a showcase event for the program.

  • Traffic Alert: I-495 Southbound Lane Blocked at Holly Oak Road Following Accident

    Traffic Alert: I-495 Southbound Lane Blocked at Holly Oak Road Following Accident

    A vehicle accident has resulted in the closure of the right lane on southbound Interstate 495 near the Holly Oak Road area, according to Delaware Department of Transportation officials.

    The lane restriction is currently in effect as emergency responders and cleanup crews work at the crash site. Drivers traveling through the area should anticipate potential delays and may want to consider using alternative routes.

    DelDOT has not yet provided information regarding the severity of the crash, number of vehicles involved, or an estimated timeframe for when the lane will reopen to traffic.

    Motorists are advised to exercise caution when driving through the area and to allow extra travel time for their commute.

  • Goldey-Beacom’s Historic Season Concludes with NCAA Tournament Defeat

    Goldey-Beacom’s Historic Season Concludes with NCAA Tournament Defeat

    The Lightning’s unprecedented basketball season reached its conclusion Thursday evening as Goldey-Beacom suffered a 111-78 defeat against fourth-seeded Daemen University during first-round NCAA Tournament action in Amherst, New York.

    The loss marked the end of what had been the most successful campaign in the program’s entire history for the Wilmington-based college.

    Despite the tournament setback, the Lightning’s journey to March Madness represented a remarkable achievement for the small Delaware institution, capping off a season that exceeded all expectations and established new benchmarks for the basketball program.

  • Goldey-Beacom Baseball Sweeps Doubleheader Against Caldwell

    Goldey-Beacom Baseball Sweeps Doubleheader Against Caldwell

    The Goldey-Beacom Lightning baseball squad delivered a commanding performance during their Central Atlantic Collegiate Conference doubleheader against Caldwell University in New Jersey.

    The Lightning secured a sweep with two decisive wins, claiming the first game 13-10 in a high-scoring affair before dominating the second contest with an 8-1 victory.

    The doubleheader took place on Caldwell’s home field in New Jersey, marking a successful road trip for the Lightning as they continue their conference play.

  • 82-Year-Old Congo Leader Expected to Win Another Term in Sunday Election

    82-Year-Old Congo Leader Expected to Win Another Term in Sunday Election

    Citizens of Congo Republic headed to polling stations Sunday for a presidential election that political observers believe will grant 82-year-old Denis Sassou Nguesso another five-year term, continuing his grip on power that has lasted more than 40 years.

    Key opposition leaders remain behind bars, while others have fled the country. Multiple opposition political parties are refusing to participate in the election, claiming the electoral process cannot be trusted.

    Voting began at 7 a.m. local time and concluded at 6 p.m. Officials registered over 3.2 million Congolese citizens to cast ballots, though political analysts and civic organizations predict participation will drop below the nearly 68% turnout from 2021, when Sassou captured 88.4% of votes.

    The longtime leader first took control of the oil-rich Central African country in 1979 and has maintained power almost without interruption, except for a brief five-year period during the 1990s.

    Six relatively unknown candidates are challenging Sassou, but none are considered viable threats, as election oversight committees are filled with individuals supporting the ruling Congolese Labour Party.

    “The opposition is fragmented and lacks a strong, emblematic figure,” said Remadji Hoinathy of the Pretoria-based Institute for Security Studies. “There may be fatigue among voters, but that will not affect Sassou’s chances.”

    Human rights organizations report that political freedoms have decreased in recent years, pointing to activist detentions and party suspensions.

    Prime Minister Anatole Collinet Makosso has rejected claims of bias favoring Sassou, maintaining that Congo’s regulatory agencies will guarantee a fair and transparent electoral process.

    Many Congolese citizens express skepticism about potential political change.

    “It’s an election whose outcome is known in advance,” said Frédéric Nkou, an unemployed resident of Brazzaville. “I don’t expect things to improve.”

    During his campaign, Sassou emphasized maintaining current policies while promising to speed up infrastructure initiatives and broaden educational and vocational training opportunities.

    While the oil-dependent economy has found stability following years of decline, World Bank data shows that 52% of Congo’s 6.1 million residents remain in poverty.

    Election officials expect to announce preliminary results within 48 to 72 hours after polls close.

  • Vietnam Holds Parliamentary Elections With 93% Communist Party Candidates

    Vietnam Holds Parliamentary Elections With 93% Communist Party Candidates

    More than 73 million Vietnamese citizens cast ballots Sunday in parliamentary elections where the ruling Communist Party dominated candidate selections, fielding almost 93% of those running for the 500-seat National Assembly.

    The elections, held every five years, serve as one of the limited democratic exercises in Vietnam’s strictly governed single-party system. Voters also selected local council representatives during the process.

    According to the national election council, Communist Party members comprised 864 candidates seeking national parliament seats, with independent candidates making up just 7.5% of the field – a decrease from 8.5% in the previous 2021 election. This composition ensures the party will continue its overwhelming legislative control.

    Currently, Communist Party members occupy 97% of parliament seats, having governed Vietnam without opposition for multiple decades.

    While the National Assembly lacks authority to overturn major party decisions, particularly regarding personnel appointments, legislators have occasionally modified proposed legislation.

    The new parliament’s inaugural session is set for early April, when members will formally approve state leadership positions previously selected by the party, including the president and prime minister roles.

