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Trump’s War on ISIS Is Failing, No Matter How Gorka Spins It

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Trump’s War on ISIS Is Failing, No Matter How Gorka Spins It


White House counterterrorism czar Sebastian Gorka was on a mission. He wanted someone dead, and he knew who could make it happen.

It was eight days after Donald Trump took office for a second time, and Gorka, the senior counterterrorism director on President Trump’s National Security Council, walked into the Oval Office accompanied by a member of his own counterterrorism team and his boss, then-National Security Advisor Mike Waltz. The group approached the Resolute desk and laid an intelligence “place mat” with information about a man in Somalia in front of the president.

“Sir, ISIS leader, killed Americans, planning to kill more Americans,” is how Gorka recalled the summary they provided to the president. “We informed him that the Biden administration had been watching him for about a year and a half.” According to Gorka, Trump replied: “What do you mean, we’ve been watching him? Kill him!’”

Gorka said Trump ticked off the “go box” on the operation orders with one of his signature presidential Sharpie markers. Moments later, outside the Oval Office, Gorka recalled, a call was made to Fort Bragg and “elsewhere” to arrange the attack. Less than 30 hours later, Gorka and his colleague were in the White House Situation Room watching the target on massive television screens. “It was Tom Clancy, but it was real,” Gorka recalled recently. “Go time was 8:45 in the morning.” Two minutes before the scheduled attack, there was still no sign of Waltz. A minute later, he walked in, and 60 seconds after, Gorka’s quest was complete.

“Eight forty-five the platform launches what it launches and this individual just disappears from the earth,” Gorka recalled recently in a version of the account told during a softball interview with Dean Cain, a MAGA influencer best known for his role in the 1990s TV series “Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman.” Gorka told the story again and again on Breitbart’s Alex Marlow Show, and to other pro-administration outlets.

In the aftermath of that first strike, Trump took to social media to boast about the attack. “This morning I ordered precision Military air strikes on the Senior ISIS Attack Planner and other terrorists he recruited and led in Somalia,” he wrote. “The message to ISIS and all others who would attack Americans is that ‘WE WILL FIND YOU, AND WE WILL KILL YOU!’” In honor of this line — which he said has become the motto of his directorate and is arguably the mantra of the second Trump administration — Gorka and his team wear custom lanyards that say: WWFY & WWKY. Gorka calls it the “most coveted lanyard in the U.S. government.”

Since that strike, the Trump administration has taken the murderous motto to heart, proclaiming versions of it in avenues from Pentagon social media posts to Trump’s foreword to Gorka’s recently released “Counterterrorism Strategy” — and conducting a global killing spree. “Since our first operation on day 11 of this administration, a scant 15 months ago, we have killed 860 jihadis across the globe,” Gorka told Newsmax, noting elsewhere that this figure does not include those killed in the wars in Iran, Venezuela, or Yemen. (Gorka also claimed, two days later, that the number killed in lethal strikes was actually 815. The White House did not reply to a request for clarification.)

While the kidnapping of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, the war with Iran, and even the so-called boat strikes in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean have been front page news, Trump has supercharged America’s longest ongoing forever war — the conflict in Somalia — with very little notice. But as Trump’s attacks in Somalia have skyrocketed, so has terrorist violence there, according to the Pentagon. War Department statistics show that attacks and fatalities in Somalia have reached epic proportions, even though the War Department seemed to claim that ISIS-Somalia has been annihilated and Trump claims ISIS was wiped out years ago.

“Somalia saw the biggest surge in reported fatalities across all regions,” according to an April report by the Africa Center for Strategic Studies, a Pentagon research institution. “The 8,813 deaths linked to al Shabaab and the Islamic State (ISIS) over the past year represent a 93-percent increase from the previous year.” This record throws into broad relief the failure of Gorka’s and the president’s primary counterterrorism strategy and the inability of the administration to kill its way to victory.

Loosened rules of engagement during Trump’s first term had a profound effect in Somalia, where strikes tripled after Trump relaxed targeting principles. The U.S. conducted 219 declared attacks in Somalia during Trump’s first four years in the White House, a more than 350 percent increase over the eight years of the Obama presidency.

“They know innocent people were killed, but they’ve never told us a reason or apologized.”

A review of Trump-era rules by the Biden administration found that for attacks in some countries, a requirement for “near certainty” that civilians would “not be injured or killed in the course of operations” was reportedly enforced only if the civilians were women and children. A lower standard was applied to adult men. All military-age males were considered legitimate targets if they were observed with suspected al-Shabab members in the group’s territory, retired Brig. Gen. Donald Bolduc, who led Special Operations Command Africa at the time, told The Intercept. 

A 2023 investigation by The Intercept found that Trump’s directive contributed to a particularly disastrous attack in Somalia that killed at least three — and possibly five — civilians, including 22-year-old Luul Dahir Mohamed and her 4-year-old daughter, Mariam Shilow Muse. The mother and child survived the initial strike but were killed by a double-tap attack as they fled for their lives. “They know innocent people were killed, but they’ve never told us a reason or apologized,” said Abdi Dahir Mohamed, one of Luul’s brothers. “No one has been held accountable.”

