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The folly of ‘unconditional surrender’: Fukuyama, ‘The End of History’ author, on why Iran won’t yield to Washington

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The folly of ‘unconditional surrender’: Fukuyama, ‘The End of History’ author, on why Iran won’t yield to Washington
US President Donald Trump said there would be no agreement with Iran unless Tehran accepts what he described as “unconditional surrender”, outlining a hardline position on the future of the Iranian leadership and the country’s political direction.

Grand phrases have a way of sounding decisive in wartime. “Unconditional surrender” is one of them. It carries the echo of 1945, of emperors capitulating and wars ending cleanly on the deck of a battleship. The phrase has resurfaced in Washington’s demands toward Tehran, but political scientist Francis Fukuyama has met it with skepticism. Among other problems, he notes, it assumes a coherent political order capable of surrender, something that simply does not exist in Iran, and perhaps never did.

The problem with demanding surrender

Donald Trump recently demanded Iran’s “UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER”, promising that the country would later be rebuilt into something “economically bigger, better, and stronger than ever before” under new and “acceptable” leadership. In a high‑profile social media message, he even riffed on his own political brand with the slogan “Make Iran Great Again,” a play on Make America Great Again that projected confidence in military force and the idea of remaking another state in Washington’s image. The declaration raised an obvious question: what exactly is this war meant to achieve?The misplaced confidence behind “unconditional surrender” is easier to understand in light of the administration’s recent success in Venezuela, where a swift operation captured President Nicolás Maduro. It was the kind of clean, decisive outcome that can encourage faith in the simple power of force. When Donald Trump later joined Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in launching strikes on Iran, he seemed to be hoping for something similar, a short campaign ending in quick capitulation. Instead, the war spread across the Middle East, with Iran firing missiles and drones at American allies and bases around the Persian Gulf. It quickly became clear that what remained of the Iranian leadership was not about to surrender, and that the conflict could stretch on for weeks.Which leaves a deeper uncertainty at the heart of the war itself. Is the aim to dismantle Iran’s nuclear programme, topple its leadership, reassure American allies, or somehow reshape Iranian society? Or is it something more ambitious, a civilisational project framed in the language of democracy? Trump has avoided the phrase “regime change”, a political reflex learned from two decades of American misadventures in the Middle East. Yet his own words largely spell it out: talk of “acceptable” new leadership, promises to rebuild Iran after victory, the suggestion that the country’s future begins once its current rulers disappear. Which leaves the war explained through a shifting mix of purposes, nuclear containment one day, liberation the next.And that uncertainty lies at the centre of why the idea of unconditional surrender is so unrealistic.

The misplaced confidence behind “unconditional surrender”

Political scientist Francis Fukuyama, best known forThe End of History and the Last Man, where he argued that liberal democracy had largely won the battle of ideologies, approaches the situation with a characteristically pragmatic lens. In his view, wars like this require clearly limited objectives rather than sweeping declarations. Normally, a careful leader in such circumstances would lower expectations and define an achievable aim, degrading much of Iran’s ability to strike targets with ballistic missiles and drones, for example, creating a plausible moment to declare victory and disengage. Instead, Trump moved in the opposite direction. According to him, the new objective of “unconditional surrender” suddenly raises the goalposts to an almost unreachable height.Fukuyama’s critique begins with something more prosaic: how power actually works inside the Iranian state.The demand for unconditional surrender assumes a government that can instruct its armed forces to lay down their weapons in a single decisive moment, the way Japan’s emperor did at the end of the Second World War. Iran does not function like that. Its security apparatus is split among multiple institutions, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, the Basij militia and the regular armed forces, each with its own networks and loyalties. After US and Israeli strikes targeted senior commanders, the command structure has become even less coherent.

US and Israel Wipe Out Key Iranian Leaders

US and Israel Wipe Out Key Iranian Leaders

In those circumstances, expecting a clean capitulation is wishful thinking. “Iran’s forces — the IRGC, Basij, and the regular military, are highly decentralised,” Fukuyama observed, noting that with leadership disrupted it is not even clear that a single hierarchy remains capable of enforcing surrender. More importantly, surrender would threaten the regime’s survival. Iran’s clerical government maintains power largely through force. Large sections of the population resent it deeply, particularly after violent crackdowns on protest movements. The armed groups that sustain the regime understand that laying down their weapons would likely mean the end of their own political protection. “The IRGC and Basij will not give up their weapons,” Fukuyama wrote, “because they themselves would not survive.”

Canada Iran Protest

Protesters burn pictures of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei as they march in support of regime change in Iran during a protest in Toronto, on Sunday, Feb. 1, 2026. (Sammy Kogan/The Canadian Press via AP)

In other words, the conflict is unlikely to end through the kind of formal capitulation Washington appears to expect. For the Iranian regime, surrender would not simply mean military defeat; it would almost certainly mean political extinction. The institutions that sustain the state, particularly the Revolutionary Guard and the Basij, understand this clearly. They have every incentive to keep fighting, even in degraded form.

The limits of bombing a country into submission

The final problem, Fukuyama argues, is historical.The belief that air power alone can force a political surrender has repeatedly proven misguided. During the Second World War the United States and Britain flattened German cities in the hope that devastation would break the Nazi government’s will. It did not. The regime collapsed only after Soviet and Allied forces physically occupied the country. A more recent example lies in Gaza. After years of bombardment and large-scale Israeli ground operations, much of the territory’s infrastructure has been destroyed and Hamas severely weakened. Yet the group persists in tunnels and shelters, still capable of obstructing any effort to rebuild Gaza and establish a stable post-conflict government. There are only two cases Fukuyama can identify where bombing by itself produced a decisive political outcome. One was Japan in 1945, when the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki convinced the emperor that further resistance was futile. The other was Serbia during NATO’s 1999 campaign over Kosovo, and even there the bombing campaign triggered domestic unrest that helped topple Slobodan Milošević, followed by a long-term NATO presence on the ground. Iran presents a far more complicated challenge. It is geographically vast, politically resilient and capable of absorbing losses while continuing to retaliate. Even if air strikes destroy much of its visible military infrastructure, missile launchers, drone bases, ammunition depots, thousands of fighters remain capable of continuing the fight. As Fukuyama puts it, “the tens of thousands of individual fighters are still there, and will retain some residual capacity to fight back.”

“Unconditional Surrender” in Iran is a fool’s errand.

That means the conflict is unlikely to end with a dramatic capitulation. What is far more likely is a drawn-out cycle of retaliation, with drones and missiles targeting US allies and military facilities across the Gulf.