    During January’s five-year party congress, officials confirmed To Lam as general secretary – Vietnam’s highest-ranking position – and chose 19 politburo members who form the primary decision-making council.

    Party leadership is anticipated to officially announce their state position nominees before parliament convenes, with Lam’s expected presidential appointment considered routine.

    This transition would enable the former public security chief to simultaneously hold both influential roles for a five-year term, bringing Vietnam’s governmental structure closer to neighboring China’s model, where Xi Jinping also maintains dual positions.

    Notable business executives among the candidates include party members Nguyen Thanh Tung, who leads Vietcombank – Vietnam’s largest bank by market value – and Le Hong Minh, chairman of technology company VNG that operates the nation’s leading messaging platform Zalo.

    Male candidates represent approximately 55% of those running, matching proportions from the last election cycle. Following the 2021 voting, women secured roughly 30% of available seats.

    Parliament chairman Tran Thanh Man informed local news outlets that election outcomes would be revealed March 23.

    State news agencies report that voter participation has surpassed 99% in each of the previous seven parliamentary elections.

  • Top US and Chinese Economic Leaders Hold Trade Talks in Paris

    Top US and Chinese Economic Leaders Hold Trade Talks in Paris

    Senior economic representatives from the United States and China began discussions in Paris on Sunday, working to resolve trade disagreements and prepare the groundwork for President Donald Trump’s planned visit to Beijing later this month to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

    The negotiations, headed by U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng, are anticipated to address modifications to American tariffs, Chinese rare earth mineral and magnet exports to the United States, American technology export restrictions, and China’s purchases of U.S. farm products.

    The delegations are convening at the Paris offices of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, according to a source with knowledge of the arrangements. China does not belong to this organization of 38 predominantly wealthy democratic nations and identifies as a developing nation.

    U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer is also participating in the discussions, which represent a continuation of diplomatic meetings held in various European locations last year designed to reduce tensions that nearly caused a complete breakdown in commerce between the world’s two biggest economies.

    Experts analyzing U.S.-China trade relations indicated that given limited preparation time and Washington’s focus on the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, the likelihood of significant trade breakthroughs remains slim, whether in Paris or during the Beijing summit.

    “Both sides, I think have a minimum goal of having a meeting, which sort of keeps things together and avoids a rupture and re-escalation of tensions,” said Scott Kennedy, a China economics expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

    Trump may seek substantial Chinese commitments to purchase new Boeing aircraft and increase imports of U.S. liquefied natural gas and soybeans, but achieving this might require offering concessions on U.S. export restrictions, Kennedy noted.

    Kennedy suggested the summit would likely “superficially suggests progress but that really just leaves things about where they’ve been for the last four months.”

    Trump and Xi may potentially have three additional meetings this year, including a China-hosted APEC summit in November and a U.S.-hosted G20 summit in December that could produce more concrete results.

    The ongoing U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran will likely be discussed during the Paris meetings, particularly regarding rising oil prices and the potential closure of the Strait of Hormuz, through which China receives 45% of its oil supply. Bessent announced a 30-day sanctions waiver Thursday evening to permit the sale of Russian oil currently held in tankers at sea, aimed at increasing available supplies.

    On Saturday, Trump called on other countries to assist in protecting shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, following Washington’s bombing of military facilities on Iran’s Kharg Island oil terminal and Iran’s threats of retaliation.

    China’s government-controlled China Daily newspaper published an editorial advocating for continued U.S.-China dialogue as a “stabilizing anchor” during the uncertainty of the “ongoing crisis in the Middle East” and as the most effective approach to addressing specific disagreements on strategic materials, technology, market access and agriculture.

    “In a moment like this, the last thing the world needs is a trade war between its two largest economies,” China Daily said.

    Both nations are expected to assess their advancement in fulfilling obligations under the October 2025 trade agreement announced by Trump and Xi in Busan, South Korea. This arrangement prevented a major escalation in tensions, reduced U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods, and suspended China’s strict rare earth export controls for one year. It also halted the expansion of a U.S. blacklist preventing Chinese companies from purchasing advanced American technology such as semiconductor manufacturing equipment.

    China also committed to purchasing 12 million metric tons of U.S. soybeans during the 2025 marketing year and 25 million tons in the 2026 season, beginning with the fall harvest.

    American officials, including Bessent, have stated that China has fulfilled its obligations under the Busan agreement so far, pointing to soybean purchases that achieved initial targets.

    However, while some industries are receiving rare earth exports from China, which controls global production, U.S. aerospace and semiconductor companies are not and are experiencing worsening shortages of essential materials, including yttrium, used in heat-resistant jet engine coatings.

    “U.S. priorities will likely be about agricultural purchases by China and greater access to Chinese rare earths in the short term” at the Paris talks, said William Chou, a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute, a Washington think tank.

    Greer and Bessent also introduce a new source of tension to the Paris discussions: a new “Section 301” investigation into unfair trade practices targeting China and 15 other major trading partners regarding alleged excess industrial capacity that could result in additional tariffs within months. Greer also initiated a similar investigation into alleged forced labor practices in 60 countries, including China, that could prohibit certain imports into the United States.