Under President Joe Biden, the U.S. military conducted 51 strikes in Somalia over four years, according to D.C.-based think tank New America. Last year alone, Trump oversaw 126 attacks, exceeding the previous one-year record of 66 under Trump in 2019. He has already conducted 64 attacks in Somalia this year, and a total of at least 190 there so far in his second term — including an attack that one top U.S. commander called the “largest airstrike in the history of the world.” Trump and Gorka are on pace to eclipse the 219 strikes of his first term in just a year and a half in office.

Gorka frames the Biden administration’s failure to conduct wholesale strikes on supposed “jihadis” as a soul-crushing experience for national security professionals from the Intelligence Community and special operations forces. “The morale was so bad,” he recently told Cain. “I’ve got a targeter on my team, an amazing lady, who are in the bowels of an intelligence agency and their job is … for 10 hours a day with headphones watching a screen tracking jihadis.… And for four years, they’re basically not allowed to kill people.” He added: “You say, ‘Hey, we’ve got the coordinates. Can we do something?’ And the White House says, ‘No.’”

Wes Bryant, who called in thousands of strikes against ISIS as a special operations joint terminal attack controller, scoffed at Gorka’s assessment that the Biden administration was negligent in its war on ISIS and capriciously allowing terrorists to operate freely.

“Often, we gain more by watching senior operatives for extended periods because we can then piece together more of an entirety of an operation or organization. Otherwise, all it becomes is whack-a-mole,” Bryant told The Intercept. “Targeting and intelligence collections operations can be likened to an undercover operation against a criminal organization in law enforcement — where we are watching and monitoring and gathering evidence and characterizing every single associate and activity in order to build the big picture of the organization and take every piece of it down versus just one guy that we found.”

Bryant was skeptical of Gorka and his motives. “I’m not sure if he doesn’t know better and just wants to deliver the superfluous talking point to his uneducated far right audience that ‘Trump kills more bad guys’ and is therefore keeping America safer.”

The Intercept sought to interview Gorka through Anna Kelly, the special assistant to the president and White House principal deputy press secretary. She did not reply to that request or to questions about Gorka’s claims.

Trump, who campaigned on ending foreign wars during his 2024 presidential run and pledged to measure success “by the wars that we end — and perhaps most importantly, the wars we never get into,” has conducted military interventions in Ecuador, Iran, Iraq, NigeriaSomaliaSyriaVenezuela, and Yemen, as well as attacks on civilians in boats in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean and CIA operations in Mexico.

While claiming to be “the peace president,” Trump — with Gorka as his point man — has actually been attempting to kill his way to victory. “We are bringing down the hammers of hell on our enemies,” Gorka told Newsmax. But official pronouncements from the Pentagon, the intelligence community, and even the White House demonstrate that Trump’s lethal strikes have failed. 

ISIS was, for example, one of the top threats in Trump’s 2018 counterterrorism strategy. He battled the group during his first term and eventually declared victory. “We defeated ISIS in record time,” Trump said in his 2024 election-night speech. Despite this, the first lethal strike of Trump’s second term — in February 2025 — was on “the Senior ISIS Attack Planner … in Somalia,” according to Trump himself. Three months later, at his commencement speech at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, Trump was back to claiming ISIS had been wiped out. “I defeated ISIS in three weeks,” he said.

This claim has, however, been undermined by the nation’s Africa Command on a regular basis in the year since, amid scores of pronouncements of attacks “targeting ISIS-Somalia.” This month, AFRICOM commander Gen. Dagvin R.M. Anderson even admitted to the Senate Armed Services Committee that the “Islamic State of Iraq and Syria remain a threat to the homeland today” and that “ISIS-West Africa and ISIS-Sahel [are] becoming increasingly more collaborative.” The next day, Trump undercut his own claims by announcing on Truth Social that U.S. forces had “eliminate[d] the most active terrorist in the world … Abu-Bilal al-Minuki,” a top figure within ISIS–West Africa whom Trump claimed was “second in command of ISIS globally.”

Despite Gorka’s consistent fawning praise of Trump — he told Cain his boss is the “most incredible commander-in-chief we’ve had of the modern age” — even Gorka’s recently unveiled “2026 Counterterrorism Strategy” rebutted Trump’s assertions. That document lists ISIS as one of the “top five Islamist terror groups that have the intent and capabilities to execute External Operations against the United States,” and it spotlighted yet another branch of the group, ISIS-Khorasan, which is active in South Asia. The National Counterterrorism Center also lists a host of additional Islamic State threats: ISIS’ network in Bangladesh, ISIS–Central Africa, ISIS-East Asia, ISIS-Libya, ISIS-Mozambique, and ISIS-Sinai among them.

Trump’s ongoing campaign against the supposedly defeated ISIS and spiking violence in Somalia offers clear evidence of the administration’s failures, even as Gorka touts success to outlets that fail to push back on his claims.

“The find, fix, finish model is peerless,” Gorka said of lethal strikes on the New York Post podcast “Pod Force One.” He boasted that the U.S. is “crushing it when it comes to jihadis.” 

U.S. Lawmakers Demand Reforms to Immigration Officers’ Use of Tear Gas and Pepper Spray

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U.S. Lawmakers Demand Reforms to Immigration Officers’ Use of Tear Gas and Pepper Spray

Three U.S. senators have called for an overhaul of federal agents’ use of tear gas and pepper spray, citing a ProPublica investigation that found at least 79 children were left screaming, coughing or hurt by these chemicals during President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown.

