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Gunfire Erupts at White House Correspondents’ Dinner, President Trump Evacuated

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Gunfire Erupts at White House Correspondents’ Dinner, President Trump Evacuated


Gunfire disrupted the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner Saturday night at the Washington Hilton, triggering panic inside one of Washington’s most high-profile annual gatherings and prompting the Secret Service to evacuate President Donald Trump, senior officials, and hundreds of attendees. Authorities said the suspect, identified as Cole Tomas Allen, 31, of Torrance, California, was taken into custody and that the president was not harmed.

The shooting unfolded as journalists, administration officials, and public figures were gathered in the ballroom. Witnesses described confusion as initial sounds were mistaken for dropped equipment before security personnel rushed in and ordered people to take cover. Some attendees ducked under tables as agents moved quickly to secure the room and escort senior officials out.

Law enforcement officials said at least one officer was struck but protected by a bullet-resistant vest and is expected to recover. Investigators believe Allen acted alone, though a motive had not been publicly established by early Sunday morning Israel time. AP and Reuters described him as a California tutor and computer programmer with an academic background in engineering and computer science.

The incident has raised immediate questions about security at the Washington Hilton, which, unlike the White House complex, relies on layered but less centralized protection for large public events. Authorities are expected to review how the attacker was able to approach or access the area.

Among those caught in the chaos was Erika Kirk, the widow of conservative activist Charlie Kirk. She reportedly took cover under a table during the shooting and later appeared visibly shaken as she was escorted out. Witness accounts said she was crying and said, “I just want to go home.”

The dinner was effectively halted as security teams swept the area. It remains unclear whether the event will be rescheduled as officials continue investigating Allen’s background, his route into the hotel, and whether any security failures contributed to the breach.

Mass rescue operation by Libyan authorities: over 400 migrants saved from 10 boats

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Mass rescue operation by Libyan authorities: over 400 migrants saved from 10 boats


Libya’s eastern-based coast guard of the Libyan National Army rescued at ​least 404 migrants on board 10 ‌boats after they had “faced harsh conditions at sea,” the Tobruk Red Crescent said.

Tobruk is a coastal city ​in eastern Libya near the border ⁠with Egypt.

The Red Crescent in the ​city said the migrants are from different ​nationalities.

Pictures posted by the Red Crescent on Facebook showed their volunteers providing first aid, food ​and blankets to the migrants.

Libya ​is a transit route for migrants, many of ‌them ⁠from sub-Saharan Africa, risking their lives to flee to Europe across desert and sea in the hope of escaping ​conflict and ​poverty.

On ⁠Monday, 10 migrants were confirmed to have died after their ​boat capsized off Tobruk, and ​31 ⁠were still missing, according to three Libyan sources and the International Organization for ⁠Migration. ​Six bodies were recovered ​on Saturday after washing ashore.

Source:  Reuters

Geocultural forces reshaping China’s economic map

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Geocultural forces reshaping China’s economic map

On April 1, the National Bureau of Statistics of China released the latest GDP rankings for the country’s various provinces and municipalities. The data showed consistent growth across major metropolises, but also revealed a significant geographic shift in the Chinese economy.

The data ranked Jiangsu and Zhejiang first and third, respectively, among Chinese provinces by GDP per capita, while Guangdong ranked fourth. Yet 20 years ago, Guangdong held an undisputed first place, with Zhejiang and Jiangsu a distant third and fourth.

The shift is even more apparent at the city level. In 2005, nine cities from Guangdong appeared in the top 25 by GDP per capita, compared with five from Jiangsu and two from Zhejiang.

Twenty years later, only three Guangdong cities remain in that group, while Jiangsu and Zhejiang have grown to seven and four, respectively.

To be sure, all three provinces remain among the most developed regions in China. Since the late 1970s, China’s economic reforms have relied heavily on manufacturing and export-led growth, fueling a regional inequality that persists today and favors its eastern seaboard.

Guangdong pioneered this model, with Shenzhen (ranked No. 1 in 2005, No. 6 in 2025) and Zhuhai (No. 3 in 2005, No. 16 in 2025) leveraging their proximity to Hong Kong and Macao, respectively, to become successful special economic zones.

Guangzhou (No. 8 in 2005, No. 22 in 2025) also used its status as the province’s capital and largest city to establish itself as a major manufacturing and trading hub.

That manufacturing success spurred the formation of innovative local firms, including Huawei in telecommunications, DJI in drones, Tencent in digital services and BYD in batteries and electric vehicles.

While these firms continue to make their mark in China and abroad, the country’s cutting-edge startup scene has shifted further north. China’s latest five-year plan, released March 12, makes the new centers of gravity clear.

In artificial intelligence and robotics, Zhejiang’s capital Hangzhou leads with local champions DeepSeek and Unitree, backed by hometown tech giant Alibaba.

In biomanufacturing, national champion WuXi Biologics has facilities in Hangzhou, Jiangsu’s Suzhou (No. 25 in 2005, No. 7 in 2025), and neighboring Wuxi (No. 11 in 2005, No. 5 in 2025).

The divergence in high-tech entrepreneurship may partly be explained by the presence of top educational institutions.

Last March, The Economist profiled Zhejiang University, concluding that its presence is instrumental in turning Hangzhou into a startup hub — much as Stanford has done for Silicon Valley.

