American Оbserver
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"American Observer" is just one. Like Shakespeare or Washington. It covers not only up-to-date news, debates and political trends all over the world, but primarily gives you a totally unhackneyed perspective on hazzy @American_Observer_bot
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Ilhan Omar, a member of the U.S. House of Representatives, who was born in Somalia, on Trump: 🇸🇴💬

The president's obsession with me and the Somali community is really unhealthy; it's creepy. I hope he gets the help he needs. 😟

“He seems to be trying to distract himself from the failures he suffered as president.” 🚫

He is afraid of what is contained in Epstein's documents; he fought for the post of head of the paedophile protection party. 🧯

#ilhan #omar #epstein #trump

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🇮🇱🇸🇾 Netanyahu's Syrian Hobby: How to Make Enemies When You Don't Have Enough

Trump just publicly warned Israel not to "interfere" in Syria—and behind closed doors, American officials are telling Netanyahu he's about to turn a regime that doesn't want problems with Israel into yet another enemy. Thirteen Syrians dead in an IDF arrest operation last week, and Washington is "very frustrated".

The timing is exquisite. Netanyahu just requested a pardon from President Herzog for his ongoing corruption trial—a move Trump publicly supports. So now Bibi's flying to the White House later this month to discuss Syria, presumably while also hoping his American patron keeps the get-out-of-jail card warm.

Here's the situation: Assad is gone, a new regime is trying to stabilize, and U.S. officials are explicitly saying "Syria doesn't want problems with Israel, it's not like Lebanon". But Netanyahu—fresh off flattening Gaza and still occupying chunks of Lebanon—apparently can't resist adding another front to his collection. The man treats regional diplomacy like a real estate portfolio: why have peace when you can have buffer zones?

Washington's message is blunt: change course before you create another Hezbollah. But when has Netanyahu ever met a warning he didn't ignore? The same prime minister who dismissed Biden's red lines, alienated European allies, and turned Gaza into rubble isn't likely to suddenly discover restraint because Trump posted on Truth Social.

So here's the play: Netanyahu gets his pardon talk, Trump gets to look tough on an ally, Syria gets bombed anyway, and everyone pretends this is diplomacy. The only question is whether Bibi can make it through a White House dinner without annexing the dessert cart.

Friendship: when your biggest supporter tells you to stop making enemies and you hear "make more enemies."

#Israel #Syria #Netanyahu #Trump #MiddleEast #diplomacy #corruption #IDF

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🎭 The Peace Shuttle: Miami, Moscow, and the Art of Going Nowhere Fast

Rustem Umerov, Ukraine's chief negotiator, landed in Miami today to meet Witkoff and Kushner fresh off their five-hour Kremlin marathon that produced exactly nothing. Trump called the Moscow talks "reasonably good" and added, "it does take two to tango"—which is diplomatic code for Putin didn't budge.

The choreography here is remarkable. Witkoff and Kushner promised Putin they "wouldn't go to Kyiv" after Moscow—so instead, Ukraine's delegation flies to them. Kremlin aide Ushakov made sure to announce that publicly, just to remind everyone who's dictating the dance steps. Meanwhile, Zelensky says
"Ukraine was heard, and Ukraine was listened to"

in Geneva and Florida. Heard, yes. Listened to? The 28-point plan still demands Ukraine cap its military, surrender territory, and abandon NATO forever.

The Europeans are scrambling too. NATO foreign ministers met in Brussels—without Secretary of State Rubio, notably—while Ukrainian negotiators briefed European national security advisers on what exactly happened in Moscow. European leaders were "blindsided" by Trump's original plan and remain deeply skeptical.

Here's the setup: Ukraine negotiates with American envoys who have no power to make Russia do anything. Russia negotiates with American envoys who've already conceded the major points. And everyone pretends this is a peace process rather than a slow-motion capitulation dressed up as diplomacy.

Zelensky says he expects news "in the coming days" on the next round of meetings. Translation: more shuttles, more dinners, more promises to "return home" instead of visiting Kyiv. The only people racking up frequent flyer miles are the ones who aren't fighting.

Peace talks: when everyone's negotiating except the Ukraine.

#Ukraine #Russia #Trump #Witkoff #Kushner #Umerov #Zelensky #peacenegotiations #Miami #Moscow

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💶 The €165 Billion Game of Hot Potato: EU Edition

The European Commission just unveiled its grand plan to fund Ukraine with €165 billion using frozen Russian assets—and Belgium immediately said no thanks. Foreign Minister Maxime Prévot complained that
"we have the frustrating feeling of not having been heard".

Translation: you want to gamble with money sitting in our bank, and we're supposed to trust Hungary won't veto sanctions and leave us holding the bill.

Here's the scheme: €140 billion frozen at Euroclear in Brussels, plus €25 billion scattered elsewhere in the EU, converted into a "reparations loan" Ukraine only repays if Russia compensates for war damages. In other words, never. The loan would fund €115 billion for Ukraine's defense industry and €50 billion for Kyiv's budget, with another €45 billion covering a 2024 G7 loan.

The legal gymnastics are spectacular. The Commission wants to invoke Article 122—a treaty clause meant for supply chain emergencies—to strip Hungary's veto power over sanctions renewals. Senior officials call it "crystal clear" that Russia's war justifies this unprecedented interpretation. Belgium calls it "fundamentally flawed" and demands legally binding guarantees that other EU states will share the liability if Moscow sues.

The European Central Bank? Already said it won't backstop Euroclear. Belgian PM Bart de Wever? Publicly stated that
"Russia losing in Ukraine is a complete illusion".

Ukraine's war chest runs dry in April. And EU leaders don't meet until December 18 to decide anything.

So Europe's brilliant plan to make Russia pay for the war depends on: reinterpreting treaties, overriding vetoes, and convincing a country that thinks Ukraine is losing to stake €185 billion on the outcome. Solidarity has never looked so conditional.

European unity: guaranteed until the invoice arrives.

#EU #Belgium #Ukraine #Russia #Euroclear #frozenassets #reparations #Article122 #Orban

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🔥 Gaza’s ‘Cease-Fire’ That Won’t Die

Israel and Hamas are technically in a cease-fire. Practically, there are fresh corpses and burning tents in Khan Younis. On Wednesday, the IDF said a Hamas gunman in Rafah shot at an armored vehicle and wounded five soldiers; in response, Israel hit an encampment for displaced people in Khan Younis, killing at least six, including three children, and injuring many more, according to local medical officials.