Lawmakers said the findings showed more restrictions are needed to avoid injuring bystanders — including children — with chemical munitions. Such weapons were designed to combat rioters and soldiers, and their compounds are toxic, especially to children, who breathe more rapidly than adults relative to their body weight. 

“This reporting makes clear that we need federal legislation to rein in the over-use and misuse of tear gas and chemical agents,” Sen. Cory Booker, a Democrat from New Jersey, said in a statement. “We cannot allow another child to be tear-gassed by federal law enforcement officers.” 

ProPublica found that the Department of Homeland Security’s policies on the use of these weapons are less restrictive than those of some local police departments, many of which have been forced to adopt stronger ones following lawsuits or local legislation. There is no uniform standard governing how and when law enforcement departments can use these weapons. 

DHS should update its policies based on the best practices of local police departments, Sen. Richard Blumenthal, a Democrat from Connecticut, told ProPublica. In Minneapolis, for instance, police officers can deploy chemical munitions only if the police chief has authorized it.

“This kind of use of force should require approval from someone in a position of authority” and an assessment of the potential “collateral damage to children,” Blumenthal said. 

Sen. Tammy Duckworth, a Democrat from Illinois, echoed this sentiment. “We need a complete overhaul of ICE and Border Patrol to ensure they follow the same rules and safeguards that apply to police departments across the country,” she said in a written statement.

Many of the hurt kids were at home when tear gas drifted in from streets where federal agents had deployed the chemical agent against crowds of protesters. Other children were sitting in their parents’ cars when officers fired pepper spray through the driver’s side windows. 

Virtually no research exists on the potential long-term effects on children, but the chemicals are undeniably dangerous. One mother near Chicago told ProPublica she’s repeatedly taken her 7-year-old daughter to urgent care due to her coughing and wheezing since tear gas seeped into their house last fall.

Referencing our reporting, three Democrats in the House Committee on Homeland Security also sent a letter to DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin asking for the department’s training and policies for using chemical munitions when children are in the vicinity. The letter accused the department of “needlessly and callously” inflicting harm on children, and it requested details on whether DHS has studied the weapons’ “toxic effects on children.” The committee’s ranking member, Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., signed the letter, along with the ranking members of two subcommittees, Rep. J. Luis Correa from California and Rep. Shri Thanedar of Michigan. 

Blumenthal sent a separate letter to Mullin requesting the disciplinary records of agents who used chemical munitions in the presence of children. One video disclosed in a lawsuit shows federal officers near Chicago hurling tear gas canisters at protesters without apparent provocation before an officer says, “Fuck yeah,” and shouts, “Woo!” This took place just a few blocks from where the 7-year-old lives. (It’s unclear if the officers were disciplined.)

“Video evidence demonstrates that chemical agents have been employed indiscriminately, even when children are present,” wrote Blumenthal, who sits on the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs and is the ranking member on the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations. 

The scope of the agents’ actions led some historians to compare current events with Southern law enforcement’s use of tear gas during the 1960s Civil Rights Movement. ProPublica interviewed one Civil Rights activist, Charles Mauldin, who was 17 years old when police tear gassed him and hundreds of others marching for voting rights in Selma, Alabama. 

“Having people like ICE treat people the way we were treated 61 years ago, it’s horrible,” Mauldin told ProPublica

A DHS spokesperson called Mauldin’s comparison “disgusting,” adding in a statement that “this type of garbage has led to our law enforcement officers experiencing coordinated campaigns of violence against them.” 

The spokesperson didn’t address ProPublica requests for interviews with Mullin; Todd Lyons, the outgoing director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement; or David Venturella, the acting director of ICE. 

“DHS does NOT target children,” the spokesperson wrote, before blaming parents for placing their children in risky situations. “It is reckless, unlawful, and extremely irresponsible for parents to interfere with law enforcement activities but especially when they are accompanied by children.”

ProPublica’s investigation found that some of the children most affected were innocent bystanders. In Portland, Oregon, federal agents routinely tear-gassed protesters who gathered outside an ICE processing center. For months starting last summer, the chemicals seeped into an apartment complex across the street, past closed windows and the towels that tenants shoved under their doors in a vain attempt to protect themselves. One 12-year-old developed hives and “chronic respiratory issues,” according to his mother’s court declaration. Two girls, ages 7 and 9, hid in a fort they built in their father’s closet. Another parent said she taught her 13-year-old son to wear a gas mask indoors.

Their situation was so extreme that the most approximate research ProPublica found was a 2018 survey of Palestinian families in the West Bank, where children complained of rashes and chronic tonsillitis after repeated exposure to tear gas deployed by Israeli security forces.

ProPublica contacted more than two dozen federal lawmakers seeking a response to our findings. None of the Republicans, including Speaker of the House Mike Johnson; Sen. Rand Paul, chair of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs; and Rep. Andrew Garbarino, chair of the House Homeland Security Committee, responded to requests for comment.

Many of the Democrats who responded condemned DHS for its officers’ behavior and pointed to past unsuccessful efforts, such as holding hearings and sending dozens of oversight letters, to hold the department accountable for its actions.