Indeed, various university rankings consistently place both Zhejiang University and Nanjing University — located in Jiangsu’s capital Nanjing (No. 31 in 2005, No. 11 in 2025) — alongside several universities in nearby Shanghai and Anhui province, in the top 10, while Guangdong has no entries.

The educational advantage Jiangsu and Zhejiang hold over Guangdong has centuries-old roots. Since the Southern Song Dynasty, Jiangnan — the region encompassing the southern bank of the Yangtze River, spanning parts of Jiangsu and Zhejiang — has been China’s premier cultural and economic hub, parlaying strength in agricultural productivity and trade into artistic and intellectual achievement.

In contrast, Lingnan, which encompasses modern-day Guangdong, was historically open to seaborne trade but remained culturally distant from the rest of the country due to its geographic isolation.

Both regions have strong commercial traditions, but Jiangnan’s intellectual heritage may give it an edge in producing the talent needed to push the technological frontier.

As Jiangsu and Zhejiang forge ahead economically, they may once again become China’s cultural center as well. In the 1980s and ’90s, Cantonese pop culture spread across China, buoyed by Hong Kong’s prosperity, giving the province’s native tongue unprecedented cachet.

But that prestige has declined markedly as Hong Kong’s economic standing has diminished. Meanwhile, Shanghai’s rise as an economic powerhouse has elevated the profile of Jiangnan’s local vernacular as a countercultural force — the formerly marginalized language is reasserting itself in the public sphere against the nationwide push for Mandarin.

Of course, it is not a foregone conclusion that the broader economic and cultural shift from Guangdong to Jiangsu and Zhejiang will continue. Much will depend on the success of individual entrepreneurs and their firms, wherever they may be located.

And global demand for Chinese goods and services can shift quickly, shaped by ongoing restrictions on Chinese imports worldwide. But in any case, examining regional differences serves as a reminder that China is far from monolithic in its future economic trajectory.

Over 2,490 killed in Lebanon in Israeli attacks since March 2

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Over 2,490 killed in Lebanon in Israeli attacks since March 2

Lebanon said Saturday that five people were killed and six others wounded over the past 24 hours, raising the death toll from Israeli attacks to 2,496 killed and 7,725 injured since March 2, Anadolu reports.

The figures were published in a report by the Lebanese Cabinet’s Disaster Risk Management Unit, as reported by the National News Agency (NAA).

The update comes as Israel continues to violate a temporary ceasefire in Lebanon that began on April 17.

The previous official toll stood at 2,491 killed and 7,719 injured, in addition to more than 1 million displaced, before the updated figures were released.

READ: UK, Finland condemn ‘unacceptable’ Israeli attacks on journalists in Lebanon

The unit did not provide further details on how the figures were calculated.

According to field sources and local media, authorities continue to recover bodies of victims killed before the ceasefire took effect, while the rise in injuries is attributed to data updates and newly reported cases from recent days.

On April 17, US President Donald Trump announced a 10-day ceasefire in Lebanon between Israel and Lebanon, later extending it on Thursday by an additional three weeks.

Since March 2, Israel has continued to violate the fragile ceasefire, resulting in casualties and widespread destruction, while Hezbollah has responded by targeting Israeli military positions in southern Lebanon and Israeli communities.

READ: Israeli army warns civilians against returning to southern Lebanon villages despite ceasefire

Trump’s war: the kind of military misadventure that ends empires

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Trump’s war: the kind of military misadventure that ends empires

Writing more than 2,000 years ago, the Greek historian Plutarch gave us an eloquent description of what modern historians now call “micro-militarism.”

When an imperial power like Athens then, or America now, is in decline, its leaders often react emotionally by mounting seemingly bold military strikes in hopes of regaining the imperial grandeur that’s slipping through their fingers.

Instead of another of the great victories the empire won at its peak of power, however, such military misadventures only serve to accelerate the ongoing decline, erasing whatever aura of imperial majesty remains and revealing instead the moral rot deep inside the ruling elite.

There is mounting historical evidence that America is indeed an empire in steep decline, while President Donald Trump’s war of choice against Iran is becoming the sort of micro-military disaster that helped destroy successive empires over the past 2,500 years — from ancient Athens to medieval Portugal to modern Spain, Great Britain, and now the United States.

And at the core of every such ill-fated war-making decision lay a problematic leader, often born into wealth and prestige, whose personal inadequacies reflected and ramified the many irrationalities that make imperial decline such a painful process.

During that demoralizing downward spiral, imperial armies, so lethal in an empire’s ascent, can err by plunging their countries into draining, even disastrous “micro-military” misadventures—psychologically compensatory efforts to salve the loss of imperial power by trying to occupy new territories or display awe-inspiring military might.

Although such micro-militarism often chose targets that proved strategically unsustainable, the psychological pressures upon declining empires are so strong that they all too often gamble their prestige on just such misadventures.

Not only did such disasters add financial pressures to a fading empire’s many troubles, but in a humiliating fashion, they also invariably exposed its eroding power while exacerbating the destabilizing impact of imperial decline in the capitals of empire (whether Athens, Lisbon, Madrid, London, or Washington, DC).

In our moment, when the bombs stop falling and the rubble is finally cleared from the streets of Tehran and Beirut, the impact on US global power of such a de facto defeat will become all too clear—as alliances like NATO atrophy, American hegemony evaporates, legitimacy is lost, global disorder rises, and the world economy suffers.