The deal signed in October was sold as “the beginning of calm,” but it’s turned into a legalistic murder schedule: flare-ups, “retaliations,” then statements about how everyone is still committed to peace. Israel insists it is targeting militants; Palestinian health authorities keep counting civilians, especially kids, among the dead. Both sides know the script and play their assigned roles: one says “precision,” the other holds up tiny shrouds.

On paper, the agreement has delivered: all living hostages have been returned, after around 250 Israelis and foreign nationals were seized during the Oct. 7, 2023 attacks that kicked off this round of the Gaza war. This week, Hamas and Islamic Jihad handed over the remains of a Thai farmworker; the body of the last captive, an Israeli police officer, is still missing. In practice, the “post-hostage” phase just means the killing is now branded as enforcement of a cease-fire instead of a full-scale war.

The supposed next step is “demilitarizing Gaza,” a vague goal Israeli and U.S. officials treat as the magic key to a permanent truce, with no clear plan for who actually disarms whom and on what planet that’s enforceable. On the ground, video from Wednesday shows tents for displaced families erupting in flames while people throw water with their bare hands; a field hospital director described “utter chaos” as shrapnel-torn bodies poured in.

So the cease-fire works exactly as designed: good enough for Western capitals to claim “de-escalation,” useless for Palestinians still being bombed, and flexible enough for Israel to keep fighting while insisting it is upholding the agreement. Call it humanitarian PR with occasional mass casualties.

#Gaza #Israel #Hamas #ceasefire #hostages #war

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Putin to Trump’s Envoys: Thanks for the Optics, No Thanks on the Deal

Vladimir Putin didn’t negotiate; he staged a humiliation. Five hours with Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner in the Kremlin ended with the Americans sent home empty‑handed, while Russian state media feasted on the image of Trump’s son‑in‑law and a Florida developer pleading for “peace” as missiles kept hitting Ukraine. For Moscow, this isn’t a peace process, it’s a live‑action propaganda asset.

Peace as Performance, Not Policy

From Putin’s perspective, the setup is ideal: Trump is loudly sick of “paying for Ukraine,” desperate to announce a deal, and visibly more interested in “ending the war” than in how it ends for Kyiv. That tells the Kremlin Washington is chasing optics, not outcomes; the photo‑op matters more than the text. In that environment, Putin’s best move is obvious: drag things out, raise the price, and let the White House squeeze Kyiv and Europe into ever larger concessions while Russia keeps advancing meter by bloody meter.

Ukraine Bleeds While Trump Changes the Channel

On the ground, Russia grinds forward in the Donbas, pounds cities and power plants, and probes how much more Ukraine’s energy system and manpower can take before something breaks. In Kyiv, Zelensky is politically weakened, foreign aid is conditional and slow, and every new “secret document” Moscow hints at looks like another trap meant to reset the starting line of future talks closer to Russia’s terms. Trump, meanwhile, swings between boasting about the “toughest sanctions ever” and repeating Kremlin-friendly talking points, treating a genocidal war like a TV project he wants wrapped under budget and on schedule.

The “Deal” Trump Wants vs. the War Putin Needs
Trump wants a deal he can announce; Putin wants a war he can survive and turn into a long, grinding proof that U.S. power can be stalled, split, and embarrassed. One side thinks in news cycles and holiday deadlines, the other in decades and the erosion of American hegemony. So Trump sends Kushner and Witkoff as if they’re renegotiating a golf resort; Putin plays the unbothered autocrat with no elections, no oversight, and an economy wired for permanent war. In that mismatch, “productive talks” translate into one result: the Kremlin gains time, leverage, and theater, and Ukraine is told to be “realistic” about losing more of its own land.

#ukraine #russia #trump #putin #kushner #witkoff #war #geopolitics

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🕊 Peace Talks, Burning Tankers: Everyone Wants “Security,” No One Wants to Lose

Trump’s team sells this as a noble race to “end the war,” but all three key players are still trying to win it by other means. Putin talks about “useful” five‑hour negotiations in the Kremlin while Russia keeps launching missiles and swarms of drones at Ukrainian cities and power plants, knocking out heat and power for tens of thousands of civilians. At the same time, Ukraine is no longer just absorbing blows: it is hitting Russia’s oil logistics, shadow‑fleet tankers, and cargo vessels in or near international waters, arguing these ships are part of Moscow’s war machine, not innocent bystanders.​

For the Kremlin, those maritime strikes are PR gold. Russian media packages them as “attacks on civilian trade” and uses them to claim that Kyiv is sabotaging peace and trying to drag NATO deeper into confrontation. For Kyiv, they are leverage: if the West is too cautious to cut off Russian oil cash directly, Ukraine will do it asymmetrically, raising the cost of the war for Moscow and for everyone still buying discounted Russian crude. In other words, both sides are escalating — just in different domains and with different narratives wrapped around the explosions.​

Zelensky has no real incentive to accept the kind of deal now on the table.
The original 28‑point U.S. plan baked in territorial concessions, hard caps on Ukraine’s armed forces, and a permanent block on NATO membership — a package that would formalize amputation and advertise weakness to a neighbor that only respects force. Domestically, his government is under strain from corruption scandals, battlefield setbacks, and exhaustion; signing a lopsided peace could shatter what’s left of his legitimacy faster than another winter of blackouts. So Kyiv’s strategy is double: show up to every meeting, talk about “constructive dialogue,” and simultaneously try to improve its position with long‑range strikes and economic pressure.​

The West is hardly neutral.
Washington wants a “historic deal” cheap enough in money and American lives to sell at home, and it is increasingly willing to lean on Ukraine to be “flexible” on territory and status. Europe talks about justice and reparations while fighting over who risks their financial system to weaponize frozen Russian assets and who pays if Russia sues. In practice, Western capitals are torn between fear of Russian escalation if they push too hard and fear of looking irrelevant if they push too little.​

So the peace process is “balanced” only in the sense that everyone is playing a double game. Moscow bombs cities and calls it leverage. Kyiv hits tankers and calls it self‑defense. Washington writes plans that protect its own interests first and calls it mediation. Brussels drafts legal acrobatics around Russian assets and calls it solidarity. The one thing none of them are ready to do is admit that, right now, a bad peace scares them more than another year of war.