ProPublica previously reported on a Democrat-led forum in March spotlighting children who have been harmed during immigration enforcement operations, including citizens who appear to have been wrongfully detained. In mid-May, Rep. Delia Ramirez of Illinois held a shadow hearing in which she cited ProPublica’s findings on children harmed by tear gas and pepper spray.

Rep. Glenn Ivey, a Maryland Democrat who attended the hearing, said in an interview that he has been pushing for fellow lawmakers to take up the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, which would address many of the issues our investigation raised.

Various experts told ProPublica that federal legislation could help ensure law enforcement agencies across the country adopt additional restrictions on these weapons, particularly when children are at risk.

Last month, for instance, Sen. Tina Smith, a Democrat from Minnesota, introduced a bill that prohibits excessive use of force, including chemical munitions, in the presence of children. It has 17 co-sponsors, none Republican, and hasn’t been brought to a vote.

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Blumenthal also called for fellow lawmakers to support a bill that would explicitly provide the public with the right to sue federal law enforcement officers for violating civil and constitutional rights.

The Trump administration previously said that any new restrictions would hamper immigration officers’ ability to carry out their work.

On Monday afternoon, federal agents fired pepper spray outside an immigration detention center in Newark, hitting Sen. Andy Kim, a Democrat from New Jersey, according to the USA Today Network. Kim had visited the facility to support detainees who’d started a hunger strike to protest conditions inside. He told reporters that he was pepper-sprayed after trying to de-escalate tensions between immigration agents and protesters, and his throat still burned later that evening. It’s unclear if any children were affected by chemical munitions. 

DHS said officers had responded to protesters obstructing law enforcement from leaving the ICE facility.

“No individuals were directly struck by pepper ball projectiles,” DHS wrote in a post on X. “Our law enforcement followed their training and used the minimum amount of force necessary to protect themselves, the public, and federal property.”

In response to ProPublica’s questions about the lawmakers’ calls for reform, a spokesperson for DHS said in a written statement that officers are trained to use “the minimum amount of force necessary to resolve dangerous situations.”

“DHS is authorized to do what is appropriate and necessary in each situation to diffuse violence against our officers in the most appropriate manner possible,” the statement said.

In his letter sent last week, Blumenthal gave the agency a deadline of June 1 to respond to his questions and requests for records.

Compliance wall: China rewriting world’s agriculture trade rules

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Compliance wall: China rewriting world’s agriculture trade rules

Sharp contrasts have emerged across Asia’s agricultural trade landscape, revealing how China’s updated import rules are restructuring supply chains throughout the region.

In Brazil’s Sao Paulo, Chinese meat buyers are willing to pay a premium for beef certified free from deforestation. A purchasing team from the Tianjin Meat Industry Association, driving shifts in China’s consumption habits, pledged to secure 50,000 tons of qualified products by the end of 2026.

It clearly signals that transparency and environmental compliance have become core purchasing priorities for Chinese importers.

Halfway across Southeast Asia, Vietnam’s durian industry faces a starkly different fate. In Dong Thap Province, 80 out of 111 fruit packaging factories have halted exports after banned chemical residues were detected in shipments.

Local Ri6 durian prices plunged to roughly one US dollar per kilogram, falling far below basic production costs. Stricter safety checks and inspection bottlenecks have shut off market access for non-compliant suppliers.

China is no longer merely a massive buyer chasing trading volume. Its evolving market access standards now wield far-reaching influence over global agricultural trade. Meeting unified compliance criteria has turned into a decisive factor for foreign producers seeking access to the world’s largest food consumption market.

Tighter border trade

Back in 2003 to 2005, I engaged in cross-border logistics operations along the China-Vietnam border. Trade activities at that time lacked mature traceability systems, standardized inspection procedures and strict certification requirements. Basic customs clearance procedures were enough to sustain legitimate business operations.

Vietnamese producers gradually formed a fixed mindset, believing low prices could offset deficiencies in product quality and document integrity. Chinese logistics practitioners also got accustomed to flexible border clearance arrangements. This relaxed trade model boosted transaction volumes, yet left the whole industry unprepared for tightened regulatory supervision.

China Customs Decree 280, officially regulating the registration of foreign food manufacturers, has overturned the old trade logic. To facilitate international compliance, detailed translations and official revisions have been publicized globally.

Following a quality scandal in 2017, Brazil spent years building a comprehensive digital tracking system covering pastures, slaughterhouses, warehouses and cross-border transportation from 2018 to 2025. When China raised food safety and environmental thresholds, Brazil stood ready and secured a steady position as a reliable, qualified supplier.

Vietnam has lagged noticeably in quality management, product tracing, logistics development and cold chain development, despite vast fruit-growing areas. Some local factories even submitted falsified tracing documents to pass customs inspections.

Such problems stem from fundamental structural gaps between modern industrial supply chain management and scattered small-scale farming modes. Producers attempting to bypass official standards can no longer avoid border restrictions and risk permanent exclusion from China’s mainstream import market.

Infrastructure creates competitive gap

Thailand and Vietnam present a telling comparison of how infrastructure shapes export competitiveness.

Thailand has effectively leveraged the China-Laos Railway for tropical fruit exports. Cold-chain freight trains deliver durians and mangosteens from orchards to Kunming swiftly via enhanced railway corridors, and the goods can reach over 30 domestic Chinese cities within 48 hours after road transfer. The railway is expected to carry more than 200,000 tons of tropical fruits throughout 2026.