The uncomfortable return of old debates

To understand the strange logic of the current war, it helps to revisit an argument that hovered over Western foreign policy after the Cold War.When Francis Fukuyama published The End of History and the Last Man in 1992, he was trying to capture the moment that followed the Cold War. Fascism had been defeated and Soviet communism had collapsed. Liberal democracy, tied to capitalism, open markets and representative institutions, appeared to stand alone. Fukuyama suggested the world might be approaching “the end-point of mankind’s ideological evolution and the universalisation of Western liberal democracy as the final form of human government.”

Fukuyama

Fukuyama argued after the Cold War that liberal democracy might represent the final stage of ideological evolution.

The phrase was widely misunderstood. Fukuyama was not predicting the end of conflict or political struggle. His claim was narrower: no competing ideology seemed capable of organising modern societies with the same durability. Even if authoritarian systems returned, he believed the long-term trajectory still pointed toward democratic governance becoming more prevalent over time.For policymakers in Washington and Europe, the argument carried practical implications. If democracies rarely fight one another, the proposition at the heart of Democratic Peace Theory, then encouraging the spread of democratic institutions could be framed as both strategy and principle. The logic was appealingly tidy: political liberalisation would encourage economic openness, economic openness would generate prosperity, and prosperous democracies would behave as stable partners rather than adversaries. Expand the liberal order, and the world should gradually become less violent. You can hear the echo of that thinking in the way Donald Trump talks about Iran today. His promise that the country will become “economically bigger, better, and stronger than ever before” once it accepts “acceptable” leadership rests on the same underlying assumption: remove the existing regime, plug the country into global markets, and stability will eventually follow. But that story was never universally accepted. The most influential critic was Samuel P. Huntington, who argued that the world was not converging around liberal democracy at all. The ideological battles of the twentieth century, he believed, were giving way to something older and more stubborn: civilisation. In Huntington’s view, future conflicts would run along cultural and religious lines, Western, Islamic, Sinic, Orthodox, Hindu, as societies defended historical identities rather than adopting a single political model. Another critique arrived from Benjamin Barber, who described the tension between two forces reshaping the world. “McWorld” was his shorthand for the expanding machinery of globalisation: integrated markets, multinational corporations, financial networks and the technological web that ties them together. “Jihad,” in Barber’s formulation, referred not narrowly to islamic militancy but to the backlash such forces provoke, communities rallying around tribe, religion, nation or culture to defend themselves against what they perceive as a homogenising global order. McWorld flattens; Jihad resists. Neither force, Barber argued, necessarily strengthened democracy. Three decades later, those arguments feel less theoretical. China has risen through a hybrid system that mixes one-party political control with the dynamism of market capitalism rather than adopting Western democracy. Russia increasingly defines itself through Orthodox identity and an autocratic state that presents itself as the defender of civilisational continuity. India’s ascent is often narrated through a rediscovery of civilisational identity rather than through imitation of Western political templates. And across parts of the Islamic world, political rhetoric frequently invokes cultural authenticity, historical continuity, and in some cases explicitly theocratic visions of governance, rather than ideological convergence with the liberal order.

Russia China

Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks with Chinese President Xi Jinping via videoconference at the Kremlin in Moscow, Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2026. (Vyacheslav Prokofyev/Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP)

In other words, the world did not converge quite the way many policymakers once expected. It diversified, hardened and, in many places, pushed back. Iran represents one of the clearest examples of that resistance. The Islamic Republic was born in a revolution that cast the United States not merely as a geopolitical rival but as the centre of a global system that sought to remake other societies in its own image while binding them into an economic order designed in Washington, London and New York. Tehran’s leaders have spent decades describing themselves as an “axis of resistance” to precisely that arrangement, rejecting not only American foreign policy but the political and economic model that accompanies it. From Tehran’s perspective, this is not stubbornness. It is the regime’s founding logic. The state was designed to resist absorption into the Western order, not to negotiate the terms of joining it. That is why demands for unconditional surrender misunderstand the terrain almost as thoroughly as they misunderstand the military balance.

The Latest: Trump calls for Iran’s ‘unconditional surrender’ as Israel strikes Lebanon

Mourners reach out to coffins during a funeral for people killed during the ongoing U.S.–Israeli military campaign in Qom, Iran, Thursday, March 5, 2026. (Seyyed Mehdi Alavi/ISNA via AP)

And there’s another complication Washington rarely admits: its own track record. The United States often wraps its interventions in the language of liberty, freedom, and democracy, noble ideals that sound convincing on paper. In practice, the motives are far less lofty: securing resources, asserting control, and expanding American influence. That control isn’t just about soldiers and bombs. It shows up in sanctions, pressure on trade and energy networks, influence over central banking and financial systems, and the installation of governments willing to play by Washington’s rules. Time and again, the story of promoting democracy has been inseparable from the story of preserving power. The result is a paradox that sits at the centre of the present conflict. Washington believes it is offering Iran a better system, democracy, markets, integration into the global economy. Tehran believes it is being asked to surrender its sovereignty, its ideology and ultimately its identity. And governments built around identity rarely capitulate simply because they are told the alternative will be better.

A slogan without a strategy

If, as Fukuyama expects, the Iranian regime does not capitulate, the United States faces three unappealing options. It could step back after degrading Iran’s military capabilities, leaving a weakened but still dangerous Islamic Republic in place. It could escalate by sending in ground forces, a move fraught with both military and political risks. Or it could expand the bombing campaign to civilian infrastructure, power grids, desalination plants, transportation networks, inflicting suffering on the very population the United States claims it is trying to protect or liberate.None of these paths matches the dramatic clarity suggested by the phrase “unconditional surrender.” As Fukuyama notes, the words may simply have appealed to the president without much thought about how they could backfire.“I’m tempted to believe,” he wrote, “that Trump just liked the sound of the words, without thinking through the ways in which they could come back to haunt him.”More fundamentally, the war was entered without a clear objective: the United States can degrade Iran’s capabilities, he concludes, but it cannot easily end the Islamic Republic, or control what comes after.History, it seems, was never going to end so neatly

Iran warns: Evacuate ports, terminals in Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Fujairah; claims that “American hideouts” in the UAE emirate were “used” to attack the oil center Khag Island during the war with the United States and Israel

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Iran warns: Evacuate ports, terminals in Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Fujairah; claims that
Iran warns UAE ports: Escalating Gulf conflict threatens global trade amid US-Israeli war

The war between Iran, the United States and Israel has entered a dangerous new phase, with tensions spreading across the Gulf and threatening some of the region’s most important economic centers. The situation escalated sharply as Iranian authorities urged residents to evacuate facilities in several major UAE ports, including Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Fujairah.Tehran claims the ports are used as “ports, terminals and hideouts” for U.S. forces allegedly involved in recent attacks on Iran’s oil infrastructure. Iranian media specifically listed the ports of Jebel Ali, Khalifa and Fujairah as potential targets and warned civilians to leave nearby areas immediately.The unprecedented warning marked the first time Iran has publicly threatened key infrastructure in the United Arab Emirates, a key economic hub in the Gulf and a long-term strategic partner of Western countries. With reports of drone strikes, missile interceptions and fires near oil facilities in the region, the threat has heightened concerns that the conflict could expand beyond Iran and Israel, potentially destabilizing global energy markets and vital trade routes in the Gulf.