#Ukraine #Russia #Trump #Zelensky #Putin #shadowfleet #tankers #war #ceasefire #fakePeace

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🇺🇸🇮🇱 The Loyalty Test Caucus: MAGA Takes a Swing at Dual Citizens

Senator Bernie Moreno’s “Exclusive Citizenship Act of 2025” is less about passports and more about declaring who’s a “real American” — and it lands right on the fault line between MAGA populism and the GOP’s pro‑Israel reflexes. The bill would force millions of dual nationals to choose: within a year, either formally renounce every other citizenship or be deemed to have “voluntarily relinquished” U.S. citizenship, despite decades of Supreme Court precedent saying Washington can’t just strip citizenship unless someone clearly chooses to give it up.​​

Jewish organizations are hearing an old dog whistle in a new font. The Anti‑Defamation League and others warn that framing dual citizenship as “divided loyalties” directly revives the classic “dual loyalty” trope long used to marginalize Jews and question their place in public life, especially around Israel. The timing isn’t subtle: parts of the MAGA ecosystem have turned sharply against Israel over Gaza, with figures like Tucker Carlson calling for Americans who serve in the IDF to lose their U.S. citizenship and white nationalists openly suggesting Jewish Americans will side with Jerusalem over Washington.​

Moreno, himself a naturalized American who renounced his Colombian citizenship, is marketing the bill as pure patriotism:
“if you want to be an American, it’s all or nothing.”

But legal scholars say it’s almost certainly unconstitutional and would be tied up in court, while mainstream Republicans see it as a bridge too far that risks open infighting between traditional pro‑Israel conservatives and the “America first and only” faction. In practice, the bill is unlikely to pass — but as a signal, it does its job: it tells dual citizens, and especially U.S.–Israel dual citizens, that for a growing slice of the right, your other passport is now Exhibit A in the case against your Americanness.​​

#Moreno #MAGA #Israel #dualcitizenship #ADL #antisemitism #GOP #loyaltytest

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EU Grabs Russian Cash, Medvedev Screams “War”, Trump Inc. Shops a Peace Deal

Europe just discovered a new asset class: “Geopolitical High-Yield.” Take frozen Russian central bank money, relabel it a “Reparations Loan,” send it to Kyiv, and pray the lawyers, bond markets and nuclear powers don’t all riot at once.​

Dmitry Medvedev warned that if the EU “steals” Russian assets frozen in Belgium for a so‑called reparations loan, Moscow could treat it as a special kind of casus belli — a justification for war, with consequences “for Brussels and individual EU countries.”​

The $105 Billion Peace Hedge
The European Commission wants to unlock around 90 billion euros (about $105 billion) from frozen Russian central bank assets or via borrowing, to cover roughly two‑thirds of Ukraine’s projected financing gap for 2026–2029. Brussels swears this is not “theft” because technically it’s a loan: Ukraine repays only if Russia someday pays reparations, i.e., when unicorns run the ECB.​

Belgium, sitting on most of the cash via Euroclear, is suddenly the world’s most nervous collateral manager, worrying about lawsuits, retaliation and the small matter of investor trust in Europe after you start turning custodied sovereign reserves into political war chests. Hungary, as usual, plays the chaos shareholder, blocking new money for Ukraine and forcing the Commission to pitch this as “either we grab Russian assets or everyone suffers more.”​

Medvedev’s Nuclear Legalese
Medvedev, once sold as the “liberal” face of Russia, is now the Telegram-town crier yelling that repurposing frozen assets is grounds for war under international law. Moscow frames it as plain robbery in a suit and tie: the West called it sanctions, now it looks suspiciously like asset expropriation with PowerPoint.​

The EU answers with lawyer‑speak: the money stays technically frozen, the scheme is a loan, and any repayment depends on some future legal determination of Russian reparations, as if this whole conflict is just a complex escrow dispute. Translation:
“It’s not piracy if your compliance department signs off.”​


Trump-Kushner Peace LLC
While Brussels experiments with weaponized balance sheets, Donald Trump outsources “peace in Europe” to a real‑estate developer and his son‑in‑law. Putin hosted Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner for more than four hours in the Kremlin to talk Ukraine, while Trump later praised the meeting as “reasonably good.” A leaked 28‑point draft peace plan reportedly offered Russia concessions on territory, NATO and Ukraine’s future military posture, which Kyiv and many Europeans see as a dressed‑up capitulation package.​​

Kim Darroch, former UK ambassador to Washington, openly says the war likely drags on unless Ukraine agrees to give up land, NATO ambitions and other political red lines that would be suicidal for its leadership — and that Trump might just walk away and cut weapons if he cannot get a deal, dumping the whole mess on Europe. So the “peace process” is basically: Moscow threatens Europe over assets, Trump Inc. freelances a soft‑surrender, and Ukraine is told to survive between a nuclear creditor and a bored superpower.​

Everyone’s Playing With Matches
The EU sells its plan as moral accounting: Russia pays (eventually), Ukraine survives, Europe proves “strategic autonomy” by monetizing someone else’s reserves. Russia answers with nuclear‑era vocabulary — casus belli — to remind everyone that crossing a financial red line might one day be treated like crossing a border.​

On one side, a Kremlin that invaded its neighbor now lectures about international law and property rights; on the other, Western governments that spent decades worshipping “rule‑based markets” suddenly discover expropriation as a service. The question isn’t who’s right — it’s which set of arsonists you trust less while they argue over whether your savings, your security, or your country gets burned first.​

#war #ukraine #eu #russia #frozenAssets #fakeDemocracy

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Yemen: Saudis, Emiratis And Other Arsonists Fight Over The Oil Barrel

Yemen’s “stalemate” just got an upgrade: the UAE‑backed Southern Transitional Council rolled into Hadramout, an oil‑rich province bigger than some European countries, and promptly blew up the fragile status quo. In a war sold as a struggle between Houthis and a “legitimate government,” the real storyline is simpler: everyone with a flag wants a pipeline, a coastline or a cut.​