    These investigations aim to restore Trump’s tariff pressure on trading partners after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled Trump’s global tariffs under emergency law as illegal. This decision effectively lowered Trump’s tariffs on Chinese products by 20 percentage points, but he immediately implemented a 10% global tariff under different trade legislation.

    China condemned the investigations on Friday and stated it reserves the right to implement countermeasures. The China Daily editorial added that the investigations were “representative of unilateral actions that complicate negotiations.”

  • President Trump Seeks International Help for Key Oil Shipping Route Amid Iran Tensions

    President Trump Seeks International Help for Key Oil Shipping Route Amid Iran Tensions

    President Donald Trump is requesting that allied countries deploy naval vessels to protect the vital Strait of Hormuz shipping lane, while Iran promises to intensify its military response following recent U.S. airstrikes on Iranian energy infrastructure.

    The strategic waterway serves as a critical route for global oil and gas transportation, and Iran’s capability to halt maritime traffic through the passage creates substantial challenges for America and its partners as they confront rising energy costs amid unprecedented disruptions to oil supplies.

    “The Countries of the World that receive Oil through the Hormuz Strait must take care of that passage, and we will help — A LOT!” Trump posted on social media Saturday. “The U.S. will also coordinate with those Countries so that everything goes quickly, smoothly, and well.”

    As hostilities enter their third week, both nations seem prepared for prolonged warfare. Three individuals with knowledge of diplomatic efforts informed Reuters that Trump’s team has rejected attempts by Middle Eastern partners to initiate peace talks to resolve the conflict.

    Iran has maintained its defiant stance, dismissing any possibility of a ceasefire while American and Israeli aerial bombardments continue.

    Iranian military forces have maintained their offensive operations. A drone assault disrupted a significant United Arab Emirates energy facility Saturday, and American officials advised U.S. nationals Saturday to depart Iraq following a missile strike on the Baghdad embassy Friday night.

    The conflict began when Israel and America launched air campaigns against Iran on February 28, resulting in over 2,000 deaths, predominantly Iranian casualties, based on official government reports and state media accounts. At least 15 people died when an airstrike struck a refrigeration and heating equipment factory in Isfahan, central Iran, according to the semi-official Fars news agency Saturday.

    Iran instructed civilians in the UAE to evacuate ports, docks and “American hideouts,” claiming U.S. forces had launched attacks on Iran from those locations. The UAE rejected allegations that Friday night’s strikes on Iran’s Kharg island originated from UAE territory.

    Designating any facility connected to America as a “legitimate target,” Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps demanded all U.S. businesses withdraw from the region.

    Energy market disruptions appear likely to continue. Several oil-loading activities were halted in the UAE’s Fujairah emirate, an important global ship-refueling center, following a drone attack, according to industry and trade sources Saturday.

    The emirate’s media office confirmed a drone was intercepted, though civil defense teams were still working late Saturday to extinguish fires caused by falling wreckage.

    Trump remained at his Mar-a-Lago Florida resort over the weekend, maintaining a low public presence Saturday while posting updates on his Truth Social platform.

    In one message, the Republican president expressed hope that China, France, Japan, South Korea, Britain and other nations would dispatch warships to the Strait of Hormuz. None of these countries provided immediate confirmation of such plans.

    French officials stated Friday their government continues efforts to build a coalition for securing the Strait of Hormuz once regional security conditions improve.

    A British Ministry of Defence representative said Saturday: “As we’ve said previously, we are currently discussing with our allies and partners a range of options to ensure the security of shipping in the region.”

    Iranian Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei, who succeeded his deceased father, has declared the Strait of Hormuz should remain closed.

    Additionally, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi rejected claims from U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth suggesting Khamenei was injured and possibly disfigured. “There is no problem with the new supreme leader. He sent his message yesterday, and he will perform his duties,” Araqchi told MS Now.

    Khamenei has not made public appearances, instead releasing a Thursday statement read by a television presenter.

    Iran minimized damage reports from Kharg Island. America stated it targeted military rather than energy industry facilities on the island, located approximately 15 miles off Iran’s Gulf coastline.

    U.S. Central Command reported striking over 90 locations on Kharg, including naval mine storage areas, missile storage bunkers and additional military installations.

    Araqchi stated Iran would retaliate against any assault on its energy infrastructure. Iran’s Ministry of Defense announced Saturday that nine ballistic missiles and 33 drones were fired from Iran toward the UAE.

    Iran warned residents to evacuate areas near Dubai’s Jebel Ali port, Abu Dhabi’s Khalifa port and the UAE’s Fujairah port, stating it was targeting U.S. bank branches throughout the Gulf.

    Fujairah, positioned outside the Strait of Hormuz, serves as the export point for approximately 1 million barrels daily of the UAE’s Murban crude oil — representing roughly 1% of global demand.

  • Delaware State Falls to North Carolina Central 59-53 Despite Strong Defense

    Delaware State Falls to North Carolina Central 59-53 Despite Strong Defense

    Delaware State University’s men’s basketball squad came up short in a hard-fought battle against North Carolina Central, falling by a final score of 59-53 on Friday evening.

    The Hornets demonstrated strong defensive play throughout the contest but were ultimately unable to generate enough offensive production to secure the victory. Despite their defensive efforts keeping the game competitive, Delaware State could not find the scoring touch needed to overcome their opponents.