Let me now turn from the disasters of the present imperial moment to the lessons of history to explore the sort of lasting damage that Donald Trump’s micro-military misadventure in the Middle East might be inflicting on this country’s declining imperium.

Defeat of Athens in Sicily

The date was 413 BC. The place was ancient Athens, then the seat of a powerful empire, long dominant around the rim of the Aegean Sea but losing influence to a sustained military challenge by Sparta.

At the port of Piraeus, a “certain stranger,” as the historian and philosopher Plutarch recalled, “took a seat in a barber’s shop, and began to discourse [on] what had happened as if the Athenians already knew all about it.” Stunned by this stranger’s report of a military debacle in far-off Sicily, the barber “ran at the top of his speed to the upper city” of Athens, where the news sparked “consternation and confusion.”

What that stranger described was the greatest military disaster in the history of the Athenian empire. Two years earlier, in the midst of the protracted Peloponnesian Wars, the aristocrat Nicias — an indifferent, indecisive leader who used his inherited wealth to court popularity with lavish spectacles — persuaded the citizens of Athens to deliver a theoretically bold blow against a rival imperial power, Sparta, by attacking its ally Syracuse in Sicily in hopes of crippling the enemy, capturing riches, and recovering Athens’ ebbing hegemony.

Instead of victory, however, Athens’ vast armada of 200 ships and some 12,000 soldiers suffered a devastating defeat. Not only was the fleet destroyed (largely because Nicias proved “an incompetent military commander”), but his surviving soldiers were captured, confined on a starvation diet in a stone quarry, and sold into slavery. Athens never recovered.

Within a decade, the city had been starved into submission by Sparta’s impenetrable blockade of a naval choke point in the Dardanelles Strait, stripped of its empire, and subjected to autocratic rule by a pro-Spartan oligarchy.

Portugal’s debacle in Morocco

Our next date is 1578. The place is Portugal, the seat of a lucrative empire that had controlled commerce across the Indian Ocean for decades but now found its hegemony challenged by Muslim merchant princes allied with the Ottoman Empire.

In its capital, Lisbon, a headstrong young king, Sebastian, suffered from sexual impotence and a fiery temperament that made him a fanatical “captain of Christ.” With the idea of striking a lethal blow in his country’s global war against Islam, the young king persuaded the flower of his nation’s aristocracy to follow him on a latter-day crusade across the Mediterranean Sea to Morocco.

There, at the fateful Battle of Alcacer Quibir, Portugal’s army was slaughtered by local Muslim forces. Some 8,000 Portuguese troops were killed, 15,000 captured, and only 100 escaped.

The defeat was so devastating that it not only destroyed the king and his court but also precipitated the country’s incorporation into the Spanish empire for the next 60 years. In the aftermath of such reverses, the Portuguese Estado da India (or state of India) at Goa was reduced to selling permits to any ship captain who could pay, whether Hindu, Muslim, or Christian. With Portuguese commercial dominance removed from the Indian Ocean, Muslim merchants and pilgrims could once again move across it unimpeded.

Though the Portuguese empire would survive for another three centuries, it would never recover the commercial hegemony that had once allowed it to dominate the world’s sea lanes from the Spice Islands of Indonesia, across the Indian Ocean and the South Atlantic to the coast of Brazil.

Spain’s disaster in the Atlas Mountains

And now to jump several centuries, another significant date for imperial disasters is 1920. The place was Madrid, where Spain’s leaders were already reeling from the psychological stress of their country’s long imperial decline, culminating in the loss of its last colonies, Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines in the Spanish-American War of 1898 with the rising United States.

Seeking regeneration through further colonial conquest, Spain’s conservative leaders reacted to that demoralizing defeat against America by expanding their small coastal enclaves in northern Morocco to establish a protectorate over the whole region and its arid Atlas Mountains.

Spain’s inept monarch Alfonso XIII, who liked to play soldier, cultivated a clique of military favorites who shared his passion for the recovery of lost imperial glory by pacifying that rugged terrain. As resistance to Spanish rule by Berber Muslims escalated into the bloody Rif War of 1920, one of the king’s favorite generals led his troops into the Battle of Annual, where Berber fighters slaughtered some 12,000 of them.

Nonetheless, through the influence of the king and his military cronies, Spain clung desperately to those profitless Moroccan mountains. The Spaniards would, in fact, dispatch 125,000 more troops there, including its Foreign Legion led by the man who, in the 1930s, would become the leader of a fascist Spain, Francisco Franco, for a protracted pacification campaign that featured both mass slaughter and military innovation.

In a desperate quest for a victory that defied both economic and strategic rationality, Spain produced some 400 metric tons of lethal mustard gas to conduct history’s first aerial bombardment using poison gas, raining mass death down upon Berber villages.

And in military history’s first successful amphibious operation, the Spanish navy also landed 18,000 troops and a squadron of light tanks at Al Hoceima Bay in September 1925 to flank and soon defeat the Berber guerrillas there.

Such micro-militarism, however, not only plunged Spain into a protracted pacification campaign with soaring costs, heavy casualties, and mass atrocities, but also unleashed political forces that would destroy its struggling democracy.

As the masses protested that misbegotten war, King Alfonso backed a military favorite, General Primo de Rivera, in imposing a decade of dictatorship that finally gave way to a short-lived Second Republic.