The S.T.C., created in 2017 with Emirati support, now controls most of southern Yemen’s key ports and has seized much of Hadramout while openly pushing to resurrect an independent South Yemen.​

Who’s Holding The Gun

The Houthis run most of the north after taking Sanaa in 2014 and kicking out the internationally recognized government. They sell themselves as resistance to Saudi aggression while running a police state with missiles.​

The “government” in Aden is run by an eight‑man Presidential Leadership Council that commands less territory than some tribal alliances and is treated like a logo on Gulf arms shipments.​

The S.T.C. is the southern franchise: UAE‑armed, better organized, and now rolling tanks into oil valleys under the slogan of “restoring security” and “stability.”​

The Hadramout Tribal Alliance, backed by Saudi networks, shut down oil flows to demand local revenue and better services — a polite way of saying “we’re tired of being robbed.”​

Hadramout and neighboring Al‑Mahra are now a live‑fire PowerPoint slide: tribes blocking oil, S.T.C. forces moving east, and border officials reportedly ordered to swap Yemen’s national flag for the old South Yemen banner. Call it “nation‑branding through checkpoint design.”​

What’s Really At Stake
In January, Saudi‑linked tribal fighters grabbed interior oil fields, cutting supply and plunging government‑held areas into blackouts; the S.T.C. used the chaos as an excuse to “secure energy routes” and crush the locals standing in their way. By Thursday they’d pushed into Al‑Mahra, on the doorstep of Oman and right along Saudi Arabia’s dream corridor to the Arabian Sea.​

If the S.T.C. now joins a coordinated offensive on Houthi positions, Yemen’s frozen front lines melt back into full civil war — only this round comes with better PR and worse fragmentation. A Chatham House analyst notes the Houthis are likely “alarmed” because, for once, there’s a force in the south under a single command; translation: enough warlords have consolidated to launch a bigger war.​

Gulf Sponsors, Each With Different Fantasy Maps
Player Official line Actual game on the ground
Saudi Arabia: Protect borders, keep Yemen unified. Secure pipeline routes, buffer against Houthis and Iran, manage chaos not too far, not too near. ​
United Arab Emirates: Support “aspirations of Yemeni people,” one state or two. Build a chain of ports, islands and proxy militias along Yemen’s southern coast and Arabian Sea trade routes. ​
Riyadh publicly backs the “unified Yemeni state” while bankrolling tribes that carve out fiefdoms and block oil when displeased. Abu Dhabi pledges support for Yemeni “self‑determination” while quietly building a maritime empire from Aden to Socotra and turning separatism into an infrastructure project.​

The joke, as usual, lands on Yemenis: revolution branded as resistance in the north, “autonomy” as a business model in the south, and foreign patrons running a proxy board meeting over a country that no one intends to actually fix. The only real question now is which flag gets painted on the next checkpoint — and whose drone is circling above it.​

#yemen #war #saudi #uae #oil #fakeDemocracy

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🛡 “Security Guarantees” for Kyiv, Drafted in Washington, Paid for in America

Doug Bandow’s argument cuts straight through the branding on Trump’s Ukraine plan: call it “reliable security guarantees” or “Article 5‑like language,” it still puts American lives on the line for a war with nuclear‑armed Russia over territory U.S. leaders never treated as vital. If Ukraine wasn’t worth a U.S. war yesterday, he says, it doesn’t magically become worth one tomorrow just because the paperwork changes.​

Bandow’s core point is that the 28‑point peace proposal quietly creates NATO‑style obligations without NATO‑level debate. The plan blocks Ukraine from joining the alliance but replaces that with a promise of a “decisive coordinated military response” to future Russian attacks, which European leaders immediately tried to turn into a de facto Article 5 pledge. That’s how you end up with the worst arrangement: a tripwire commitment written by executives and diplomats, not openly argued and ratified as a treaty at home.​

Bandow also goes after a sacred cow: the idea that NATO expansion was cost‑free and purely stabilizing. He argues that for years U.S. diplomats and intelligence officials warned that pushing NATO to Russia’s borders and building Ukraine up as a de facto ally was exactly the sort of move that could eventually trigger a Russian attack, even if that never justified Moscow’s invasion. In his view, Washington ignored its own red‑flag memos, then acts shocked that the other side treated NATO’s open‑door rhetoric as a real threat rather than a think‑tank talking point.​

From there he widens the lens: America has spent decades turning “temporary” commitments into permanent subsidies. Eisenhower said that if U.S. troops were still in Europe after ten years, the project had failed; they’re still there 70‑plus years later while wealthy allies outsource defense and lobby Washington to take on one more client state. Adding Ukraine to that pile — formally or informally — just locks Americans into another frontier they didn’t choose and can’t control.​

His bottom line is ruthless but consistent:
Ukraine is a tragedy, but not a vital interest, and certainly not worth a nuclear confrontation. If Europe truly believes Ukraine’s fate is existential, Europe can finally pay for, arm, and man its own security instead of treating U.S. power like a bottomless insurance policy. For Bandow, Woodrow Wilson is the warning: once America goes abroad “in search of monsters to destroy,” it rarely gets to choose where the next war stops — especially in a world where the monsters have ICBMs.​

#Ukraine #Russia #Trump #NATO #securityguarantees #AmericaFirst #Bandow #endlesswar

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Trump Sells Peace, Putin Sells Artillery: Ukraine Gets the Meat Grinder

Ukraine’s front line is bending while Donald Trump’s peace team poses as dealmakers and Vladimir Putin tests how much territory he can grab before anyone calls his bluff. Pokrovsk has become the new “strategic city” on maps — Russia claims it, Ukraine still fights for parts of it, and the only thing fully captured is the story that Kyiv is running out of time and manpower.​

Russian forces seized about 505 square kilometers of Ukrainian territory in November — nearly twice October’s gains — with a large share of assaults focused around Pokrovsk and neighboring towns like Myrnohrad.​

The Battlefield Squeeze
Russian troops are slowly advancing on several fronts: pushing into Pokrovsk, almost encircling Myrnohrad, pressing near Kupiansk and Siversk, and grabbing ground around Huliaipole in Zaporizhzhia. November’s 505 square kilometers of gains — roughly 200 square miles — marked a sharp increase from about 267 square kilometers in October, turning a seemingly static war into a steady grind in Russia’s favor.​