Advanced refrigeration technology guarantees stable product quality. Container temperature is controlled within a tight fluctuation range, cutting cargo loss from 8-15% under traditional road transport down to merely 1-5%.

Vietnam’s export chain suffers from prominent operational bottlenecks. Fleets of durian trucks often queue up for 24 hours waiting for pre-shipment tests in Dong Nai Province. By late 2025, Vietnam had only 24 GACC-accredited testing laboratories, insufficient to meet demand in major planting zones.

The long waiting period is not caused by temporary inspection surges, but a permanent upgrade of China’s regulatory requirements. Dong Thap alone yields its massive durian output in May and June, with no efficient clearance channel available.

Cold storage shortage further worsens the situation. The country owns 117 professional cold storage facilities, yet 90% are designed for frozen meat and seafood, leaving limited space for fresh fruits. Severe post-harvest losses stand at 20-40% annually, totaling $3.5 to $4.1 billion in economic losses.

Given the huge investment required for cold chain facilities, testing labs and cross-border logistics, Vietnam’s industrial disadvantages will hardly be reversed in the next three to five years. In contrast, Thai exporters enjoy stable and reliable cold-chain transport supported by the transnational railway network.

Beyond surface-level testing

Public discussions in Vietnam tend to attribute export disruptions to insufficient testing capacity, while ignoring fundamental systemic problems.

China conducts strict tests on cadmium and the industrial dye Auramine O, both hazardous to human health. Test results from Mekong Delta regions show excessive levels of heavy metals in considerable durian and jackfruit samples, and unapproved food additives will trigger immediate shipment recalls.

A failed reinspection in China carries long-term penalties. Factories with disqualified cargo will lose official export codes, and qualification restoration takes six to 12 months, covering an entire fruit export cycle. Eight local packaging plants have submitted accreditation applications but still await official approval, keeping export stagnation unresolved.

Vietnam’s fruit and vegetable exports hit a record $8.5 billion in 2025. The booming performance relied solely on expanded output rather than systematic industrial upgrading and risk-resistance improvement.

The so-called testing bottleneck conceals unresolved issues, including incomplete tracing records, unregulated planting codes, loose factory audits and inadequate cold chain investment, problems that peer competitors have actively addressed to adapt to China’s new rules.

Compliance standards reshaping global trade patterns

Vietnam’s agricultural authority has urged testing institutions to improve inspection efficiency and has appealed to Chinese customs for more flexible clearance policies. However, partial adjustments cannot bridge deep-seated strategic gaps.

China has evolved into a rule-maker in global agricultural trade. By setting ESG-related purchasing standards, tightening heavy metal limits and applying high-standard cold chain infrastructure as competitive screening conditions, it has built clear compliance thresholds for overseas suppliers.

Qualified partners embrace digital tracing systems, invest in cold chain construction and maintain complete trading documents. Others, depending on informal operations and fake credentials, are gradually marginalized.

The changing landscape brings far-reaching impacts on Southeast Asian economies. Countries that align their industrial standards and infrastructure construction with China’s requirements, as Thailand has by utilizing the China-Laos Railway, will retain steady access to China’s huge consumer market.

Economies that fail to catch up, on the other hand, will see their agricultural products lose a competitive edge to rivals.

Vietnam faces a critical strategic choice. It can keep coping with updated import regulations with temporary solutions, or launch comprehensive supply chain reform. Full improvements covering farm-level tracing systems, standardized testing capacity and border cold storage networks can turn compliance requirements into genuine competitive strengths.

A new order of agricultural trade is taking shape. Every rejected container, every premium payment for certified goods and every fresh fruit delivered via temperature-controlled transport all point to the ongoing industrial transformation.

Compliance rules serve as a fair screening mechanism instead of discriminatory trade barriers. Meeting high standards acts as a vital entry ticket, dividing competitive producers from backward ones and resetting the balance of global agricultural trade.

Ju Liang is an independent policy analyst with over 20 years of on-the-ground experience in Southeast Asia, specializing in agricultural trade and supply chain compliance. He is currently based at Yunnan Agricultural University, China. All opinions expressed are personal.

Muslims pray at Al-Aqsa Mosque to mark 1st day of Eid al-Adha

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The courtyards surrounding Al-Aqsa Mosque in occupied Jerusalem on Wednesday – the first day of the four-day Eid al-Adha holiday – were packed with Muslim worshipers performing Eid prayers, Anadolu reports.

Eid-al-Adha commemorates the readiness of Prophet Ibrahim — also known as Abraham to Christians and Jews — to sacrifice his son on God’s command.

Muslims on this day sacrifice animals to remember Prophet Ibrahim’s sacrifice, and the meat from those animals is distributed to the poor in the community.

This year’s Eid al-Adha holiday — one of the most important holidays in the Muslim calendar — comes amid continued Israeli violations of a ceasefire agreement in force since October 2025.

According to Gaza’s Health Ministry, more than 880 people have been killed and over 2,645 injured in Israeli attacks since a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas was announced on Oct. 10.

The agreement was intended to halt Israel’s war, which killed more than 72,000 people — most of them women and children — injured more than 172,000 and caused extensive destruction affecting approximately 90% of civilian infrastructure since October 2023.