In 1936, however, only a decade after the Rif War ended, General Franco flew his Army of Africa back from Morocco over the Mediterranean Sea, launching a Spanish civil war that would defeat the Republic and establish a fascist dictatorship that would rule the country for nearly 40 dismal years of economic stagnation.

End of the British Empire at Suez

Arguably, when it came to imperial decline, however, the most revealing date was 1956.

The place was London, the seat of the once-proud British Empire, where the suffocating stress of a painful, protracted global imperial retreat had pushed British conservatives into a disastrous micro-military intervention at Egypt’s Suez Canal, leading to what one British diplomat would term the “dying convulsion of British imperialism.”

In July 1956 (as described in my recent book Cold War on Five Continents“), Egypt’s charismatic president Gamal Abdel Nasser nationalized the Suez Canal, ending British colonial control there, electrifying the Arab world, and elevating himself to the first rank of world leaders.

Although British ships could still pass freely through the canal, the country’s conservative prime minister, Anthony Eden, a vain aristocrat and determined defender of empire, would be deeply unsettled, if not unhinged, by Nasser’s assertive nationalism. Indeed, his leadership throughout the crisis would prove so unbalanced that senior Foreign Office officials would become convinced “Eden has gone off his head.”

In response to the news of the canal’s nationalization, an apoplectic Eden would immediately convene a council of war at 4:00 in the morning. Calling Nasser a “Muslim Mussolini,” a reference to the former fascist ruler of Italy, Eden ordered “him removed and I don’t give a damn if there’s anarchy and chaos in Egypt.”

Making his meaning perfectly clear, Eden asked his foreign minister: “What’s all this nonsense about isolating Nasser or ‘neutralizing’ him as you call it?” He then added pointedly: “I want him destroyed, can’t you understand? I want him murdered.”

With the British secret service MI6 failing in multiple assassination attempts, however, Eden’s government began plotting with the French and Israelis to launch a secret, two-phase invasion of the Suez Canal Zone.

On October 29, the Israeli army led by the dashing General Moshe Dayan swept across the Sinai Peninsula, destroying Egyptian tanks and bringing his troops within 10 miles of the canal. Using that fighting as a pretext for its own intervention (supposedly to restore peace), in just three days, an armada of six Anglo-French aircraft carriers smashed the Egyptian air force, destroying 104 of its new Soviet MIG jet fighters and 130 additional aircraft.

With Egypt’s strategic forces destroyed and its military virtually helpless before the might of that imperial juggernaut, Nasser deployed a geopolitical strategy brilliant in its simplicity. He had dozens of rusting cargo ships filled with rocks and then scuttled them at the canal’s northern entrance, quickly closing one of the world’s main maritime choke points and so cutting off Europe’s oil lifeline to the Persian Gulf.

By the time 22,000 British and French forces began storming ashore at the canal’s north end on November 6, their objective of securing the free movement of ships had already been snatched from their grasp.

By the end of that micro-military disaster, Britain would be reprimanded by the United Nations; its currency would require an International Monetary Fund bailout to save it from utter collapse; its aura of imperial majesty would have evaporated; and the once mighty British Empire would be on the road to extinction.

In retrospect, the Suez Crisis would not only expose the full-scale decline of British power, but also show the world that the country’s ruling Conservative establishment, with its illusions of imperial and racial superiority, was no longer capable of global leadership.

America’s defeat in the Strait of Hormuz

Another date likely to prove all too significant when it comes to the history of imperial decline is February 28, 2026. The place was Washington, DC, home to what had been history’s most powerful imperial state that had dominated much of the globe for nearly 80 years through a mixture of military alliances, deft diplomacy, and economic leadership.

By then, however, cracks had distinctly begun to appear in its edifice of power as US global hegemony faced an increasingly strong economic challenge from China, its massive military suffered two searing defeats in Afghanistan and Iraq, and its economic globalization produced an angry populism at home.

After a populist campaign based on promises to restore both working-class prosperity and America’s global power, Donald Trump took office a second time in January 2025 promising a “golden age of America,” a “thrilling new era of national success” in which the country would “reclaim its rightful place as the greatest, most powerful, most respected nation on Earth, inspiring the awe and admiration of the entire world.”

Born to wealth and privilege himself, Trump returned to office convinced of his unique “genius” for leadership and believing that “I was saved by God to make America great again.”

Wielding raw economic and military might to compel obeisance from friend and foe alike, the president, inspired by a delusional sense of divine mission, began attempting to bend the world to his will.

But during his first year in office, nothing seemed to work as planned. Indeed, most of his initiatives produced the sort of backlash that only served to show how far the United States had fallen from 1991, when the break-up of the Soviet Union made it the world’s sole superpower.

On April 2, 2025, on what he called “Liberation Day,” Trump announced a roster of punitive tariffs to protect domestic manufacturing largely from Chinese imports that faced an initial duty of 34%—later raised to a fully punitive 100%. But at their October 2025 meeting in South Korea, China’s leader Xi Jinping forced Trump to back down by cutting US access to his country’s storehouse of strategic rare earth minerals.

In January, with his tariff initiative losing its luster, Trump plunged the NATO alliance into crisis by demanding that Denmark give him the island of Greenland, threatening to impose new tariffs on European allies unless they complied. Within a week, however, vociferous European resistance had led him to retract that threat at the Davos economic summit, claiming he was satisfied with NATO’s offer of a “framework of a future deal.”