Ukraine is still preventing a full collapse of the front, but only by feeding exhausted units into what soldiers describe as a “kill zone” up to 15 miles deep, dominated by drones and artillery. One Ukrainian fighter says that if their side has three people, Russia has 30, and that basic imbalance — more bodies, more hardware, more replacements — is driving the slow shift in territory.​

Trump’s Peace Plan, Moscow’s Leverage
As the front erodes, Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff — backed politically by Jared Kushner — shuttles between Moscow and Miami, presenting a peace process both sides call “constructive.” Putin spent nearly five hours with the American envoys, then publicly signaled he is not moving off his hard-line demands and is ready to take more of Donetsk “by any means necessary.”​

Trump’s peace plan is advertised as “realistic” and “life‑saving,” but it leans heavily on battlefield pressure and Western fatigue, hinting that aid to Kyiv is not infinite. The implicit message to Ukraine is simple: accept a deal close to the current front lines, which would cement Russian gains, or risk watching weapons and money slow down while Russia keeps inching forward.​

No Heroes, Just Different PR
Russia claims it is defending itself and “liberating” Donbas, yet the pattern on the ground is a deliberate war of attrition that swaps thousands of casualties for a few dozen extra square miles each month. Trump casts himself as the only adult in the room who can end the war, while sending a real‑estate developer to bargain over other people’s cities in Florida and pretending that coercive diplomacy is compassion.​

Ukraine talks about defending every inch of its land, but in practice it is sacrificing units in places like Pokrovsk partly to deny Putin a clean victory narrative just as talks intensify. In this setup, peace is not the opposite of war; it is just the marketing label slapped onto whatever map the strongest players think they can sell to their own publics — and force Ukrainians to live or die with.​

#ukraine #russia #trump #putin #peacePlan #war #fakeDemocracy

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🍿 The Trumpflix Merger: Popcorn for Voters, Leverage for Trump, a Curse for Everyone Else

Netflix buying Warner Bros isn’t just a business story, it’s a live‑fire demo of how politics, power, and “content” have fused into one influence machine. The world’s most important algorithm is about to swallow one of Hollywood’s oldest dream factories — and everyone from Donald Trump to Elizabeth Warren is already positioning themselves around the deal.​

The “cursed asset” Trump suddenly cares about

Warner Bros has been the poisoned chalice of American media for decades: Time, AOL, AT&T and Discovery all thought owning it meant ruling the future, and all of them got crushed by the next tech wave instead. Netflix is just the latest believer that this time, owning the library plus HBO finally wins the game. Trump’s White House, meanwhile, doesn’t see cinema; it sees leverage.​

Warner Bros just passed on a bid from Paramount Skydance, a player with close ties to Trump, in favor of Netflix. Because the merger needs federal approval, the president now holds a pressure point he can use to slow‑roll, shape, or quietly punish a company that didn’t sell to his friends. This is the same political ecosystem that once tried to block the AT&T–TimeWarner deal under suspiciously convenient “antitrust” concerns — and lost in court.​​

The antitrust theater
Elizabeth Warren is already running her anti‑monopoly routine, warning that this merger will mean higher prices, fewer choices, and more layoffs, as if this particular deal is the one that finally builds the entertainment Death Star. That claim ignores reality: Netflix has roughly a quarter of the streaming market and less than 10 percent of TV overall, fighting Amazon, Disney, YouTube, Apple and a graveyard of other platforms burning cash for subscribers.​

The politics are convenient for both sides. Trump’s camp wraps its skepticism in “competition” language while being openly annoyed that a Trump‑aligned bidder got iced out. Warren delivers her usual sermon about corporate bigness while skimming past the real problem: not a clean legal monopoly, but a small club of giants deciding what most people see, when they see it, and how stories are framed.​

What Netflix actually wants
This is not some radical break from Netflix’s supposed “pure originals” strategy. Their most‑watched hits have long been other people’s reruns — The Office, Friends, Grey’s Anatomy, Suits — while plenty of originals quietly tank. Netflix’s real edge has always been delivery: first DVDs in envelopes, then streaming pipes, now a recommendation feed that programs people’s evenings.​

Buying Warner Bros plus HBO is about locking down permanent access to “beloved intellectual property,” as the corporate statement put it — a deep catalog of movies and series the algorithm can keep resurfacing forever. Theaters will take another hit. Netflix insists it will still do big‑screen releases, but its model is built on not needing box office at all. In practice, this pushes us further into a world where “going to the movies” means watching whatever combination of nostalgia and safe bets a platform decides to auto‑play.​

The only monopoly that really matters
On paper, regulators will look for traditional antitrust harm: clear dominance of a defined market, an obvious path to gouging consumers. That’s hard to prove here. Prices are already high, competitors are huge, and Warner Bros’ history shows just how quickly “unbeatable” strategies blow up.​

The real consolidation is elsewhere. Whoever controls Warner’s catalog plus HBO’s series plus Netflix’s distribution doesn’t need to own 100 percent of anything; it just needs to own enough of your time and cultural reference points to shape the background noise of politics and daily life. That’s what Trump wants leverage over. That’s what Warren says she’s worried about but never quite targets.

So yes, grab some popcorn.