    The narrow six-point margin reflected the competitive nature of the matchup, with both teams battling throughout the game. The loss adds another chapter to Delaware State’s ongoing season as the Hornets continue to work on finding the right balance between their defensive intensity and offensive execution.

    Delaware State will look to bounce back from this setback as they continue their campaign, hoping to build on the positive defensive showing while addressing the offensive struggles that proved costly in this contest.

  • Romanian Pet Owners Showcase Creative Costumes at Annual Animal Expo

    Romanian Pet Owners Showcase Creative Costumes at Annual Animal Expo

    Animal enthusiasts in Romania’s capital city came together to celebrate their beloved companions at the 15th edition of the country’s premier pet industry exposition. The annual event in Bucharest featured a festive costume parade where pet owners showcased their creativity by outfitting their furry friends in elaborate and vibrant attire.

    The celebration brought together animal lovers from across the region for the colorful spectacle that has become a beloved tradition in Romania’s pet community.

  • Detroit’s Skubal Dominates in Spring Training Return, Tigers Beat Blue Jays 6-1

    Detroit’s Skubal Dominates in Spring Training Return, Tigers Beat Blue Jays 6-1

    Detroit Tigers pitcher Tarik Skubal made an impressive comeback to spring training action, striking out seven batters across 4 2/3 innings as his team dominated the Toronto Blue Jays 6-1 on Saturday in Dunedin, Florida.

    In his first appearance since representing Team USA against Great Britain in the World Baseball Classic earlier this week, Skubal gave up just three hits and one run while issuing no walks on 61 pitches. Tigers outfielder Matt Vierling contributed significantly to the offensive effort with two RBI doubles.

    Blue Jays veteran Max Scherzer delivered an equally strong performance, throwing four shutout innings while allowing only two singles and two walks with five strikeouts. Toronto’s Daulton Varsho managed to connect for a solo home run off Skubal in the fifth inning, while Riley Tirotta recorded two hits including a double.

    In other spring training action, Philadelphia rallied past the New York Yankees 4-6 in Tampa when Felix Reyes launched a decisive two-run homer in the ninth inning to break a deadlock. Justin Crawford scored twice and drove in one run for the Phillies, while Edmundo Sosa collected two hits. Philadelphia starter Bryse Wilson dominated early with three no-hit innings, improving the team’s spring record to 8-11-1.

    Yankees pitcher Max Fried worked 5 1/3 innings, surrendering five hits and three runs with four strikeouts. Braden Shewmake tied the game at 4-4 with an eighth-inning solo blast, and Jasson Dominguez had a productive day going 2-for-2 with a walk, run, RBI and stolen base.

    Pittsburgh overcame a two-run deficit when Marcell Ozuna delivered a three-run homer in the seventh inning, leading the Pirates to an 8-6 victory over Baltimore in Bradenton, Florida. Henry Davis and Billy Cook also went deep as Pittsburgh accumulated 12 hits, with Ryan O’Hearn and Nick Yorke each collecting two hits. Pirates starter Carmen Mlodzinski struck out five batters over five innings while giving up seven hits and two runs.

    Baltimore’s Adley Rutschman went 2-for-4 with a two-run homer, and Dylan Beavers added another two-run blast while going 2-for-3. The Orioles managed 13 hits despite the loss. Starting pitcher Trevor Rogers allowed four hits and two runs across four innings with three strikeouts and one walk.

    Miami’s split squad defeated Washington 4-1 in Palm Beach, powered by rookie catcher Bennett Hostetler’s two-run homer and two stolen bases. Marlins opener Cade Gibson recorded four strikeouts in 1 2/3 innings as seven Miami pitchers combined to limit the Nationals to four hits while striking out 13.

    Washington’s Brady House drove in their only run with a fifth-inning RBI double. Nationals starter Alex Clemmey pitched three hitless innings with one walk but was charged with two unearned runs after his team committed three errors in the third inning alone.

    St. Louis and Miami’s other split squad battled to a 7-7 tie in Jupiter, Florida, with Cardinals slugger Nolan Gorman hitting his third spring training home run. Cardinals starter Andre Pallante struck out four and walked three while allowing one run over five innings. Gorman, Jose Fermin and Nathan Church each contributed two hits for St. Louis.

    Miami’s Ryan Ignoffo homered in the eighth inning while going 2-for-2, and Ian Lewis and Yiddi Cappe each drove in two runs. Marlins starter Ryan Gusto gave up six hits and two runs in four innings of work.

  • FCC Chief Threatens TV Stations Over ‘Fake News’ After Trump Iran Coverage Criticism

    FCC Chief Threatens TV Stations Over ‘Fake News’ After Trump Iran Coverage Criticism

    Federal Communications Commission Chairman Brendan Carr escalated his ongoing battle with television broadcasters Saturday, warning stations they could face license revocation while amplifying President Donald Trump’s complaints about Iran war coverage.

    In a social media post on X, Carr declared that broadcasters distributing what he termed false information need to change their practices ahead of upcoming license renewal periods. His message included a screenshot from Trump’s earlier Truth Social post that criticized major news organizations including the New York Times and Wall Street Journal for what the president called poor reporting on the conflict involving the United States and Israel against Iran.

    “Broadcasters must operate in the public interest, and they will lose their licenses if they do not,” Carr stated in his warning.