READ: Sheikh Ekrima Sabri warns of escalating threats to Al-Aqsa Mosque

A global brand but local cars is Audi’s future, says CEO

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A global brand but local cars is Audi’s future, says CEO

MUNICH—One of the defining car industry trends of the early 21st century was the global, or world, car. Spread the development costs out across multiple markets, the thinking went, and efficiency takes care of the rest. At least that was the idea; post-COVID, post-Ever Given, and in a world now erupting into trade wars and actual shooting wars, plans need to change.

“With Audi, we have to be flexible on a global perspective,” said Audi AG CEO Gernot Döllner, and the new Q9 is an example of that. “It’s really the car where US requirements were at the center of the product development process. It’s dedicated to the US for the first time. Global launch, not Europe and then US. And for the Q9, it’s the US first and then it’s also dominated the volume we expect by the US American market. And then after the US, we will have the global launch of that car,” he said.

Yes, that means bigger and better cup holders that can handle the insulated mugs that everyone had to have, as we saw from the Q9’s interior. But it also means paying more attention to things like the JD Power surveys and so on. For example, for the Q9, “we rearranged the smart door panels we have in our A5, A6, and Q5 cars and came back to dedicated switches, optimized the interior cooling, and of course seating, the roof concept, all that with a key customer focus,” Döllner said.

“We definitely will be able to keep Europe and the US together when it comes to products. And we will do that by listening more carefully to US customers, because I learned that earlier in my career, that’s no problem in Europe to have a product that’s perfect for the US, but sometimes it’s the other way around a little bit difficult, which is absolutely alright,” he said.

China gets its own cars

The AUDI E7X is a new model developed for China in partnership with SAIC.

The AUDI E7X is a new model developed for China in partnership with SAIC. Credit: Audi

Euro and American tastes intersect enough that most models will be shared. China is a different story. “We definitely see that we need more local for local in China, and I believe that we need regional-specific solutions and definitely a local production system. And that would be great if I would be able to implement that setup for Audi to have a future-resistant setup for the brand, especially in the US,” he said.

“Having been to China two weeks ago on Beijing motor show, it’s crystal clear that the global car for the era of the global product is over. We will need also China-specific solutions from the ecosystem, from the supply chain, from the production system, much more than we have in the past to be successful in China. And that’s also an opportunity to have the European and North Americans even more specific to the climates in these regions,” he explained.

What about a new R8?

An exploded Audi R8

I do love the Audi R8, and a new one would be great.

I do love the Audi R8, and a new one would be great. Credit: Audi

In response to a question asked by another journalist, Döllner noted that he’s “a big fan of V8. It’s a perfect fit to the full-size SUVs and whenever package-wise possible.” But since he brought up V8s, I decided to ask a cheeky question—since there’s a V8 in the new Lamborghini Temerario, and since Lamborghini and Audi share technology within the Volkswagen Group, how about a third-generation Audi R8 supercar?

“It’s a great V8 engine on the Temerario. Really outstanding engine. And as I said, we have these opportunities to come up from the different technical solutions and combine them. And I mean, the C Sport is an example that we build a car with character based on a Porsche platform, and the result is a clear Audi, and that’s our approach to have our customers in mind and come up with the right solution. Good idea,” he told me.

That’s not quite a yes, but it’s a lot more than a no…

Forbidden fruit

I wasn’t the only person wishcasting with my questions. Another of my peers pressed Döllner on the subject of station wagons. Audi has been one of the last purveyors of wagons in the US market, but with the retirement of the RS6 Avant, it currently only has sedans, fastbacks, and SUVs here. Well, never say never. In addition to the RS5 Sportback that you’ll be able to read about on Thursday, Audi makes an Avant version for Europe. While it’s not officially destined for the US yet, it appears to be on the cards now.

“I would see the more sporty versions like RS or, of course, an allroad version would be a perfect fit,” he said, even if more basic wagons won’t cross the ocean. “I’m really positively surprised to say that our dealers… they really asked for the RS models to be brought to the US as wagons as well. And we didn’t have that in our base plans, but I think we are doing that. And from the reaction, we could think about doing stuff, but right now there are no plans.”

the rear of an Audi RS5 Avant

The RS5 Avant isn’t coming to America… yet.

The RS5 Avant isn’t coming to America… yet. Credit: Audi

Again, not quite a yes, but better than a no.

Israel says it killed Hamas’ new armed wing chief in Gaza

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Israel says it killed Hamas’ new armed wing chief in Gaza


Israel said on Wednesday it had killed Hamas’s newly appointed armed wing chief in Gaza, ​days after it killed his predecessor, while intensifying military pressure in Gaza and expanding operations in Lebanon.

The Israeli military said ‌Mohammad Odeh was killed in an operation in Gaza on Tuesday.

A relative of Odeh confirmed his death to Reuters and said the funeral would take place after noon prayers in Gaza City. Hamas has yet to issue an official statement, but a statement from his family said he was killed along with his wife and son.

Gaza health ​officials said six people, including at least one woman, were killed and more than 20 others were wounded in the same ​Israeli strike that destroyed an upper floor of an apartment building in the Rimal neighbourhood in Gaza City. Rescue ⁠workers were still at the scene looking for more possible casualties.