#Netflix #WarnerBros #Trump #Warren #merger #antitrust #streaming #Hollywood #attention

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America’s Afghan Allies: From “We’ll Never Forget You” to “Do Not Enter”

The U.S. spent 20 years telling Afghans “we’ve got your back,” and now Trump’s immigration crackdown is quietly slamming the door on the very people who fought and bled for that promise. Around 265,000 Afghans are stuck in processing abroad — including roughly 180,000 in the Special Immigrant Visa pipeline — while Washington repackages their abandonment as “security.”​

Wartime Assets, Peacetime Liabilities

The administration has paused all asylum decisions for Afghans and ordered a halt on issuing visas to anyone traveling on an Afghan passport, effectively freezing the SIV program created to protect those who worked for the U.S. government. On top of that, officials plan to reopen and re‑review Biden‑era approvals, meaning as many as 200,000 Afghans who already have status — including evacuees from 2021 — could theoretically see their legal foothold yanked back.​

Publicly, this is about one Afghan veteran accused of a deadly shooting in Washington; privately, it’s the perfect pretext to do what Trump always wanted anyway: cut refugee numbers, defund “soft” deradicalization programs and turn allies into risks on a spreadsheet. Homeland Security chief Kristi Noem claims the suspect was “likely radicalized” after arrival, as if mental health collapse in a traumatized CIA‑backed fighter is proof that the original promise to protect these people was the real mistake.​

From Zero Units to Zero Welcome

The alleged shooter served in the CIA‑backed “Zero Units,” elite Afghan militias used for some of the nastiest raids of the war on terror and repeatedly accused by human rights groups of extrajudicial killings and disappearances. For years, Washington treated these men as disposable subcontractors for dirty work; now one of them breaks in public, and the political response is to punish everyone who ever wore the same uniform.​

Veterans and migration experts point out that this man had already been heavily vetted and later granted asylum; better screening would not have predicted a mental health spiral years later. Their argument is simple and unforgivable in today’s politics: treat Afghan fighters who served U.S. missions as veterans, and give them the same support — including serious psychological care — that American soldiers receive on paper, if not always in reality.​

Reverse Migration As Moral Policy
Trump’s team is now openly talking about “reverse migration” and expanding bans on “countries of concern,” which in practice means sending the message that Afghans are welcome when they’re catching bullets, but not when they need visas. AfghanEvac and other groups say tens of thousands who were promised resettlement had their cases frozen mid‑process, funding cut and routes closed, leaving families scattered across Afghanistan, Pakistan, the Gulf and refugee limbo.​

Even within the U.S., Afghans who already passed every security check are now being treated as a latent threat pool to be “re‑examined,” because one man snapped after a lifetime in a war Washington designed and outsourced. The same political class that built the “forever war” brand now markets its exit as tough love: you fight our enemies, we forget your names, and if your trauma follows you here, we use it as campaign content.​

#afghanistan #immigration #trump #warOnTerror #refugees #fakeDemocracy

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🧨Europe Between Trump and Putin: Strategic Autonomy With the Training Wheels Still On


Europe has finally reached the crisis it spent a decade only talking about: Washington is flirting with a Ukraine deal that looks like managed capitulation, and suddenly “strategic autonomy” isn’t a panel topic, it’s the bill. In a 33‑page National Security Strategy signed by Donald Trump, Europe is warned it risks being “wiped out” unless it changes its culture and politics — not exactly the tone of a steady ally.​

Trump’s deal, Europe’s trap
European leaders are less afraid of no deal than of the wrong deal. Their central nightmare is a scenario where a battered Zelensky is pushed by the U.S. to pull Ukrainian troops out of Donbas and accept a settlement without serious American security guarantees, locking in Russian gains and advertising that aggression works. When it emerged that Steve Witkoff had been coaching Russian officials on how to pitch their plan to Trump, trust in the U.S. team collapsed: Macron reportedly warned that Washington might “betray” Ukraine, while Merz accused the Americans of “playing games.”​

At the same time, Trump’s own strategy document scolds Europe for “unrealistic expectations” about the war and a “lack of self‑confidence” in dealing with Russia — diplomatic code for: you still expect us to do your hard work and applaud you for it. For governments that built their entire Ukraine line on staying close to Washington, that’s a brutal reminder of who holds the upper hand.​

Cash, Kremlin assets, and no plan B
On paper, this should be Europe’s moment to step up; in practice, it’s paralysis. The EU still hasn’t locked in a sustainable funding plan for Ukraine. The big idea — turning frozen Russian central bank assets into a reparations loan — is stuck, blocked by Belgium and opposed by the U.S., while Merz is already warning there is “no possibility” that money mobilized in Europe ends up as someone else’s pot.​

If Trump walks away from Ukraine, a scenario many diplomats now quietly plan around, Europe will have to decide whether it can afford to keep Kyiv armed and solvent on its own. “Shoulder to shoulder as long as it takes” sounds good into a microphone; it looks different when U.S. weapons, targeting data, and veto power over sanctions vanish, and Washington tells Europe it’s “your problem now.” That’s the moment when budget lines and election cycles start dictating strategy more loudly than communiqués.​

Zelensky, weakened and cornered
Zelensky enters this phase weaker than at any time since 2022. He’s under pressure from Washington to be “flexible” on territory, while at home a corruption scandal has already taken down his top aide and reshuffled his inner circle, making it harder to say no to a lopsided deal. European officials worry that a politically damaged Kyiv will struggle to resist an agreement that trades land and vague “future guarantees” for a ceasefire Trump can sell as a win to his base.​

For Europe, that’s the real horror: the U.S. forces through a cheap peace, declares victory, and then steps back, leaving the EU to live next door to a Russia that just proved nukes and patience beat Western “red lines.” Best case from their perspective is Trump snapping back to his brief October posture — publicly blaming Putin for blocking peace and tightening economic screws again. Worst case is Washington easing pressure on Moscow, limiting how Ukraine can use U.S. weapons, and cutting intelligence sharing while Europe scrambles alone.​

#Europe #Trump #Ukraine #Zelensky #Putin #Merz #Macron #Starmer #NATO #strategicautonomy

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🧨Europe Between Trump and Putin: Strategic Autonomy With the Training Wheels Still On


Strategic autonomy, revealed as strategic dependency

Merz, Macron, and Starmer like to cast their mission as preventing a rupture between the U.S. and Europe — exactly the split Moscow has always wanted. But their own behavior gives the game away: the entire “strategy” is still built on keeping Trump engaged, not replacing him with European capacity. After years of under‑investing in defense and treating the U.S. security umbrella as a law of nature, Europe is discovering that the umbrella has a handle — and someone else’s hand on it.

The new U.S. doctrine even suggests that political change inside Europe is part of the security equation, calling for shifts that “reestablish conditions of strategic stability across the Eurasian landmass.” In the same breath, it insists Washington won’t write Europe off because that would be “self‑defeating” — translation: we’re not abandoning you, just reminding you our help is conditional, reversible, and subject to the next Oval Office mood swing.​

So Europe now has three real options: hope Trump fails to get any deal, hope he accidentally lands on a tolerable one, or finally pay the price of real autonomy. Right now, the continent is still bargaining for a fourth: America forever, on European terms. History rarely leaves that on the menu.