On February 28, 2026, with his tariff initiative failing and his Greenland gambit checkmated, Trump joined Israel in a seemingly bold strike on Iran that soon had the makings of the sort of fateful “micro-military” maneuver that appears to go with imperial powers in decline.

In the first few days of war, US and Israeli bombing killed Iran’s leadership, destroyed its navy, and eliminated its air defenses, leaving the country seemingly prostrate before the might of America’s air-power juggernaut.

After a week of devastating bombardment that seemed to stun the world with its lethality and precision, on March 6 Trump demanded that Iran offer an “unconditional surrender” and signal its capitulation by “the selection of a GREAT & ACCEPTABLE Leader.” In exchange, he promised that the US would “work tirelessly to bring Iran back from the brink of destruction.”

But much as Nasser had done at Suez in 1956, Iran’s leadership reversed the war’s geostrategic balance by closing a critical maritime choke point in the Strait of Hormuz. By striking five freighters with drones in the first week of war, Iran’s leaders, taking a leaf from Nasser’s geopolitical playbook, effectively shut the Strait of Hormuz to tanker traffic, cutting off gas, fertilizer, and oil shipments that plunged the world economy into an unprecedented energy crisis. By the end of March, Iran’s chokehold over the strait was so tight that it began collecting “tolls” from freighters to permit passage.

Blindsided by the strait’s unexpected yet utterly predictable closure, on April 5, Easter Sunday, an unsettled Trump posted a social media message saying: “Tuesday will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one, in Iran. There will be nothing like it!!!”

He added: “Open the Fuckin’ Strait, you crazy bastards, or you’ll be living in Hell—JUST WATCH. Praise be to Allah.” Two days later, Trump threatened that, unless Iran opened the Strait of Hormuz, he would attack its civilian infrastructure so severely that “a whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again.”

After the collapse of subsequent negotiations between the two sides at Islamabad, Pakistan, on April 12, Trump plunged ever deeper into the Iran quagmireordering the US Navy to “begin the process of BLOCKADING any and all Ships trying to enter, or leave, the Strait of Hormuz,” and “interdict every vessel in International Waters that has paid a toll to Iran.” With characteristic bluster, he added: “We are fully ‘LOCKED AND LOADED,’ and our Military will finish up the little that is left of Iran!”

Even if Trump destroys Iran’s infrastructure or eventually negotiates a face-saving peace deal, by every metric that really matters, Washington has already lost its war with Iran. Like all weaker powers in asymmetric warfare, Tehran has been willing to absorb relentless punishment, while inflicting pain that the dominant power can ill sustain.

The US will soon run out of targets in Tehran, but Iran has a whole world of damage that its cheap drones can do to the elaborate, exposed petroleum infrastructure on the south shore of the Persian Gulf.

Like Britain at Suez in 1956, Washington will likely pay a heavy price for its “micro-militarism” in the Strait of Hormuz. Close allies, the bedrock of US global power for 80 years, have refused any military support for Washington’s war of choice, prompting Trump to call them “cowards.”

In response to his thundering threats of civilian and civilizational destruction (both war crimes), Trump has been condemned by world leaders. Oblivious to the dangers of war in a region that is the epicenter of global capitalism, Washington is now proving ever more dangerously disruptive of the global economy, making China look like a far more stable choice for world leadership. Moreover, while the US military has proven its tactical agility in destroying targets, it clearly can no longer capture meaningful strategic objectives.

With its alliances in tatters, its world leadership forfeited, and its aura of military might evaporating, the only trajectory for US global hegemony now seems to be downward (like so many great powers of the past).

By the time Trump’s micro-military misadventure in the Strait of Hormuz is over, the decline of US global power will have accelerated drastically and the world will be trying to move beyond the old Pax Americana toward a new, distinctly uncertain global order.

Alfred W. McCoy is professor of history at the University of Wisconsin-Madison is the author of “In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power”. Previous books include: “Torture and Impunity: The U.S. Doctrine of Coercive Interrogation” (University of Wisconsin, 2012), “A Question of Torture: CIA Interrogation, from the Cold War to the War on Terror (American Empire Project)”, “Policing America’s Empire: The United States, the Philippines, and the Rise of the Surveillance State”, and “The Politics of Heroin: CIA Complicity in the Global Drug Trade”

Originally published by Tom Dispatch and republished by Common Dreams, this article is republished under a Creative Commons license.

Leader of Russia’s Communists warns parliament of risk of revolution due to faltering economy

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Leader of Russia’s Communists warns parliament of risk of revolution due to faltering economy


The veteran leader of Russia’s Communist Party has warned parliament that the ​country’s faltering economy risks stoking a 1917-style revolution and that the government needs to take urgent measures to correct ‌its course.

Gennady Zyuganov, 81, issued his warning to a plenary session of the State Duma, the lower house of parliament, ahead of a parliamentary election due in September, according to a recording of his speech posted on the Duma’s official website.

“We’re doing everything we can to support (President Vladimir) Putin and his ​strategy and policies, but you (the government) are not listening,” he said, in comments made on Tuesday. They drew some ​applause and were carefully listened to by Vyacheslav Volodin, the Duma speaker and a close Putin ally.

Zyuganov ⁠said a recent government meeting convened by Putin had been the gloomiest in a long time.