ISRAEL SAYS ODEH WAS INVOLVED IN 2023 ATTACK

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on ​Tuesday that Odeh had headed Hamas’ intelligence division at the time of the October 7, 2023 cross-border attack into Israel that triggered the Gaza war ​and was appointed about a week ago to replace Izz al-Din al-Haddad, the group’s chief armed commander, who was killed by Israel on May 15.

Sources close to Hamas did not confirm Odeh’s appointment as the new military chief but agreed he was seen as Haddad’s possible successor, as the group’s chief of military intelligence and possibly ​the last remaining living member of the armed wing’s higher leadership council.

Hours before the attack, Israel announced it had expanded ground operations in Lebanon, where ​it has been fighting Iran-allied Hezbollah militants since it launched attacks on Iran with the United States at the end of February. Israel is also intensifying its military ‌activities in ⁠the West Bank.

Israel and Hamas are deadlocked in indirect talks over implementing the second phase of a ceasefire deal, which includes the group’s disarmament and Israeli army withdrawals.

The ceasefire agreed in October left Israel in control of more than half of Gaza, with Hamas controlling a sliver of coastal territory.

‘VOLUNTARY MIGRATION’ FROM GAZA IS PLANNED, ISRAEL SAYS

In a statement, Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said Hamas would no longer exercise civilian or military control over ​Gaza and that a plan for ​what he described as “voluntary migration” ⁠from the enclave would also be implemented “at the right time and in the right way”.

Some 900 Palestinians have been killed in Israeli strikes since the truce came into effect, according to figures from Gaza health officials that ​do not distinguish between combatants and civilians.

Four Israeli soldiers have been killed by militants during the same period, ​the country’s military ⁠has said.

Israel has killed dozens of Hamas leaders and military officials since the start of the Gaza war, and has vowed to kill or capture anyone who it says was involved in the October 7, 2023 attacks.

Hamas does not disclose figures for casualties among its fighters. Israel says its post-ceasefire strikes are ⁠aimed at ​preventing attacks or stopping people from approaching its armistice line with Hamas.

More than 72,000 Gazans ​have been killed since the war started in October 2023, most of them civilians, according to Gaza health authorities. Israel says it takes extraordinary measures to avoid civilian casualties.

Hamas’ October 7, ​2023, attacks on Israel killed 1,200 people, according to Israeli tallies.

Iran Condemns US Strikes as Ceasefire Breach

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Iran Condemns US Strikes as Ceasefire Breach


Iran accused the United States on Tuesday of violating the ceasefire after American forces struck targets in southern Iran, including missile sites and boats near the Strait of Hormuz, even as negotiations continued in Qatar on a possible agreement to end the war and restore commercial traffic through the waterway. Washington said the strikes were defensive actions aimed at protecting US forces from Iranian threats.

Iranian officials described the attacks as a sign of “bad faith and unreliability” and said they undermined talks that had appeared to be moving toward a temporary framework. Tehran said the strikes violated the ceasefire and warned that it would respond to any further aggression. The US said the operation targeted missile launch sites and boats attempting to lay mines near Hormuz, the strategic Gulf passage that has become the center of the latest diplomatic push.

The talks in Qatar have focused on extending the ceasefire, reopening the Strait of Hormuz, releasing frozen Iranian funds, and setting up further negotiations over Iran’s nuclear program. Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf and Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi took part in the Doha contacts before leaving the country, while US officials said discussions could continue in the coming days.

The confrontation has placed President Donald Trump’s administration in a delicate position: seeking a deal to reduce pressure on global energy markets while continuing military action against Iranian assets it says threaten US personnel and shipping. The Strait of Hormuz carries a large share of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas, making its reopening a priority for Washington, Gulf states, and energy importers.

Iran has also begun restoring internet access after one of the country’s longest nationwide shutdowns, which had deepened economic strain and cut off many businesses and citizens during the conflict.

The latest strikes do not appear to have ended the talks, but they have narrowed the space for compromise. With Iran calling the attacks a breach and Washington insisting it acted in self-defense, the ceasefire now depends on whether both sides can keep negotiating while still firing around its edges.

Explosion at Paper Mill Leaves Workers Dead and Others Missing (Video)

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Explosion at Paper Mill Leaves Workers Dead and Others Missing (Video)


A routine morning at a Washington state paper mill turned deadly Tuesday when a chemical tank suddenly imploded, unleashing a terrifying hazardous materials emergency that left multiple people dead, several injured and others still unaccounted for.

The disaster unfolded around 7:18 a.m. on May 26 at Nippon Dynawave Packaging Company in Longview, Washington, after authorities were called to what officials described as a hazardous materials incident involving a vat of chemical treatment product.

By the time emergency crews arrived, the scene had turned grim.

“We have confirmed that there are fatalities,” Cowlitz Fire and Rescue Chief Scott Goldstein said during a news conference. “But the exact number is undetermined.”

Officials said the ruptured tank contained a white liquid chemical used in the paper-making process. The implosion critically injured multiple people and triggered a large-scale emergency response at the mill.

Authorities confirmed that 10 people were injured, including one firefighter. Even more troubling, officials said some people remained unaccounted for as crews continued recovery and accountability operations inside the facility.