Iran warning shocks entire Gulf region

Iran’s evacuation warning comes as tensions rise as the United States attacks Khargah Island, Iran’s main oil export terminal. Tehran has accused Washington of using Emirati facilities to carry out the attack, but has provided no evidence to support the claim. Iranian officials have warned that locations with ties to the United States, including ports and logistics centers, could become legitimate targets for retaliation. Residents and workers near the UAE’s three main ports were urged to leave the area as the facilities “could be targeted in the coming hours,” Iranian state media reported.The warning has alarmed the entire region, as the ports are not only vital to the UAE economy but also play a central role in global trade and energy supply chains.

Why Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Fujairah ports are important

  1. port jebel ali middle EastBusiest hubs: Jebel Ali Port, located in Dubai, is the largest and busiest port in the Middle East and one of the most important shipping hubs in the world. The port, operated by global logistics giant DP World, handles millions of containers every year and is a gateway for trade in the Gulf, Africa and South Asia. Due to Jebel Ali’s strategic role in global logistics, any threat to Jebel Ali could disrupt supply chains beyond the region.
  2. Khalifa Port is Abu Dhabi’s growing trade gateway: Abu Dhabi’s Khalifa Port is a major deep-water port designed to expand the UAE’s maritime trade capabilities. It is part of the Khalifa Industrial Zone, a rapidly expanding logistics and manufacturing hub aimed at diversifying the UAE economy beyond oil. The port handles large container traffic and connects the UAE to global shipping networks, making it another important node for regional trade.
  3. Fujairah, one of the world’s most important oil storage centers: The Port of Fujairah is probably the most strategically sensitive of the three. Unlike other Gulf ports, Fujairah is located outside the Gulf Strait of HormuzThe narrow maritime chokepoint through which about one-fifth of the world’s oil supplies pass. This location makes Fujairah vital to energy security because it allows the UAE to export oil without sending tankers through the strait. The port handles about 1 million barrels of crude oil per day and accounts for about 1% of global oil demand. Recent reports indicate that some oil loading operations in Fujairah were temporarily halted after drone interceptions caused debris to ignite fires near energy facilities. Although authorities said there were no casualties, the incident highlighted how vulnerable the Gulf region’s energy infrastructure has become amid escalating conflicts.

Drone strikes and missile interceptions in the Gulf during the Iran-U.S.-Israel war

The evacuation warning comes as the Gulf region witnesses a series of drone and missile incidents linked to the expanding conflict. Entire region:

  • Several Iranian drones and missiles were reportedly intercepted by Gulf air defense systems.
  • Debris from aerial interceptions fell in urban areas.
  • A fire has been reported near an oil storage facility in Fujairah.
  • Some oil operations have been temporarily halted due to safety concerns.

The attacks are part of a broader escalation in U.S. and Israeli military operations targeting Iranian facilities. Iran responded by launching missile and drone strikes in the region while warning countries hosting U.S. troops that they could face retaliation.

Iran’s Khag Island attack raises threats

The current crisis has intensified after the United States attacked military installations near Khag Island, Iran’s most important oil export hub. Khag Island handles approximately 90% of Iran’s oil exports, making it one of the most strategic energy facilities in the world. U.S. officials said the attacks targeted military sites, but Iran interpreted them as an attack on its economic vitality. In response, Tehran warned that it could attack U.S.-related infrastructure across the region. This includes not only military bases but also ports, logistics facilities and companies believed to support U.S. operations.The U.S.-backed war between Iran and Israel began rapidly escalating in late February following a series of attacks. Within weeks, the conflict spread across multiple fronts, including missile exchanges between Iran and Israel, drone strikes in the Gulf, attacks on energy infrastructure and cyberattacks on regional systems.According to international reports, thousands of people have been killed or injured in Iran since the conflict began. As the war enters its third week, analysts fear the region may be on the brink of a larger confrontation.

Strait of Hormuz: The world’s most dangerous chokepoint in the war between Iran and the United States and Israel

Another reason the situation is so dangerous is the conflict’s proximity to the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most important waterways. The strait connects the Persian Gulf to the Arabian Sea and carries significant oil and gas shipments from:

  • Saudi Arabia
  • United Arab Emirates
  • Kuwait
  • Iraq
  • Qatar.

Since about 20% of the world’s oil supplies pass through this narrow waterway, any disruption could cause global energy prices to spike. Global markets are already showing signs of panic, with oil prices surging amid fears of supply disruptions.

How the UAE and global markets are responding to Iran and the US-Israel war

The UAE has not publicly confirmed Iran’s claims that US forces launched the attack from Emirati territory. However, as tensions escalate, authorities have taken a number of precautionary measures.These include:

  • Residents urged to report intercepted missile or drone debris
  • Improve the security of critical infrastructure
  • Strengthen controls on social media misinformation related to attacks.
  • Energy companies operating in the region are also watching developments closely.

Even temporary disruptions to Gulf ports could have far-reaching consequences for global shipping, oil markets and international trade.

Will Gulf cities become targets in a war between Iran and the United States and Israel?

Iran’s warning raised concerns that major cities such as Dubai and Abu Dhabi could be targeted if the conflict escalates further. However, analysts pointed out that a direct attack on the Gulf states could trigger a broader regional war involving multiple countries. Despite hosting U.S. military bases and maintaining close economic ties with Western allies, most Gulf governments have tried to avoid becoming involved in the conflict. Still, the latest threat highlights how easily war can spread beyond its original front lines. Currently, the situation remains fluid and unpredictable. Military analysts say several scenarios are likely to unfold in the coming days, including an escalation of drone and missile attacks in the Gulf, further attacks on energy infrastructure or shipping routes, an international naval deployment to secure oil routes and diplomatic efforts to prevent a broader regional war. Much will depend on whether Iran threatens Emirati ports and how regional governments respond.Evacuation warnings for the ports of Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Fujairah are a stark reminder of how quickly geopolitical conflicts can threaten the world’s most important economic centers. Gulf cities like Dubai have thrived for decades on stability, global trade and international investment, but as Iran’s conflict with the United States and Israel deepens, the region now faces one of its most serious security challenges in years. If tensions continue to escalate, the impact could extend beyond the Middle East and ripple across global energy markets, shipping routes and financial systems.

Park City bomb threat: Egyptian Theater threatened, Main Street buildings evacuated; first details

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Park City bomb threat Utahmandatory evacuation on Saturday. According to local reports, the Egyptian Theater at 328 Main St was threatened, causing the building on Main Street to be evacuated.