“If you (the government) do not urgently adopt ​financial, economic and other measures, by autumn a repeat of what happened in 1917 awaits us. We don’t have the right to ​repeat that. Let’s take some decisions.”

Despite his warning, there is currently no sign of serious social unrest in Russia, amid tight wartime censorship, protest bans, long jail sentences for dissidents and the growth in influence of the Federal Security Service, the main successor agency to the Soviet-era KGB.

AVOIDS CRITICISM OF PUTIN

Although ​Zyuganov’s party, the second largest in parliament, is the main successor to the Soviet Communist Party, it has long backed Putin and ​his core policies, offering carefully-calibrated criticism of the ruling United Russia party from within the tightly controlled political system.

His comments, which also referenced recent viral ‌criticism, opens new tab of ⁠the authorities by a celebrity blogger, looked designed to win votes from Russians feeling the economic pinch, distance Putin from the economic problems, and show that the political system is aware there are issues that need addressing.

Zyuganov was careful not to blame Putin personally, appearing to take aim instead at the government, the central bank, and the ruling party, whose ratings are under pressure according to state ​opinion polls.

The 1917 revolution swept away ​Russia’s monarchy and a provisional ⁠government, bringing the Bolsheviks to power and paving the way for the creation of the Soviet Union, which collapsed in 1991.

Putin, in power as either president or prime minister since the end of ​1999, has repeatedly promised stability and spoken of the destructive nature of revolutions.

He scolded his own top ​officials last week ⁠after the economy contracted by 1.8% in the first two months of the year and asked them to come up with new measures to boost growth.

Russia’s $3.1 trillion economy, which contracted in 2022 but grew in 2023, 2024 and 2025, has outperformed most expectations and avoided a crash ⁠despite Western ​sanctions imposed over Moscow’s war in Ukraine.

But the strain of the war and double-digit ​interest rates slowed growth to 1% last year.

The U.S.-Israeli war on Iran has lifted oil prices, however, a move likely to boost the Russian economy if sustained. The ​International Monetary Fund has raised its forecast for Russia’s economic growth this year to 1.1%, from 0.8%.

Source:  Reuters

Taliban Claims No Security Threat, Urges Citizens Abroad To Return

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Taliban Claims No Security Threat, Urges Citizens Abroad To Return


The Taliban on Saturday called on Afghan nationals staying at a US-managed transit facility in Qatar to return to Afghanistan, saying the country is secure and that citizens no longer face safety risks.

In a statement, Foreign Ministry spokesman Abdul Qahar Balkhi said Afghans living abroad should feel confident returning home.

He maintained that there is currently no security threat to anyone in Afghanistan and said people are not being compelled to leave the country due to insecurity.

The Afghan government’s statement comes after several US media outlets reported that the Trump administration is considering relocating its former Afghan allies to the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The Congo is currently regarded as one of the world’s most conflict-ridden countries.

According to The New York Times, “After halting a US resettlement program for Afghans who helped the American war effort, President Trump is in talks to send as many as 1,100 of them to the Democratic Republic of Congo, an aid worker briefed on the plan said Tuesday.

More than 1,100 Afghans who were evacuated to Qatar after the fall of Kabul in 2021 are bracing for the closure of Camp As-Sayliyah in Doha, as the US-run facility was set to shut down on March 31.

The camp served as a temporary refuge for former Afghan commandos, interpreters, and family members of US service personnel, many of whom were evacuated during the chaotic withdrawal following the Taliban’s return to power.

Most of those housed at the camp have already been cleared for resettlement in the United States following extensive security vetting, with more than 400 children among them.

American senators strongly criticize the reported plan for moving Afghan allies from Qatar to Congo.

Senator Alex Padilla posted on his X account, “Unbelievable. When we betray our allies, we signal to every future partner that the US isn’t worthy of their trust.” Senator Jeff Merkley described the proposal as “evil and wrong.”

Several US senators, including Tammy Duckworth, Tim Kaine, and Ed Markey, have also criticized the reported relocation plan, calling for an immediate halt and stronger protections for Afghan allies.

Meanwhile, Nadir Khalili, a former Afghan special forces operative, told The Media Line that “It would have been better for us to have been killed in the war than to be transferred to a country like Congo.”

Khalili continued, “At the time, US officials clearly told us that, morally, the responsibility for our protection now rested with the United States, which is why we brought our children with us. But hearing this now has only deepened our anxiety.”

Aid agencies and human rights groups, including the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, have repeatedly urged faster international solutions for Afghan refugees, warning that delays in resettlement increase vulnerability and instability.

‘Roadkill’ Found Inside Louisiana Restaurant

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‘Roadkill’ Found Inside Louisiana Restaurant


A small-town restaurant in Louisiana is at the center of a stomach-turning controversy after police discovered what they described as roadkill stored right alongside food meant for customers.

The drama unfolded in Pineville, where local favorite China Queen suddenly found itself under intense scrutiny after a viral Facebook post accused the restaurant of skinning a dead animal behind the building. The now-deleted post — which reportedly included a photo — quickly spread online and sparked outrage among residents.

When the Pineville Police Department showed up to investigate, they made a troubling discovery: a deer carcass sitting in the restaurant’s freezer with other food items.