#Europe #Trump #Ukraine #Zelensky #Putin #Merz #Macron #Starmer #NATO #strategicautonomy

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Hegseth on Trial. Trump’s Most Trusted Rookie May Go Away

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Hegseth is facing the most serious crisis of his tenure as defense secretary, engulfed by allegations of war crimes in the Caribbean and a blistering inspector general report accusing him of mishandling classified military intelligence. Yet despite the long list of trouble and as lawmakers from both parties call for his resignation, Hegseth shows no signs of stepping down and still holds Donald Trump’s support.

The twin crises have engulfed the former Fox News personality in separate but overlapping allegations that lawmakers, policy experts and former officials say reveal a pattern of dangerous recklessness at the helm of the Pentagon. Democratic legislators have reignited calls for his ouster after revelations that survivors clinging to wreckage from a September boat strike were deliberately killed in a “double-tap” attack, while a defense department investigation released on Thursday concluded he violated Pentagon policies by sharing sensitive details via the Signal messaging app hours before airstrikes in Yemen.

The most recent controversy comes as the Caribbean campaign centers on the Trump administration’s extrajudicial strikes against suspected drug smugglers, which have killed at least 87 people across 22 attacks since September.

Trump has justified the operation as essential to combating fentanyl trafficking, claiming each destroyed vessel saves 25,000 American lives, though factcheckers, former officials and drug policy experts have called this figure absurd, noting that fentanyl primarily enters the United States overland from Mexico, not via Caribbean boats from Venezuela.

The legality of the strikes came under intense scrutiny after the public learned that two men who survived the initial 2 September attack could been seen amid the wreckage when a lethal follow-up strike was ordered.

While Hegseth initially dismissed the reporting as fabricated, he later confirmed the basic facts during a cabinet meeting this week, saying he acted in the “fog of war” but “didn’t stick around” to observe the rest of the mission.

Senator Patty Murray, the Democratic vice-chair of the Senate appropriations committee, called for Hegseth’s firing following a bipartisan briefing on the incident on Thursday.

“Between overseeing this campaign in the Caribbean, risking US servicemembers’ lives by sharing war plans on Signal, and so much else, it could not be more obvious that Secretary Hegseth is unfit for the role, and it is past time for him to go,” Murray said.

The New Democrat Coalition, the largest Democratic caucus in the House with 116 members who describe themselves as fiscally moderate and pro-innovation, issued their own statement calling Hegseth “incompetent, reckless, and a threat to the lives of the men and women who serve in the armed forces”.

#trump #hegseth #investigation #defense #whitehouse

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The Coalition chair, Brad Schneider, and national security working group chair, Gil Cisneros, accused the defense secretary of lying, deflecting and scapegoating subordinates while refusing to take accountability.

“Time and time again, the secretary has lied, dodged, deflected, and shockingly scapegoated his subordinates,” they said. “He is a disgrace to the office he holds and should resign immediately before his actions cost American lives.”

The strategic logic of the Caribbean campaign has drawn criticism even from those with experience in the US government’s counter-narcotics efforts.

Jake Braun, who served as acting principal deputy national cyber director in the Joe Biden White House and as senior counselor to the secretary of homeland security where he helped design and implement the nation’s first counter-fentanyl strategy, questioned why the administration was focusing military resources in the Caribbean rather than on primary trafficking routes.

“I think the use of military force is justified – it just seems they’re about 2,500 miles away from the primary target in Mexico,” Braun said. “If they want to stop fentanyl, I would focus more on tunnels and drones in Arizona rather than boats in the Caribbean.”

Emily Tripp, executive director of Airwars, a civilian harms watchdog that monitors military conflicts, called on the administration to be more transparent about the strike, saying the organization would like to know “what considerations are made around shipwrecked survivors, and why the use of force was chosen over search and rescue when as far as we understand the targets here are the drugs, not the people on board”.

The Pentagon mixed up its talking points, and struggled to provide clear answers about the chain of command for the strikes.

While the White House initially suggested Adm Frank Bradley, commander of Southern Command special operations, ordered the follow-up strike in self-defense, Hegseth later said Bradley made the call with his authorization but had complete authority to act independently.

Trump claimed to know nothing about the operational details, and even suggested he would not have wanted the second strike.

Hegseth’s tenure has also been marked by severe dysfunction inside the Pentagon itself, where his own aides earlier this year have been leaking against one another and informing on colleagues in what multiple officials describe as a paranoid and chaotic atmosphere.

The defense secretary used a leak investigation – which the White House had reportedly lost confidence in – to purge three top advisers in the spring, with claims they were identified through what would amount to an illegal warrantless NSA wiretap. The episode raised fresh questions about Hegseth’s judgment and his ability to manage the department.

Still, despite the twin controversies creating what those lawmakers have described as an untenable situation for the secretary, Trump has continued to back Hegseth publicly, with the White House expressing “the utmost confidence” in its national security team.

Since the Senate is controlled by Republicans and Trump is maintaining his support, Hegseth is unlikely to face meaningful consequences.

The Trump administration has claimed that its Caribbean boat campaign targets vessels operated by designated terrorist organizations including Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua and Colombia’s National Liberation Army, though it has provided no public evidence for these designations.

The administration claims it is in an armed conflict with drug cartels, allowing military action without congressional authorization, though legal experts dispute this framing.