The Park City Police Department and Park City Fire Department are responding to a bomb threat. (Facebook/Sean Mason)
The Park City Police Department and Park City Fire Department are responding to a bomb threat. (Facebook/Sean Mason)

Park City Police and the Park City Fire District were responding and traffic was blocked at the top of Sweden Lane and Main Street.

ALSO READ | Did Trump Cabinet Members Buy Bunkers During the Iran Conflict? Housing company claims surge

The public is asked to avoid the area while the investigation is ongoing.

Meanwhile, pedestrian and vehicular traffic is moving away from Main Street and Swede Alley south of Trapper’s Way, or uphill from the intersection.

Park City Visuals

Photos shared showed police and fire engines at the scene and officers on the street. Pedestrians stood nearby and watched, and people were asked to clear the area.

“On our last day in Park City, we were directed to the streets, away from the bomb threats on Lower Main Street. At least we got into Squatter’s for a bite to eat while we waited. Red-eye flight home at 11:00 p.m. See you at Tampa Airport in the morning,” one person wrote.

Another expressed concern and asked “What’s happening on the streets now?”. One person responded: “A friend at work just said she was told to evacuate due to a bomb threat.” Many others added it was a bomb threat, while one person fearfully asked “OMG what happened??”.

Bomb threat in Park City amid recent series of incidents

The Park City bomb threat comes amid a spate of such reports across the United States. A bomb threat was received at the scene Savannah/Hilton Head International Airport Saturday morning.

“Saturday morning, the Chatham County Police Department received information regarding a potential security threat at the Savannah/Hilton Head International Airport. Airport Police determined there was no credible threat to persons at the airport or terminal,” authorities said of the incident. according to Local reports.

The University of Virginia library also received a bomb threat, but no suspicious device was found. Yesterday, there was a bomb threat northwest washington d.c. That was true too, but the authorities have clarified everything.

The threats come as law enforcement across the United States is on high alert amid the ongoing war with Iran. Authorities have been more vigilant since Israel and the United States killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in a joint strike. Today, Zoo Miami also announced it was closing after receiving a call about a bomb threat. On X, they wrote “Out of an abundance of caution, Zoo Miami is currently closed to the public after receiving an anonymous call reporting a bomb threat. We thank the public for their patience and cooperation. We will provide additional updates as more information becomes available.”

‘This is deeply disturbing’: Indian-origin restaurateur Harman Singh Kapoor arrested days after announcing UK restaurant closures

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'This is deeply disturbing': Indian-origin restaurateur Harman Singh Kapoor arrested days after announcing UK restaurant closures

Indian-origin restaurateur Harman Singh Kapoor was arrested days after he announced he would close his 16-year-old restaurant Rangrez in the UK due to threats from Pakistanis and a lack of police support.Kapoor confirmed his arrest while replying to one of the tweets. Kapoor did not disclose the specific reasons for his arrest, saying: “All I was doing was protecting my family, but I myself was arrested. Instead of protecting us, the police targeted my religion – my Sikh faith and belief. This is deeply disturbing.”Earlier, Kapoor revealed that Muslims targeted his restaurant because he chose not to sell halal meat from day one, and as a result, Pakistanis gave it bad reviews. Kapoor said he was unconcerned about the failure of his business because he chose to close the restaurant and will now pursue activism full-time.In a series of tweets, Kapoor called Muslims inbreeding and said: “Proud that we don’t sell halal food. We don’t cater to inbreeding.”In another post calling for a ban on halal food in the UK, he wrote: “I am proud that I do not sell halal food and because of this many people in the inbreeding community are unhappy and leave false reviews. Rangrez Restaurants do not cater to inbreeding at the expense of torturing animals. Inbreeding is not my customer.”Who is Harman Singh Kapoor? Harman Singh Kapoor is a Sikh activist known for speaking out against Khalistani extremism. In 2023, he claimed his car was shot at and vandalized after criticizing the Khalistan movement. Kapoor and his wife have also become increasingly vocal against Muslims in recent months. Shortly before announcing the closure, the couple shared a video warning parents about alleged cases of “love jihad” in the UK and Australia. Kapoor claimed that many girls were “brainwashed” by Pakistani and Bangladeshi boys and lost contact with their families, adding that he had been investigating several such cases. Kapoor also faced criticism online. Some social media users claimed he had been planning to enter politics with far-right activist Tommy Robinson. Others have accused him of adopting anti-immigration rhetoric despite being an immigrant himself, claiming he sought asylum in the UK as an Afghan Sikh refugee despite being from India.

Nancy Guthrie’s last conversation with neighbor revealed; mystery man seen days before kidnapping

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looking for Nancy GuthrieThe 84-year-old disappeared from her Tucson-area home earlier this year, and she continues to raise questions as investigators gather information from people who knew her or lived nearby. Recently, a neighbor recounted the last conversation Savannah Guthrie’s mother had with them.

Nancy Guthrie is pictured on a message board in Tucson on February 26, 2026 (AFP/Getty Images)
Nancy Guthrie is pictured on a message board in Tucson on February 26, 2026 (AFP/Getty Images)

Nancy Guthrie Update

The disappearance occurred in the Catalina Foothills community near Tucson, Arizona, and Guthrie was last seen on January 31. Her family reported her missing the next day, prompting the Pima County Sheriff’s Department to launch an investigation with assistance from the FBI. Despite weeks of searching, authorities have released limited information as they continue to review evidence and pursue potential leads.

Read more: Nancy Guthrie case: FBI recovers new security images from before her disappearance; spotted any suspicious activity?

Brian Entin’s Investigation

Reporter Brian Entin, who has been covering the case as part of an ongoing series of investigations, recently visited the community and spoke with several residents and workers who had contact with Guthrie before her disappearance.

Among them was a gardener who worked near Guthrie’s home and would occasionally see his grandmother while working in the area. The staff member described the last interaction he remembered with her.

“It has been about eight months since I last saw Mrs. Guthrie. It was early in the morning. The gardener revealed that they had a very brief conversation in which he said: ‘Hi, Mrs. Guthrie, how are you?’

When Entin asked Guthrie if she had been with anyone else, the gardener said he had never noticed anyone accompanying her.

“I’ve never done that.”

The worker described Guthrie as a kind and pleasant person, calling her a “really nice lady” and “lovely.”

Read more: Nancy Guthrie: Annie Guthrie ‘Dear Missing’ video raises questions; Savannah Guthrie makes big decision on Tommaso Cioni

Neighbors also shared observations of unusual activity in the area before Guthrie disappeared. Aldine Meister, a nearby resident who has lived in the area for several years, told Entin about a suspicious encounter she noticed a few weeks ago.

Mester noted that some changes were occurring in the area at that time.

“There was an abandoned house at the end of the street and someone had just moved in next to us,” she said.