    The FCC maintains authority over television and radio station licensing but does not have regulatory power over publications that operate solely through digital and print platforms, including the newspapers Trump mentioned in his criticism.

    This marks an expansion of Carr’s previous complaints, as Saturday represented the first instance where he connected his broadcasting concerns to coverage of military conflicts. The FCC chairman has consistently advocated for stricter enforcement of public interest requirements for stations that utilize public airwaves, claiming the commission has neglected this responsibility for many years.

    In his weekend statement, Carr referenced what he described as misleading information during the 2024 election cycle and declared that Americans have become distrustful of news media organizations.

    Trump has maintained a pattern of challenging news organizations when they publish content he views as unfavorable, previously advocating for the removal of broadcasting licenses from outlets he considers biased against him.

    The administration’s approach toward broadcasters has drawn opposition from Democratic officials and some Republican leaders, though Carr points to polling data showing declining public confidence in media as justification for his position.

  • Salisbury University Athletes Break Records at South Carolina Track Meet

    Salisbury University Athletes Break Records at South Carolina Track Meet

    CONWAY, S.C. – Salisbury University’s track and field athletes concluded their St. Patrick’s Day weekend competition on a high note, establishing new school records and delivering impressive performances during the final day of the Myrtle Beach Collegiate Challenge held at Doug Shaw Memorial Stadium.

    The Sea Gulls’ men’s and women’s teams showcased their talents throughout the two-day event, with several standout performances highlighting the weekend’s activities in South Carolina.

  • UMES Men’s Volleyball Loses Second Match Against Saint Francis

    UMES Men’s Volleyball Loses Second Match Against Saint Francis

    The University of Maryland Eastern Shore men’s volleyball squad experienced another setback in their second encounter with Saint Francis University.

    The Hawks were unable to overcome their opponents in this rematch, continuing their struggles against Saint Francis this season.

    Details about the specific match results and player performances were not immediately available for this latest contest between the two teams.

  • Hawks Softball Starts MEAC Conference Play with Two Losses to Howard

    Hawks Softball Starts MEAC Conference Play with Two Losses to Howard

    The University of Maryland Eastern Shore Hawks softball team faced a challenging start to their Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference schedule, falling in both games of a doubleheader against Howard University.

    The Hawks were unable to secure a victory in either contest as they opened MEAC competition, with Howard taking both ends of the twin bill.

    UMES will need to regroup quickly as they move forward in conference play, looking to turn things around after the disappointing start to their MEAC slate.

    The losses mark the beginning of what the Hawks hope will be a competitive conference season despite the early setback against Howard.

  • Teen Arrested After Allegedly Stabbing Rideshare Driver in Newark

    Teen Arrested After Allegedly Stabbing Rideshare Driver in Newark

    Newark law enforcement officials have taken a minor into custody following an early morning attack on a rideshare driver that left the victim hospitalized with stab wounds.

    The violent incident unfolded just after midnight on March 14, 2026, when Newark Police Department officers were dispatched to a business parking lot located on the 100 block of Grove Lane in response to reports of a stabbing.

    According to investigators, the victim was actively working as a rideshare driver when the assault occurred. Police have not released additional details about the circumstances leading up to the attack or the current condition of the injured driver.

    The juvenile suspect now faces attempted murder charges in connection with the stabbing. Authorities have not disclosed the age or identity of the accused due to their minor status.

    The investigation into this violent crime remains ongoing as Newark police work to piece together the events that led to the attack on the rideshare operator.

  • University of Delaware Softball Player Achieves Career Milestone Despite Team Loss

    University of Delaware Softball Player Achieves Career Milestone Despite Team Loss

    University of Delaware softball player Marlayna Capaldi celebrated a personal breakthrough during her team’s recent matchup against Louisiana Tech, connecting for her first career home run despite the Blue Hens falling short in the contest.

    The milestone moment marked a significant achievement for Capaldi in her collegiate softball career, providing a bright spot for the Delaware program even as they absorbed the loss to the Bulldogs.

    While the team result wasn’t what the Blue Hens hoped for, Capaldi’s historic swing represents the kind of individual progress that can build momentum for future games as the season continues.

  • Tampa Company Recalls Honey Products Containing Undisclosed Erectile Dysfunction Drugs

    Tampa Company Recalls Honey Products Containing Undisclosed Erectile Dysfunction Drugs

    A Tampa-based supplement manufacturer has launched a nationwide recall of honey-based products after federal testing discovered they contained unlisted erectile dysfunction medications.

    Pure Vitamins and Natural Supplements, LLC announced the voluntary recall on March 14, 2026, affecting three specific products: Boner Bear Honey, Red Bull Extreme, and Blue Bull Extreme.

    According to FDA laboratory testing, Boner Bear Honey was found to contain both sildenafil and tadalafil, while Red Bull Extreme and Blue Bull Extreme products contained sildenafil. These are the same active ingredients found in prescription medications like Viagra and Cialis.

    The presence of these undeclared pharmaceutical ingredients poses serious health risks, particularly for individuals taking nitrate medications or those with cardiovascular conditions, as dangerous interactions could occur.

    Consumers who have purchased any of these products are advised to stop using them immediately and consult with their healthcare provider if they have experienced any adverse reactions.