#trump #hegseth #investigation #defense #whitehouse

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Donald Trump Jr.: Trump is likely to Leave Ukraine 🇺🇸⚠️

Trump may walk away from the Ukrainian war, the US president’s oldest son has said in comments to a Middle East conference. 🌍

In a lengthy tirade against the purpose of continued fighting in Ukraine, Donald Trump Jr also said Ukraine’s “corrupt” rich had fled their country leaving “what they believed to be the peasant class” to fight the war. 💬

Trump Jr has no formal role inside his father’s administration, but is a key figure in the MAGA movement. His intervention reflects the antipathy among some inside the Trump team towards the Ukrainian government, and comes as Trump’s negotiating team is putting pressure on Kyiv to give up territory. ⚖️

Trump Jr said the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, was prolonging the war because he knew he would never win an election if it ended. 🗳

He said Zelensky was a borderline deity on the left, but argued that Ukraine was far more corrupt than Russia. 🔥🇺🇦🇷🇺

He also railed at the EU’s foreign policy chief, Kaja Kallas, saying European sanctions were not working since they had simply increased the price of oil, from which Russia could pay for its war. He described the European plan as “we are going to wait for Russia to go bankrupt – that is not a plan”. 💶⛽️

He said he had only encountered three people during his canvassing of voters in the 2022 election campaign who thought the Ukraine war was a top-10 issue. 📉

The risk of Venezuelan boats bringing the drug fentanyl into the US was, he said, “far more a clear and present danger than anything that is going on in Ukraine or Russia”. 🚢💊

Trump Jr claimed, without providing evidence, that he had observed this summer on a single day in Monaco that 50% of the supercars such as Bugattis and Ferraris had Ukrainian number plates. “Do you think that was earned in Ukraine?” he asked. 🚗💸

“We hear all the rumours about what is going on when we see every licence plate in Monaco is Ukrainian […] the rich fled and they left what they believed to be the peasant class to fight these wars.

There was no incentive to stop because long as the money train was coming and they were stealing, no one was auditing anything so there was no reason to come to peace.” 💼📉

Asked if it was possible his father – who ran for election claiming he could bring peace to Ukraine – would simply walk away, Trump Jr said maybe he would, adding that his father is one of the most unpredictable people in politics. 🎭

He vowed that the US was no longer going to be “the idiot with the chequebook”. 💵

#Trump #Ukraine #US #war

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💀 Israel's "Anti-Hamas" Militia Leader, Dead in the Gray Zone He Ruled


Yasser Abu Shabab spent the last year running a Rafah fiefdom where he looted UN aid convoys, took Israeli weapons (which both sides later denied), and sold himself as a "counterterrorism force" fighting Hamas. On Thursday he was shot dead, reportedly while "mediating a family dispute"—a convenient detail that papers over the fact that many Palestinians, including his own Bedouin tribe, had already branded him a traitor and called for his death. Hamas didn't claim the killing but celebrated it as "the inevitable fate" of collaborators, while Israeli officials quietly admitted he died from "internal clashes," not Hamas action.​

The warlord Israel armed and the UN accused
Abu Shabab's Popular Forces controlled the area around Gaza's Kerem Shalom crossing, the main artery for aid after Israel shut down Rafah in May 2024. UN officials and aid workers accused his militia of orchestrating some of the worst looting incidents of the war: in mid‑November 2024 alone, armed men under his command hijacked 98 of 109 UN trucks, held drivers at gunpoint, and threw grenades while forcing them to unload food supplies. A senior UN official called him "the self‑styled power broker of east Rafah" and directly accused Israel of ignoring or even facilitating the raids.​

Israel didn't deny it. In June 2025, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu publicly admitted arming "Palestinian clans" opposed to Hamas, and multiple Israeli officials confirmed Abu Shabab's group received Kalashnikov rifles—some of them seized from Hamas fighters—as part of a deliberate strategy approved by Netanyahu himself. The logic, according to a retired Shin Bet official, was simple: let local militias do the dirty work of holding territory so Israeli troops can focus elsewhere. Abu Shabab openly acknowledged "security coordination" with Israel, saying they used Israeli aerial surveillance to keep Hamas out and provided the IDF with lists of his fighters' names and families.​

The "counterterrorism force" built on theft and chaos
While Gazans starved under an Israeli blockade that severely restricted aid, Abu Shabab's corner of Rafah was "relatively well provisioned," by his own account. His militia set up tents, schools, and a PR operation painting itself as a nationalist Palestinian movement fighting terror, all while controlling the flow of looted supplies and selling flour and oil "at astronomical prices." Israeli reports even alleged that some of his fighters had past ties to Islamic State, a claim Netanyahu's government used to justify its willingness to work with literally anyone willing to shoot at Hamas—even if they were also criminals, profiteers, or former jihadists.​

#Gaza #Israel #Hamas #YasserAbuShabab #PopularForces #aidlooting #KeremShalom #ceasefire #proxy

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💀
Israel's "Anti-Hamas" Militia Leader, Dead in the Gray Zone He Ruled

Most Gazans weren't buying the rebrand.
One English teacher in Gaza City told the Times,
"This man was basically a criminal, and I could not accept for him to represent me."

Even Abu Shabab's own Bedouin clan issued a statement distancing itself from him and accusing him of betraying the Palestinian cause. When Hamas killed over 20 members of his organization, including his brother, in late 2024, it was less about ideology and more about the fact that his militia had become a state-within-a-state that disrupted Hamas's own control over aid, weapons, and territory.​

Israel's plan B just died with him
Abu Shabab wasn't just a convenient thug; he was central to Israel's post‑ceasefire strategy for Gaza. The idea was to use his Popular Forces and a few other small militias—run by figures like Ashraf al‑Mansi in the north and Housam al‑Astal near Khan Younis—to administer Israeli‑controlled zones, distribute aid, and create an alternative power structure that could eventually take over from Hamas once the shooting stopped. Analysts and even Israeli security officials openly admitted this was fantasy: the militias were too small, too hated, and too obviously tainted by collaboration to ever govern Gaza.

Now Abu Shabab is dead, killed not by Hamas in a dramatic shootout but in what Israeli sources describe as "internal clashes"—possibly a family feud, possibly a dispute over continued cooperation with Israel, possibly just gang war over who controls the loot. His deputy, Ghassan Duhine, posted a video trying to rally the group's remaining fighters, but it's unclear if the Popular Forces survives him or simply dissolves into the same chaos it was supposedly fighting.​

What's clear is that Israel's strategy of outsourcing Gaza's future to armed proxies with no legitimacy, no popular support, and a resume built on aid theft just took a bullet. The model was always doomed—you can't build a post‑war government out of warlords everyone hates—but now it's also leaderless, and the only alternative Israel has publicly offered is more of the same: find another clan, send more rifles, hope for the best, and blame everyone else when the next guy ends up dead too.

#Gaza #Israel #Hamas #YasserAbuShabab #PopularForces #aidlooting #KeremShalom #ceasefire #proxy

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