According to authorities, an individual at the restaurant claimed the deer had been picked up from the side of the road earlier that morning after apparently being struck by a vehicle the night before. The person reportedly said the meat was intended for soup — but police couldn’t determine whether it was meant for personal use or to be served to customers.

That uncertainty has only fueled concern.

Officials pointed out that while eating deer meat isn’t unusual in Louisiana, handling roadkill comes with strict rules. State law requires prior authorization to possess it — and improper storage can create serious health risks due to rapid bacterial growth.

Now, the situation has escalated beyond a local investigation. Both the Louisiana Department of Health and the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries have launched formal probes into the incident.

Police say they’re continuing to assist as those investigations move forward, emphasizing public safety as their top priority.

Meanwhile, the restaurant is attempting damage control.

In a handwritten notice taped to its front door, China Queen apologized for the incident, insisting the deer was never meant to be served to diners.

“The item involved was never intended to be served to customers, but it was improperly stored,” the note read. “It has been fully cleaned and sanitized. We are cooperating with health authorities and have corrected our procedures to ensure this does not happen again.”

Still, the explanation hasn’t quieted the backlash.

Under Louisiana law, illegally possessing roadkill — including a deer — can carry serious penalties. Officials say it’s considered a class four violation, which can mean fines ranging from $400 to $950, up to 120 days in jail, or both.

Adding to the controversy, records show the restaurant had already been cited earlier this month for multiple “critical” health violations during an inspection. Those issues — including improper storage practices, unapproved equipment, and employees drinking in food prep areas — were reportedly corrected during a follow-up visit days later.

Now, with investigators digging deeper and the internet watching closely, many are left asking the same uneasy question: how did this happen in the first place — and what else might have been going on behind the scenes?

Trump administration attempt to gut Endangered Species Act hits roadblock

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Trump administration attempt to gut Endangered Species Act hits roadblock

The Trump administration and congressional Republicans have spent the last year trying to defang the Endangered Species Act, the country’s bedrock conservation law. But one of the most aggressive and far-reaching attempts just faced a major setback—and concerns from within the party were at least part of the reason.

Republicans in the US House of Representatives abruptly canceled a vote that had been scheduled for Wednesday—Earth Day—on legislation that aims to codify into law many of President Donald Trump’s moves to weaken endangered species protections. Some lawmakers, mostly in tourism-dependent areas along the Gulf of Mexico, expressed concerns about the bill.

“Don’t tread on my turtles. Protected means protected,” US Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.) wrote in a social media post on Monday ahead of the then-pending vote.

The vote cancellation came weeks after the Trump administration issued a controversial—and legally dubious—exemption for oil and gas drilling in the Gulf of Mexico from conservation measures required by the Endangered Species Act.

The ESA Amendments Act, introduced by US Rep. Bruce Westerman (R-Ark.), would limit habitat protections, require agencies to conduct economic and national security analyses when determining whether to list a plant or animal as endangered or threatened, extend the deadlines required for listing decisions and fast-track the delisting process. Westerman’s office did not respond to a request for comment on why the vote was canceled.

The nonprofit Defenders of Wildlife released a letter on Monday signed by more than 275 organizations urging representatives to vote no, citing concerns that it would “prioritize politics over science.” The group sees the canceled vote as a signal that “the proponents of this bill finally got the message that this bill is just wildly out of step with where the American public is,” said Mary Beth Beetham, director of legislative affairs at Defenders of Wildlife.

“It’s a complete rewrite of the Endangered Species Act, and there’s not one provision in the bill that would make it more likely that species would recover. In fact, it would most likely make it more likely that species would continue to decline,” she said. “This bill should just die of its own weight.”

Patrick Parenteau, an emeritus law professor at the Vermont Law and Graduate School, said the Republican representatives may have jumped ship for one specific reason.

“I can’t tell how much of the opposition is about defending the Endangered Species Act, as opposed to preventing oil and gas drilling off the coast of Florida,” Parenteau said.

The Florida Everglades ecosystem alone hosts dozens of endangered and threatened species, including manatees, Florida panthers and many birds. It also contributes more than $30 billion annually to real estate, tourism and other parts of the local economy, a recent report estimated. But that ecosystem and others in the state are threatened by fossil fuel production, experts say.

US Rep. Kat Cammack (R-Fla.) told E&E News that she is concerned about “opening up any potential avenues for drilling in the Gulf,” given how much the state relies on ecotourism, and that she wants to “see some improvements made before we’re willing to support the bill.”

Dozens of Floridians, including businesspeople, environmentalists and scientists, signed on to a letter opposing the legislation.

“Without protections for habitats and wildlife, the economic value of our natural resources to visitors will be greatly diminished,” the letter read. “Weakening the ESA would harm Florida’s wildlife and environment, as well as our communities and economy.”

Westerman told news outlets he hopes the bill will be back on the floor soon.

Fossil fuel vs. endangered species

Since Trump regained office, his administration has pursued a variety of actions to chip away at—or in some cases, take a sledgehammer to—the Endangered Species Act to clear away constraints on fossil fuel production, timber harvesting and other industrial activities.

Last April, the US Fish and Wildlife Service proposed a rule to rescind the law’s definition of “harm,” effectively eliminating many habitat protections for species—a key part of how the law has prevented extinction. The rule has not yet gone into effect.

In November, the agency announced a separate set of proposals that would dismantle several other rules underpinning the law, including changes that would hinder agencies’ ability to protect species from rapid global warming impacts.