She also recalled seeing a strange man about three weeks before Guthrie disappeared.

“Even though his hat was down low, I couldn’t see his face clearly. He was walking down the street and I saw him and I thought, ‘Oh, that guy doesn’t fit in.'”

Mester added that the man’s appearance and behavior seemed unusual for the area.

“He was a little hunched over and had no walking or hiking equipment. He was wearing street clothes,” she explained. “So I thought it was weird because it wasn’t normal.”

Tamil poet and lyricist Vairamuthu wins Jnanpith Award

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CHENNAI: Tamil poet-lyricist Vairamuthu has been selected as the 2025 recipient of the Jnanpith Award, the country’s highest literary award. He is the third Tamil litterateur to receive this honour. Following Akilan (1975) and Jayakanthan (2002). However, he was the first to win the Tamil Poetry Prize; two others received it for their prose. “For me, literature should uplift human beings. I travel in their dreams and emotions. I have two wings. With this award, I feel I have two more wings. I dedicate this award to the Tamil society and its people with a sense of gratitude.” Varamutu told TOI on Saturday. “The Jnanpith should have been given first to the great poet Bharathidasan. Unfortunately, he passed away before the award was instituted. Therefore, the first award was given to Malayalam poet G Shankara Kurup in 1965. Sixty years later, as a poet, I am proud to be bestowed with this award tamil nadu,” Varamuthu said. “I can understand the delay in recognition for Tamil writers as the award is given on a rotating basis. However, Hindi literature has received this award 12 times, Kannada literature 8 times and Malayalam literature 6 times. Tamil as a classical language should get more attention. This is my only regret. I hope more Tamil writers will receive this award in the future,” Varamuthu said. Vairamuthu was born on July 13, 1953 in Theni district. He received his master’s degree in Tamil from Pachaiyappa College, Chennai, where he also received a gold medal. At the age of 18, while still a student, he published his first collection of poems, Vaigarai Meengal. Vairamuthu started working in the Tennessee Government Official Languages ​​Committee. In 1980, he entered the Tamil film industry as a lyricist in the film “Nizhalgal” directed by Bharathiraja. The song “Idhu oru ponmaalai pozhuthu” composed by Ilayaraaja has been praised for its new imagery. This technique of introducing new images, words, metaphors, similes and alliteration earned Vairamuthu the title “Kaviperarasu” (literally meaning poet-emperor). Vairamuthu has composed more than 8,000 songs and won seven national awards for his lyrics. From Sivaji Ganesan to Kamal Haasan, from Rajinikanth to Dhanush and Vijay Sethupathi, he has achieved the rare feat of writing songs across three generations. “Every day, I learn new things and update myself. That’s why I am able to work with different generations,” Vairamuthu added.

Dr. Disrespect vs. Nickmercs: Dr. Disrespect vs. Nickmercs: Everything you need to know about the ongoing feud

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Dr. Disrespect vs Nickmercs: Everything you need to know about this ongoing feud

The long-standing rivalry between Dr. Disrespect and Nickmercs is once again making headlines in the gaming world. Earlier in March 2026, Dr. Disrespect harshly criticized Nickmercs during a live broadcast, calling him “Fake,” one “Two-faced” and a “Fake.” The controversy is now making waves on social media and YouTube, reminding the public of the long-standing rivalry between the two gaming figures.The latest controversy relates to a controversy that began in 2024 after Dr. Disrespect was banned from Twitch. At the time, Nickmercs publicly condemned him, accusing him of cheating on his wife and sending inappropriate messages to minors. Since then, the relationship between the two players has been tense, with them often responding to each other on live streams.

How the Dr Disrespect and Nickmercs drama started and why it’s escalating again

The conflict between the two creators dates back to 2024 and 2025. During that time, Nickmercs chose to distance itself from Dr Disrespect following the Twitch ban controversy. He said the situation put many of his friends in a difficult position, even calling Dr. Disrespect ” “dog” during one of his live broadcasts. The comments created a clear divide between the two men.Things heated up again on March 5, 2026, when Dr. Disrespect talked about Nickmercs during a YouTube live stream while playing Battlefield. He said Nickmercs was pretending to be someone he was not and claimed the streamer would not have repeated the comments if they met in person. Dr. Disrespect also mocked him, saying he had become irrelevant and suggesting he relied on content such as TheBurntPeanut’s thumbnails to attract viewers.A few days later, Nickmercs responded during an ARC Raiders livestream from March 9-11. He responded without hesitation. Nickmercs calls disrespectful Dr. “Damn actors” And told him to stop pretending. At the same time, he stood by his previous criticisms and revisited the cheating accusations that caused the fallout in the first place.Videos from both streams quickly spread on YouTube and other social media platforms. Fans from both communities began discussing the situation, which only made the feud more visible online. Even though Dr. Disrespect even claimed that he would “destroy” Nickmercs There would be no real life confrontation if they met face to face.However, the rivalry between Dr. Disrespect and Nickmercs is currently one of the biggest topics in the streaming world. The two sides were still talking to each other during the live broadcast, and it seemed that the farce was far from over.

The Latest: Iran threatens UAE ports as war enters its third week

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Iran on Saturday threatened for the first time to attack infrastructure of a neighboring country, urging people to evacuate three major ports in the United Arab Emirates that Tehran claimed were “legitimate targets” because the U.S. military used them for attacks.

The Latest: Iran threatens UAE ports as war enters its third week
The Latest: Iran threatens UAE ports as war enters its third week

The escalation sharpened global economic worries as tensions mount around the Strait of Hormuz, a route for about one-fifth of the world’s oil where shipping has effectively ground to a halt.

Iran has fired hundreds of missiles and drones at Gulf neighbors, saying it targets U.S. assets even as airports and oil facilities have been hit or threatened. America and Israel have struck thousands of targets across Iran during the war, now in its third week.

On Friday, President Donald Trump said U.S. forces “obliterated” military sites on Iran’s Kharg Island, home to the country’s main oil export terminal. Iranian officials have warned that strikes on its oil infrastructure could trigger further retaliation.

Meanwhile, Israel’s war against Hezbollah has deepened Lebanon’s humanitarian crisis, with about 800 people killed and more than 850,000 displaced.

Here is the latest:

Trump’s broadcast regulator Brendan Carr responded to a Trump complaint about negative coverage of the Iran war with an X post threatening broadcasters, urging them to “correct course before their license renewals come up.”

Carr, the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, has previously launched investigations into networks he has said are unfairly partisan, most notably pressuring ABC to take late-night host Jimmy Kimmel off the air.

It was the first time Carr had addressed Iran coverage, although Trump and the White House have sharpened their attacks in recent days against coverage they perceive as being unduly critical or unfair.

“The law is clear. Broadcasters must operate in the public interest, and they will lose their licenses if they do not,” Carr warned.

Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi made the call on social media. He also noted Trump’s message earlier Saturday urging other countries to send warships to help secure shipping in the Strait of Hormuz off Iran, and described the president as “begging.”

The Israeli military reacted for the first time Saturday to the deaths of six crew members on a U.S. refueling plane that crashed in Iraq.

“I convey my deepest condolences for the six lives lost,” Israel’s chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir, said on Saturday during a visit to a logistics center in central Israel. “Our partners in the United States are doing unprecedented work in this historic operation,” he said.

Israel will partially resume school in some of the more rural areas of the country starting Monday, the first time children will be in class since the war began with Iran. Schools with sufficient bomb shelters can open in rural areas, especially in the south, which has experienced far fewer missiles.

Schools are still closed in the more-populated parts of Israel’s center, as well as northern Israel, which is experiencing heavy bombardment from Hezbollah.

“It is only closed to the tankers and ships belonging to our enemies, to those who are attacking us and their allies,” Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said in an interview with MS Now on Saturday.

Nearly all shipping is still avoiding the Strait of Hormuz, however, due to security concerns.

Araghchi also dismissed claims that Iran’s new supreme leader, Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, is seriously injured.

“They will see soon that there is no problem with the new supreme leader,” Araghchi said. “He is performing his duties according to the constitution, and he will continue to do that.”

Kuwait’s armed forces said Saturday evening that the sound of explosions was from ongoing interception efforts, while Saudi Arabia’s Defense Ministry said it downed three drones over the Kingdom’s Eastern Province.

There was no immediate word on casualties or damage.

Israel said it has detected missiles from Iran aimed at northern Israel and is working to intercept them.

People, mostly Iranians who crossed from Iran at the Kapikoy border crossing, pull luggage in Turkey’s eastern Van province, Friday, , 2026.

So far, relatively few people have chosen to leave: The U.N. estimates that only about 1,300 Iranians have fled via neighboring Turkey each day since the war started.

Among them was 32-year-old hairdresser Merve Pourkaz, who spoke to The Associated Press while waiting at an alpine border crossing with Turkey. She decided to go after bombs exploded near her house.

Others are returning from abroad, heading toward the fighting to protect their loved ones and homes.

“How can I feel safe in Istanbul when my family is living in Iran during the war?” said Leila Rabetnezhadfard, 45, who postponed her wedding to a German university professor to go back to Iran.

However, Iran’s neighbors and Europe are growing increasingly concerned about a possible migration crisis should the war drag on, and are making contingency plans.

Read more

In response to Trump’s calls for countries including the U.K. to send warships to help protect the Strait of Hormuz, the Defense Ministry said Saturday: “We are currently discussing with our allies and partners a range of options to ensure the security of shipping in the region.”

It did not provide details.

Three members of the Kuwaiti army sustained minor injuries when two drones damaged the Gulf nation’s Ahmed Al-Jaber air base on Saturday, a spokesperson for the Defense Ministry said in a statement.

Kuwait’s air defense system intercepted another three drones, and two drones fell outside what the ministry called “the threat area” and posed no danger.

Early in the war, three American fighter jets were mistakenly downed by friendly Kuwaiti fire during an Iranian attack. Kuwait is also where six U.S. soldiers were killed in a drone strike on a command center.

U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres said in Beirut on Saturday that there is no military solution to the Israel-Hezbollah war and called for diplomacy and full implementation of U.N. resolutions.

He urged the international community to step up efforts to end the conflict.

The Lebanese Health Ministry said Saturday that at least 2,009 people have also been wounded since the latest round of fighting began on March. 2.

The ministry said the dead include 106 children and 65 women.

The president was spending Saturday morning at his golf club in Florida but posted that, “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.”

But it was not clear if that effort was set to begin or if Trump only hoped it might because 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.

It was the first time Trump has publicly suggested the U.S. may not be able to reopen the waterway on its own, and without international support.

Iran has used the effective closure of the strait to disrupt the world’s energy markets and put pressure on the United States and Israel.

Apparent fire from a heavy machine gun sparked a blaze at the U.N. peacekeeping force position near the village of Mais al-Jabal, and the peacekeeper was hurt on his way to a shelter.

Kandice Ardiel, a spokeswoman for the UNIFIL peacekeeping force, said it launched an investigation and reminds all actors of their obligations to ensure the safety and security of peacekeepers at all times.

U.N. positions in southern Lebanon have been hit several times during exchanges of fire between Israel and Hezbollah, including on March 6 when three peacekeepers were wounded at a UNIFIL base.

Mizan, Iran’s official judiciary news agency, claimed without evidence that U.S. forces are located in the civilian ports of Jebel Ali, Khalifa and Fujairah in the United Arab Emirates — making the ports “legitimate targets” for Iranian attacks.

The news agency urged people in and around those ports to immediately evacuate, saying the facilities “may be targeted in the coming hours.”

Earlier Saturday, a drone interception sparked a fire near Fujairah’s port but there were no casualties, according to the Fujairah media office.

During the war, Gulf Arab states have faced seemingly unending and occasionally fatal Iranian drone and missile attacks targeting oil fields, cities and critical infrastructure.

Jebel Ali Port in Dubai is the busiest in the Middle East.

The two ships were carrying liquefied petroleum gas on their way to India, the country’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Randhir Jaiswal said in a briefing Saturday.

He did not specify where the carriers Shivalik and Nanda Devi had departed from.

The crucial strait has been virtually closed because of the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran.

Kharg Island Terminal is the beating heart of Iran’s oil export system, strategically located in the Persian Gulf. For decades, it has been essential in connecting Iran’s vast oil reserves with the global market.

The infrastructure on Kharg Island is impressive, with massive storage tanks and pipelines built to handle millions of barrels of crude oil daily. Large oil tankers regularly dock there, transporting oil extracted from fields in southwestern Iran. The setup allows Iran to manage its exports efficiently, even when faced with sanctions.

Historically, Kharg Island has been through difficult times, including being targeted during the eight-year Iran-Iraq War due to its critical role in Iran’s economy.

▶ Read more about Iran’s strategic islands

The attack wounded two security personnel and damaged the building in Iraq’s semiautonomous northern Kurdish region.

It was the second attack on the facility in less than a week, the ministry said in a statement. It called on Iraqi authorities to investigate and hold those responsible to account.

According to TankerTrackers, two tankers were loading oil on Kharg on Saturday, hours after the U.S. said it struck Iranian military facilities there.

Another 51 paramedics and medical workers have been wounded since the latest round of Israel-Hezbollah fighting began on March 2.

The latest strike on Friday night in the southern village of Burj Qalaouiyah hit a health care center, killing 12 people and seriously wounding one. A search is ongoing for four people who are still under the rubble, the ministry said.