  • Drone Strikes on Tehran Security Posts Trigger Widespread Fear Among Iranian Forces

    Drone Strikes on Tehran Security Posts Trigger Widespread Fear Among Iranian Forces

    Fear has gripped Iranian security forces as drone strikes targeting military checkpoints throughout Tehran have escalated, according to a leaked audio recording from a Basij militia commander obtained by The Media Line.

    The recording, shared on the Telegram channel Mamlekateh, captures a commander addressing his troops through a messaging platform used by forces in one Tehran district. The commander can be heard instructing his personnel to remain calm during drone attacks and not to desert their positions.

    A Tehran resident reports that growing numbers of Basij members have stopped showing up for duty in recent days due to fears of becoming targets.

    The commander in the audio identifies the aircraft used in one checkpoint attack as a Heron TP drone, explaining it can fly continuously over Tehran for 16 hours and deploy eight cluster-operating missiles. He explains that with fewer traditional military targets available for fighter jets, drones are now being used to target military personnel in the capital.

    According to the recording, aircraft are also being utilized to locate gathering spots for military personnel, with large concentrations of mobile phones helping to reveal their positions.

    The commander instructs forces stationed in schools, mosques, and other civilian buildings to immediately turn off their phones when they hear drone sounds, evacuate their posts, and relocate to nearby positions where they can engage any “armed individuals” while avoiding potential missile strikes.

    “They are clearing the way so that by creating fear and terror they can move operational teams across the city to the intended areas,” the commander states in the recording, urging his forces to manage their anxiety and “not be scared for no reason.” He notes that Basij personnel are constantly scanning the skies in anticipation of air strikes, despite no ground-based attacks occurring.

    Recent days have seen the Israeli military release multiple videos showing strikes against Revolutionary Guards and Basij personnel at security checkpoints, with additional footage appearing on various Telegram channels. These attacks have created significant anxiety among Basij members.

    A southern Tehran resident told The Media Line that a family member who had been stationed at a neighborhood checkpoint – which locals refer to as a “trap” – shut off his phone yesterday and fled to northern Iran. When Basij officials called asking about his absence, the family claimed they had no knowledge of his whereabouts.

    These developments coincide with Friday’s Quds Day demonstration, where several high-ranking officials participated, including President Masoud Pezeshkian, who appeared to move through the crowd with minimal visible security protection.

    State television labeled Pezeshkian as “brave” in on-screen text, while his security detail maintained distance, many positioning themselves behind television cameras with weapons at the ready.

    During Chief Justice Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Ejei’s rally appearance, an explosion occurred in the vicinity, prompting both uniformed and plainclothes security personnel to quickly escort him from the area while the event was being televised. State media also confirmed that explosive debris killed a woman near Enghelab Square in central Tehran during the Quds Day gathering.

    Combined Israeli and US operations targeting Tehran locations have significantly intensified over recent nights, with massive explosions reported throughout most areas of the Iranian capital, particularly in eastern and western districts, as well as in Karaj, continuing around the clock.

    As bombing continued and electrical power was disrupted in sections of the city, an eastern Tehran resident informed The Media Line on Friday evening that all VPN access had been blocked since morning, and satellite television channels – residents’ primary source for war updates – had been jammed, leaving people unaware for hours of US and Israeli warnings about targeted areas.

    On Thursday evening, Vice President Mohammad Reza Aref made visits to multiple checkpoints to encourage military personnel and took photographs with the forces.

    Following the announcement of Ali Khamenei’s death, the former Islamic Republic leader, civilians took to the streets in celebration, prompting Basij and IRGC forces to open fire in several incidents, resulting in multiple civilian deaths.

    In recent days, Iranian authorities have positioned military units throughout city streets in vehicles mounted with machine guns, openly threatening demonstrators and warning that any public protests will face suppression more severe than the violent crackdown in January.

    Social media users reported additional checkpoint attacks in Tehran and other cities, including Karaj, on Friday evening.

  • Salisbury University Athletes Claim Multiple All-American Honors at National Meet

    Salisbury University Athletes Claim Multiple All-American Honors at National Meet

    BIRMINGHAM, Alabama – Salisbury University’s track and field athletes delivered exceptional performances at the Division III Indoor National Championships, with several team members securing coveted All-American status.

    The Sea Gulls concluded their competition at the Birmingham Crossplex with multiple athletes achieving the prestigious honor that recognizes the nation’s top collegiate performers in their respective events.

    The national championships represent the pinnacle of Division III indoor track and field competition, bringing together the country’s elite student-athletes to compete for individual and team honors.

  • Blue Hens Baseball Squad Defeated by Louisiana Tech

    Blue Hens Baseball Squad Defeated by Louisiana Tech

    The University of Delaware baseball team experienced a setback in their recent contest against Louisiana Tech, falling to their opponents in what proved to be a challenging game for the Blue Hens.

    The loss marks another chapter in Delaware’s ongoing season as the team works to build momentum and improve their performance on the diamond. The Blue Hens will look to regroup and refocus as they prepare for upcoming games in their schedule.

    Delaware’s baseball program continues to compete at a high level as they face various opponents throughout the season, working to develop their skills and team chemistry under pressure situations.

  • Hawks Fall 6-0 to Stonehill Despite Strong Pitching Performance

    Hawks Fall 6-0 to Stonehill Despite Strong Pitching Performance

    The Hawks dropped their second contest of the series against Stonehill, falling 6-0 despite a strong pitching effort from Richard De Jesus.