Since the current session of Congress began in January 2025, meanwhile, lawmakers have proposed more than 60 pieces of legislation that would “undermine the ESA or weaken protections for imperiled wildlife,” according to a Defenders of Wildlife tracker. The ESA Amendments Bill is widely considered the most extensive of those proposals.

Agency decisions can be reversed by a later administration, and the Biden administration did just that after Trump’s first term. That’s why experts say changes codified by Congress pose a more existential risk to the Endangered Species Act’s long-term survival.

“Stopping this bill,” Parenteau said of the ESA Amendments proposal, “is the single most important thing you can do to preserve the Endangered Species Act.”

This story originally appeared on Inside Climate News.

EU loan throws Ukraine a lifeline but more help needed for war

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EU loan throws Ukraine a lifeline but more help needed for war


The approval of a 90-billion-euro European Union loan throws Ukraine a lifeline, averting deep cuts to public services, but Kyiv may need more money to meet its military needs this year, economists and officials said.

Ukraine’s budget foresees a ​massive deficit of around 1.9 trillion hryvnias ($43 billion) in 2026 – around one fifth of economic output – but economists say it significantly underestimates the cost of the war with Russia.

Maksym Samoiliuk, ‌economist at the Centre for Economic Strategy, a Kyiv-based think tank, said military spending would be more realistically assessed now the delayed loan had been approved to take into account factors such as a pay rise for military personnel, expected this summer.

“The loan is crucial as it creates the space needed to address pressures in Ukraine’s defence budget,” Samoiliuk said.

Only half of the 90 billion euros will be disbursed to Ukraine this year, with the remainder coming in ​2027. The bulk of the loan is earmarked for military spending, with around 17 billion euros each year destined for general budget needs such as health and education.

In addition to ​Ukraine’s own military budget, a group of more than 20 allies funds purchases of U.S.-made weapons under the PURL program.

Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orban had ⁠blocked the EU loan for months after accusing Ukraine of dragging its feet with the repair of an oil pipeline Kyiv said was damaged by a Russian drone. The pipeline carries Russian oil to ​Hungary and Slovakia.

The resumption of oil flows on Wednesday – which followed Orban’s defeat in an April 12 election – opened the way for EU ambassadors’ approval of the loan.

Yuliya Markuts, Vice President for Macro and Public Finance ​at KSE Institute, an economic think tank in Kyiv, estimated that the budget for defence spending would need to be revised higher by up to 10 billion euros, depending on how the conflict unfolded on the frontline.

Last year, Ukraine also raised its military expenditure forecasts, Markuts said, with part of that covered by government bond issuances as well as lending from the Extraordinary Revenue Acceleration (ERA) loans, a G7 initiative.

“How will it be this year? It’s hard to ​say now, but there could be some kind of repeating this,” she said, adding that it was also possible the EU loan might cover the revised budget.

‘CONFIDENCE IN TOMORROW’

Economists had said Ukraine would start ​to run out of money by June if the EU loan was not disbursed by then, requiring deep cuts to public services.

Many Ukrainians breathed a sigh of relief after the aid package won approval from EU ambassadors ‌on Wednesday. ⁠The humanitarian sector in Ukraine has already been hard hit by U.S. aid cutbacks under President Donald Trump.

Hanna Fedotova, a 58-year-old nursery caregiver, said the EU funding provided stability for Ukraine’s state institutions, “and, crucially, for education and development”.

“This aid is about having confidence in tomorrow, the certainty that we will be able to keep doing our jobs,” Fedotova said in a basement nursery in the southeastern city of Zaporizhzhia, around 40 km (25 miles) from the frontline.

The EU loan only needs to be repaid if Russia makes war reparations to Ukraine.

President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has said that, even with the EU loan, Ukraine still needs additional ​funding for the war.

“We talk about 90 billion ​and say that this amount covers everything. ⁠That’s false,” Zelenskiy told Reuters in an interview last month.

MORE MONEY NEEDED

Zelenskiy said the loan only allows Ukraine to order 60% of the weapons its domestic industry has the capacity to produce. Ukraine also needed to find 5 billion euros to strengthen its electricity sector after Russian attacks.

And, even though allies spent ​nearly $5 billion on the PURL weapons program last year, mostly air defence equipment, Zelenskiy said Ukraine needed $15 billion.

“We can’t protect everything, even though we ​must do so. So where ⁠to take the money from?” he said, adding he hoped defence cooperation agreements with Gulf states might provide additional funding.

The EU acknowledges its two-year loan only covers around two-thirds of Ukraine’s external financing needs. For 2027, international partners still need to commit the remaining financing, EU Economy Commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis said, though funding needs for this year would be covered.

Ukraine has other sources of financing. Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko said last week it ⁠would soon receive ​2.7 billion euros from the EU’s Ukraine Facility, after parliament approved some overdue reforms. Ukraine also agreed in February a ​four-year, $8.1 billion IMF loan.

All of this money comes with strings attached – including governance and tax reforms, some of them deeply unpopular. The IMF agreed last week to postpone the imposition of VAT on entrepreneurs after parliament baulked at the measure.

“Ukraine’s capacity to ​sustain the momentum of reforms will be the most pressing issue going forward,” Samoiliuk said. “Ukraine’s international partners should apply more pressure… and emphasise that Ukraine itself needs these reforms.”

Source:  Reuters

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