The ministry said that Israel has been intentionally targeting medical workers, adding that claims by Israel’s military spokesman that ambulances are being used for military purposes are pretexts to justify the attacks.

Earlier Saturday, the Israeli military Arabic spokesman said Hezbollah is widely using ambulances for military purposes. He said the militant group should stop or the Israeli military will act.

Nine ballistic missiles and 33 drones were fired Saturday toward the United Arab Emirates, the Defense Ministry said.

It said the total number of projectiles fired at the country since Feb. 28 included 1,600 drones, 294 ballistic missiles and 15 cruise missiles. The attacks have killed six people and wounded 141 others, it said.

In a post on X Saturday, Ebrahim Azizi, the head of Iran’s parliamentary committee on national security and foreign policy, said that by providing drone support to Israel, Ukraine has “effectively become involved in the war.” He said the entire country became a target for Iran.

Government spokesperson Fatemeh Mohajerani said the damaged structures included 36,469 residential units and 6,179 commercial facilities, according to state-run IRNA news agency.

Iran hasn’t provided any information about military losses and damage.

Mohajerani, meanwhile, said the war has taken a heavy toll on women, with 223 women and girls killed and 2,129 others wounded since Feb. 28. She didn’t provide an overall death toll, but previously authorities have said that 1,230 people have been killed.

The fire near Fujairah port in the United Arab Emirates broke out Saturday following the drone interception, authorities said.

No casualties were reported from the attack, the Fujairah media office said, adding that firefighters were battling the blaze.

Associated Press footage showed smoke rising Saturday morning over the facility.

The sites include museums and historic monuments across Iran, authorities said Saturday.

The Cultural Heritage Ministry said the latest strikes in the city of Sanandaj in Kurdistan province seriously damaged the Asef Mansion, Salar Saeid Mansion and Khosro Abad Mansion, according to Mizan, the judiciary’s official news agency.

Some of the sites date back several centuries and are dedicated to Kurdish culture.

President Emmanuel Macron posted on X that he spoke with the president, prime minister and parliament speaker of Lebanon, and that everything must be done to prevent the country from sinking into chaos.

Macron added that Hezbollah must immediately halt “its reckless escalation” while Israel must abandon any large-scale offensive and stop its massive airstrikes.

Macron said Lebanese leaders have said they are willing to have direct talks with Israel.

The French leader said Israel must seize this opportunity to launch talks to reach a ceasefire, find a lasting solution, and allow Lebanese authorities to fulfill their commitments in support of Lebanon’s sovereignty.

Lebanon’s President Joseph Aoun said Friday that he expressed readiness to negotiate with Israel but got no response. Lebanon and Israel remain at a state of war since 1948.

“Export and import operations, as well as the activities of companies based on the island, are currently ongoing,” Ehsan Jahaniyan, deputy governor of Bushehr province, was quoted as saying by NourNews, an outlet close to Iran’s Supreme National Security Council.

Kharg Island is home to the primary terminal that handles the country’s oil exports.

Jahaniyan also said that daily life activities were normal, adding that the strikes left no casualties.

Early Saturday, semi-official Fars News Agency reported that the U.S. strikes were limited to military facilities.

A cloud of orange-tinted, thick dust spread across the Gaza Strip on Saturday as first responders told Palestinians to stay home, especially those with respiratory illness.

People were also urged to secure their tents to prevent them from being blown away. Israel’s war with Hamas has left most of Gaza’s 2 million residents displaced, living in tents and damaged buildings with little protection from the elements such as rain, wind and sand.

Videos on Saturday showed tents flapping and trees swaying as cars drove down dust-filled streets with little visibility. While dust storms occur in Gaza, there hasn’t been one this intense in more than five years.

Bahrain’s Defense Ministry said Iran fired 10 drones and three missiles on Saturday.

That has brought the total number of missiles and drones fired at Bahrain during the two-week war to 124 and 203, respectively.

Iran’s military command threatened Saturday to attack cities in the United Arab Emirates, claiming they were used by U.S. forces to launch strikes on Iran’s Abu Musa and Kharg islands.

According to Iran’s state television, the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters said, without providing evidence, that U.S. forces launched attacks on the Islamic Republic from “ports, docks and hideouts within” cities in the Emirates.

It called on people to evacuate “ports, docks and locations where U.S. forces are sheltered in UAE cities.”

Lebanon’s Health Ministry said the airstrike hit an apartment in the southern city of Sidon. It gave no other details.

The United Arab Emirates has detained 10 foreigners who allegedly posted footage on social media of missile and drone attacks on the county.

UAE General Prosecutor Hamad Al Shamsi ordered them to remain in detention over accusations of spreading disinformation, some of which included AI-generated videos of purported attacks on UAE landmarks.

He said in a statement that their acts are punishable by imprisonment of at least a year and a fine of at least 100,000 dirhams .

The airstrike destroyed a residential building early Saturday in the western city of Eyvan, the judiciary’s official news agency Mizan reported, citing local authorities. The dead included a 6-month-old, it said.

At least 1,230 people have been killed in Iran since the war began Feb. 28, according to Iranian authorities.

Trump wrote in a social media post: “The Fake News Media hates to report how well the United States Military has done against Iran, which is totally defeated and wants a deal – But not a deal that I would accept!”

Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency reported Israeli strikes Saturday morning on Beirut and the country’s south.

The Palestinian militant group also urged regional countries to “cooperate and stop” the U.S. and Israeli assault on Iran.

“While affirming the right of the Islamic Republic of Iran to respond to this aggression by all available means in accordance with international norms and laws, the movement calls upon the brothers in Iran to avoid targeting neighboring countries,” Hamas said in a statement Saturday, its first since the war began on Feb. 28.

The group, which maintains close ties with Iran and Qatar, said stopping the war is in the interest of the region.

Hamas is part of the so-called Axis of Resistance, which includes Iranian-backed militant groups in the Middle East.

An airstrike hit a house in Iraq’s capital, Baghdad, early Saturday, killing at least one person, according to a security official and another affiliated with the Iranian-backed armed groups in the country.

The strike in Baghdad’s Karrada district also wounded two people, they said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to speak to the press.

In a statement, the Iraqi military condemned the strike as “a blatant violation of all humanitarian values and a disregard for international conventions.”

The strike happened before a missile attack hit the U.S. Embassy compound in Baghdad.

— By Qassim Abdul-Zahra

Iran’s semiofficial Fars news agency reported at least 15 explosions with thick smoke rising over Kharg Island, earlier hit by U.S. strikes.

It said the strikes targeted an air defense facility, a naval base, the airport control tower, and an offshore oil company’s helicopter hangar, adding no oil infrastructure was damaged in the attack.

Iran’s joint military command reiterated its threat to attack U.S.-linked oil and energy facilities in the region if the Islamic Republic’s oil infrastructure were hit.