    De Jesus took the mound for seven innings in what proved to be a solid outing for the Hawks starter, though his team was unable to provide the offensive support needed to secure a victory.

    The defeat marks the second loss of the series for the Hawks as they continue to face challenges against the Skyhawks.

    Despite De Jesus’s quality start on the mound, the Hawks offense struggled to generate runs throughout the contest, ultimately being shut out by Stonehill’s pitching staff.

  • Volatile Severe Weather Setup Possible Across the Mid-Atlantic Monday

    Volatile Severe Weather Setup Possible Across the Mid-Atlantic Monday

    A rapidly strengthening storm system is expected to bring the potential for strong to severe thunderstorms across portions of the Mid-Atlantic on Monday, including parts of Maryland, Delaware, and Virginia.

    We are closely watching the evolving setup, which could lead to a volatile day of severe weather across the eastern United States, particularly from the Carolinas northward into the Mid-Atlantic.

    The storm system will begin organizing this weekend as low pressure develops on the eastern side of the Rocky Mountains. As the system strengthens and lifts northeast toward the Great Lakes, the upper-level trough associated with it is expected to turn negatively tilted, a configuration that often signals a strengthening storm system.

    By Monday morning, a warm front is forecast to lift north through the Mid-Atlantic, placing much of the region into the warm sector of the storm. This will allow warmer temperatures and increasing humidity to spread northward, with dew points rising into the 60s as southerly winds transport a deep plume of moisture into the region.

    At the same time, the atmosphere will become increasingly dynamic. Forecast guidance shows strong height falls aloft and a powerful upper-level jet stream positioned over the Mid-Atlantic. These ingredients will help promote rising motion in the atmosphere and the development of thunderstorms.

    While atmospheric instability may be somewhat limited due to cloud cover and early-day showers, the strength of the wind fields and large-scale dynamics could compensate for that limitation. Strong low-level wind shear ahead of the approaching cold front may allow thunderstorms to organize quickly Monday afternoon and evening.

    The primary threat with these storms will be strong to damaging wind gusts, though a few tornadoes cannot be ruled out, especially if individual storms are able to form ahead of the main line of convection.

    Scattered to widespread severe storms are possible across the Southeast and Mid-Atlantic on Monday. The corridor with the greatest potential for more significant severe weather currently appears to extend from South Carolina northward into Maryland, placing parts of the Mid-Atlantic near the northern edge of the higher-risk zone.

    SPC Forecasters also note that this could become a very volatile severe weather day, and portions of the region from South Carolina to Maryland may even warrant an upgrade to a Level 4 Moderate Risk in later outlooks if confidence increases in the severe storm setup.

    Storm modes could include a mix of discrete supercells ahead of the front as well as a fast-moving squall line. Embedded circulations within the line could enhance the tornado threat as storms move east toward the coastal plain.

    In addition to the severe weather threat, the system will also bring the potential for periods of heavy rainfall. Precipitable water values are forecast to climb between 1.1 and 1.4 inches, which is above the 90th percentile for early March. While widespread flooding is not currently expected, locally heavy rain could lead to quick rises on small streams and rivers.

    We will continue to refine the forecast in the coming days as the timing of the cold front and the amount of daytime heating become clearer. These factors will play a key role in determining how intense the storms become.

    Residents across the Mid-Atlantic should stay weather aware on Monday and be prepared for the possibility of rapidly changing weather conditions during the afternoon and evening hours.

  • A’s Catcher Shea Langeliers Goes Deep Three Times in Spring Training Matchup

    A’s Catcher Shea Langeliers Goes Deep Three Times in Spring Training Matchup

    MESA, Ariz. — Oakland Athletics backstop Shea Langeliers put on a power display during Saturday’s spring training contest, launching three home runs in as many trips to the plate against Kansas City.

    The catcher was removed from the game following the fifth inning, but not before connecting for three solo blasts that helped Oakland build a commanding 5-0 advantage. Kansas City starter Ryan Bergert surrendered all three long balls to Langeliers.

    The 28-year-old slugger started his impressive afternoon by sending a ball over the left field wall in the opening frame, followed by a center field shot in the third inning, and capped off his performance with another drive to center field during the fourth inning.

    During the previous season, Langeliers established a personal best with 31 home runs across 123 contests for Oakland. The catcher has accomplished the three-homer feat twice during regular season play — once on April 9, 2024, in a game at Texas, and again on Aug. 5, 2025, during a contest at Washington.

  • Billionaire Tilman Fertitta Eyes $6.5B Purchase of Caesars Entertainment

    Billionaire Tilman Fertitta Eyes $6.5B Purchase of Caesars Entertainment

    Entertainment industry billionaire Tilman Fertitta is reportedly pursuing an acquisition of casino operator Caesars Entertainment through his company Fertitta Entertainment, according to a Saturday report from CNBC.

    Sources familiar with the discussions told the network that negotiations are underway for a deal valued at $6.5 billion in equity, with Caesars shares priced at $32 each in the proposed transaction.

    The March 14 report has not been independently confirmed by other news organizations at this time.