Ebrahim Zolfaghari, spokesperson for the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters made the threat early Saturday, according to Iran’s state-run television.

He warned that Iran will target “all oil, economic, and energy infrastructures belonging to oil companies across the region that have American shares or cooperate with America” if energy and economic infrastructure in Iran is attacked.

There was no immediate comment from the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad after a strike hit it’s compound in the Iraqi capital.

On Friday, the embassy renewed its Level 4 security alert for Iraq, warning that Iran and Iran-aligned militia groups have previously carried out attacks against U.S. citizens, interests and infrastructure, and “may continue to target them.”

The sprawling embassy complex, one of the largest U.S. diplomatic facilities in the world, has been repeatedly targeted by rockets and drones in the past by Iran-aligned militias.

The groups have recently stepped up attacks on bases hosting U.S. and coalition troops.

A drone strike in northern Iraq on Thursday killed a French soldier and wounded several others stationed there as part of an international coalition.

A missile struck a helipad inside the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, two security officials said.

The projectile landed within the embassy’s boundaries after the Green Zone, the heavily fortified district in central Baghdad that houses Iraqi government institutions and foreign embassies, added the security officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity as they are not authorized to speak with the press.

Video obtained by The Associated Press showed smoke billowing from inside the compound.

— By Qassim Abdul-Zahra

This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

Ex-Pentagon official claims US has satellite images of UFO craft ‘not made by humans’

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Ex-Pentagon official claims US has satellite images of UFO craft 'not made by humans'

An expert familiar with the documents told the New York Post that the federal government has evidence of UFOs, including satellite images of craft that do not appear to be man-made.Christopher Mellon, a former assistant deputy secretary of defense for intelligence during the Clinton and Bush administrations, said the government has extensive UFO documentation, including photos and videos. He said public disclosure of the information would “take the UFO discussion to another level.”

‘He was 50 feet away’: UFO nearly hit US jet? Former Navy pilot’s alien testimony shocks Congress

Following President Trump’s order two weeks ago, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth will direct the release of “documents” related to aliens, UFOs, and “all other information” related to “highly complex” topics, the president wrote on Truth Social.While the news has federal agencies, including the White House and Pentagon, scrambling, there has been no official word on what will be released or when.The most striking data, Mellon claimed, were clear satellite photos of spacecraft above Earth that were clearly not man-made. “The satellite images we have of the spacecraft are certainly unlike anything we’ve ever built or built,” Mellon said.He said former Director of National Intelligence and current CIA Director John Ratcliffe mentioned images of the same craft engaging in “unexplainable operations” in a 2021 Fox News interview.In 2017, Mellon played a key role in the release of three U.S. military radar images of unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP) known as “Tic Tac,” “GOFAST,” and “Gimbal.” He said there were more similar items on government hard drives.Mellon said the government now prefers to use the term “UAP” (unidentified flying object) rather than “UFO.”“In 2018, there were numerous videos from the same source that were deemed unclassified — gun cams on F18s, [Forward Looking Infrared Radar] The videos — those videos are no longer available to the public,” he said.“I know there’s this because I’ve seen some of it,” Mellon said, adding, “And there’s no reasonable reason I can think of why these videos were withheld.”Mellon said the released documents should contain some provocative images, but he did not expect the documents to prove the existence of extraterrestrial civilizations or contact with extraterrestrial civilizations.Mellon said the Department of War, the Department of National Intelligence, the National Security Agency, the Defense Intelligence Agency, the Department of Energy and the National Nuclear Security Administration all have UFO documents related to the releases ordered by Trump.He said releasing classified and sensitive material was an “unnatural act” for an intelligence agency. “I have a feeling the bureaucracy is going to be slow to respond, and I don’t think they’re going to come out with the best product very quickly, even if they do,” he said. “Congress needs to remain vigilant to ensure that this entire process is thoroughly effective.”Sen. Mike Rounds, R-South Dakota, ranking member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, who co-sponsored the UAP Disclosure Act with Minority Leader Chuck Schumer in 2023, said he hopes the bill will be widely released to ensure U.S. military secrets are protected.Rounds said he wanted to “disclose as much information as possible and tell the American people honestly what we’re seeing that we don’t know or are learning about.“I just want to make sure that whatever we roll out, it doesn’t impact our own national security capabilities.”

Who is Phil Campbell? Motorhead guitarist dies at 64; what is his net worth?

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Phil Campbell, veteran leads the way guitarist The lead singer of rock band Motörhead has died at the age of 64.

Motörhead's beloved guitarist Phil Campbell has died aged 64, leaving behind a legacy of music and treasured memories. (Phil Campbell and the Bastard)
Motörhead’s beloved guitarist Phil Campbell has died aged 64, leaving behind a legacy of music and treasured memories. (Phil Campbell and the Bastard)

The Welsh-born guitarist’s death was announced on Saturday morning through a post shared by his family on the social media accounts of his band Phil. Campbell and illegitimate children.

“It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of our beloved father, Philip Anthony Campbell, who passed away peacefully last night after a long and courageous battle in the intensive care unit following a complex major surgery,” the statement read.

“Phil was a devoted husband, a wonderful father, a proud and loving grandfather, affectionately known as ‘Bumpy’. He was loved by all who knew him and will be deeply missed. His legacy, music and the memories he created with so many people will live on forever,” it continued.

It added: “We kindly ask that our family’s privacy be respected during this extremely difficult time.”

Also read: Who is Edith Vinay Solomon? California man indicted for assaulting TSA worker, seriously injuring Dallas police officer

Who is Phil Campbell? People pay tribute to the late guitarist

According to Rolling Stone, Campbell was invited to join Motorhead in 1984 by lead singer Lemmy Kilmister. He was Motorhead’s longest-serving guitarist, playing for 31 years until Lemmy’s death in 2015 and the band’s disbandment.

Swedish rock drummer Mikkey Dee, who became a member of Motorhead in 1992, took to social media to express his condolences following news of the death of his “dear friend” and bandmate.

“He’s the funniest guy I know and the best rock guitarist I’ve ever played with,” Dee said. “His sense of the vibe and feel of rock music was outstanding. We wrote 12 studio albums together and his extraordinary talent never ceases to amaze me. Most of all, I will miss hanging out with some of the nicest people you could ever meet.”

Dee sent her best wishes and support to Campbell’s family and friends.

“Sleep well my friends and rock warriors,” he added. “Say hello to Lemmy, Würzel, Filthy and Eddie. I’m sure you’ll be a crazy bunch to hang out with again!”

What is Phil Campbell’s net worth?

Phill Campbell’s career spanned decades. The guitarist has become a beloved figure among rock enthusiasts and developed a legion of fans. However, he has not only gained fans but also amassed a considerable net worth. According to Celebrity Net Worth, the Motorhead guitarist has a net worth of $8 million.