    Fertitta, known for his ownership of the Houston Rockets NBA team and Golden Nugget casinos, would be adding one of the gaming industry’s major players to his entertainment portfolio if the deal moves forward.

  • Florida GOP Group Shuts Down University Chapter Over Antisemitic Behavior

    Florida GOP Group Shuts Down University Chapter Over Antisemitic Behavior

    The Florida Federation of College Republicans has shut down its University of Florida chapter after an internal probe revealed antisemitic behavior among members, the university announced Saturday.

    University officials said the state Republican federation conducted its own investigation which found a “pattern of conduct that violated its rules and values, including a recent antisemitic gesture.” Based on these findings, the federation requested that the university deactivate the campus chapter while they attempt to rebuild the organization under new leadership.

    In a statement posted on social media, the university emphasized its dedication to “preventing and addressing antisemitism and other forms of discrimination and harassment” that pose threats to campus life. School officials indicated they would assist in reestablishing the Republican chapter once it undergoes reorganization.

    The Florida Federation of College Republicans has not responded to requests for comment regarding the dissolution.

    This marks the second incident of antisemitic conduct involving conservative student organizations at Florida universities this month. Earlier in March, Florida International University announced that law enforcement was investigating reports of racist, antisemitic, and homophobic messages shared in an online group chat involving local Republican Party figures and conservative student activists.

    According to the Miami Herald, leaked WhatsApp conversations showed participants included notable local GOP officials and student leaders from FIU’s Turning Point USA chapter, a conservative youth organization founded by activist Charlie Kirk.

  • Kim Jong Un Supervises Rocket Launcher Test as Tensions Rise

    Kim Jong Un Supervises Rocket Launcher Test as Tensions Rise

    North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un personally supervised his military’s testing of powerful rocket launchers on Saturday, according to the country’s state-controlled media.

    The weapons test involved 600mm-caliber multiple rocket launchers that successfully struck targets on an island in the East Sea, North Korea’s official KCNA news agency reported.

    “The launched rockets battered the island target in the East Sea of Korea about 364.4 km away with the accuracy of 100 percent,” KCNA said.

    South Korean military officials confirmed that North Korea fired more than 10 ballistic missiles into the ocean on Saturday. The launch occurred while American and South Korean forces were conducting joint military exercises, and as former President Donald Trump has made new attempts to restart diplomatic talks with the North Korean regime.

    According to South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff, the missiles were fired from a location near North Korea’s capital city of Pyongyang at approximately 1:20 p.m. local time. The projectiles were aimed toward waters off the nation’s eastern coastline.

  • UMBC Claims America East Championship, Secures NCAA Tournament Spot

    UMBC Claims America East Championship, Secures NCAA Tournament Spot

    The University of Maryland, Baltimore County basketball team punched their ticket to March Madness on Saturday, defeating Vermont 74-59 in Baltimore to claim the America East Conference championship.

    Leading scorer DJ Armstrong Jr. put on a spectacular performance, netting 33 points to power the top-seeded Retrievers to their first conference tournament championship since 2018. The victory guarantees UMBC an automatic spot in the upcoming NCAA Tournament.

    The Retrievers (24-8) dominated the second half, outscoring their opponents 44-31 and closing the game with an impressive 26-8 scoring surge. This marks the third conference tournament championship in the program’s history.

    Armstrong Jr. delivered an outstanding shooting display, connecting on 9 of 11 field goal attempts and sinking a championship game record seven shots from beyond the arc. His exceptional performance throughout the tournament earned him Most Outstanding Player recognition, averaging 17.6 points while shooting an impressive 64% from the field.

    Supporting Armstrong Jr.’s heroics, Jose Roberto Tanchyn controlled the boards with 10 rebounds, while Ace Valentine contributed 13 points for UMBC, which has now won 12 consecutive games.

    At halftime, the Retrievers held a narrow 30-28 advantage over Vermont (22-12). The Catamounts received their strongest offensive contribution from bench player TJ Long, who scored 17 points, while Gus Yalden and TJ Hurley each added 11 points.

    In other conference championship action, Howard University captured the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference title with a 70-63 victory over North Carolina Central in Norfolk, Virginia. Bryce Harris recorded a double-double with 14 points and 10 rebounds, while Cedric Taylor III added 13 points and 12 rebounds for the top-seeded Bison (23-10). Howard has now won eight straight games and will make their fourth NCAA Tournament appearance, having last participated in 2024. North Carolina Central’s Dionte Johnson led the Eagles (14-18) with 14 points in the losing effort.

  • Blue Hens Tennis Team Suffers 5-2 Defeat Against Saint Joseph’s Hawks

    Blue Hens Tennis Team Suffers 5-2 Defeat Against Saint Joseph’s Hawks

    The University of Delaware men’s tennis team experienced a tough defeat on Friday, falling to Saint Joseph’s University by a score of 5-2.

    The Blue Hens were unable to overcome the visiting Hawks despite competing on their home courts. The match result represents another setback for Delaware’s tennis program as they work through a difficult season.

    Saint Joseph’s dominated the competition, claiming five of the seven total points available in the dual match format. The Blue Hens managed to secure two points but could not mount enough wins to challenge for the overall victory.

    The defeat adds to the challenges facing the Delaware tennis squad as they continue their season schedule. The team will look to regroup and prepare for upcoming matches as they seek to build momentum moving forward.