Victims’ names have not yet been released. Longview Fire Department Battalion Chief Mike Gorsuch said identities will be shared only after families have been notified.

In a joint statement, the company and city officials said patients were taken to hospitals in Longview and Vancouver. PeaceHealth St. John Medical Center later confirmed to CNN that nine patients were brought to the hospital, including one person who died. Two others were transferred to other facilities, while six remained in fair condition.

Despite the frightening nature of the blast, officials said there was no immediate danger to the surrounding community. Still, residents were urged to stay away from the area while emergency crews continued working the scene.

Washington Gov. Bob Ferguson said he was monitoring the tragedy closely and confirmed that responders from the state Department of Ecology had been sent to the site.

“I’m deeply saddened to hear that there have been fatalities,” Ferguson said. “My thoughts are with the workers and their families, and with the first responders.”

The recovery operation remains ongoing as investigators work to determine exactly what caused the chemical tank to implode and how many lives were lost in the horrifying mill disaster.

Taiwan’s boom a leveraged bet on AI irrational exuberance

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Taiwan’s boom a leveraged bet on AI irrational exuberance

Taiwan has just vaulted past India to become the world’s No. 5 stock market, powered by an AI boom that’s fused investor frenzy with the dominance of the planet’s most critical chipmaker.

The catalyst is unmistakable: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., up 46% this year, pulling the entire market — and the economy — upward with it. TSMC alone accounts for about 42% of Taiwan’s benchmark, which has now swelled to US$4.95 trillion in market value.

Only the US, China, Japan and Hong Kong sit higher. With AI demand accelerating and semiconductors at the center of the surge, Taiwan’s position looks anything but accidental — and hard to bet against.

Taiwan’s boom looks unstoppable — as long as the AI tide lifting all of North Asia keeps rolling. Right now, the self-governing island’s economy reads like a leveraged wager on AI demand, and the numbers make that hard to deny.

Taiwan’s exports jumped 39% year‑on‑year in April, and investors still shrugged because March delivered an eye‑popping 62% surge. Semiconductor shipments climbed 40.5%, while the broader machinery and electrical equipment category — roughly 84% of all exports — expanded 48.7%. Over the first four months of the year, Taiwan exported $263.35 billion in goods, up 47.8% from a year earlier.

Strong chip demand is overpowering weak domestic spending, and the negative effect the Iran-war-driven inflation is having on household confidence. The result: Taiwan’s economy blasted ahead at 13.7% in the first quarter, its fastest pace since 1987.

Taiwan, more than almost any economy besides South Korea, is all‑in on the AI boom. TSMC sits at the center of it — its fortunes now virtually indistinguishable from global demand for AI hardware — making it the economy’s beating heart.

That centrality has turned Taiwan into a kind of toll booth on the road to AI, collecting value every time the world upgrades its computing power.

Korea shares a similar dynamic. The Kospi is on a tear, up 91% this year, powered by chip titans SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics, which have surged 215% and 149%, respectively.

The Kospi’s head-spinning rally has some investment bank analysts, including those at Citigroup, wondering whether then-Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan’s 1996 warning of “irrational exuberance” might apply to Korea.

In a recent report, Citi writes that it’s too early to predict a huge correction in Seoul. Yet, Citi warns, the “Kospi appears significantly more overbought compared to the US market,” and a “prudent approach would be to take profits on half of the positions.”

The rally is already giving President Lee Jae‑myung some breathing room. His pledge to end the long‑lamented “Korean discount” suddenly looks more plausible. One clear beneficiary is the National Pension Service, whose finances have “significantly stabilized,” notes analyst Jun Young Choi of Yulchon.

The fund’s assets — 1,212 trillion won ($805 billion) at the end of 2024 — jumped to 1,458 trillion won ($970 billion) in 2025 as markets surged. Earlier this month, they even approached 1,800 trillion won ($1.2 trillion).

“This explains why concerns about pension depletion have temporarily subsided,” Choi writes in an op-ed for The Chosun Daily.

But, Choi cautions, “the problem is that no market rises forever. Pessimists note that excessive optimism and speculation during technological shifts have repeatedly created bubbles. Examples like the 1920s radio boom, the late 1990s internet frenzy, and subsequent crashes heighten caution. The October 1929 US stock market crash pushed ordinary citizens, fearing they’d miss wealth-building opportunities, to the brink. It remains unclear whether the current rally marks a bubble’s peak or the dawn of a new era.”

Even Japan is catching a YOLO halo effect. Its electronics makers, machinery firms and banks are all riding the AI trade’s momentum, pushing the Nikkei 225 to record highs above 67,000 (it’s now around 65,800).

The surge is strong enough that BofA Securities is cautioning about a possible short‑term correction by June, especially as fallout from the Iran war cools risk appetite and takes some lift out of the AI trade. Others see Japan’s gains as the payoff from years of corporate‑governance reforms and competitiveness upgrades.

Analyst Kirsten Chang at ETF Trends argues that while the US wrestles with shifting Federal Reserve policy, “Japan has found a Goldilocks balance: moderate inflation and a remarkably smooth exit from negative interest rates by the Bank of Japan. This stability has positioned Japan as a rare safe haven with growth, leading to the first collective global re-weighting to overweight in 20 years.”

Whether Japan remains a safe harbor will hinge heavily on whether US President Donald Trump can find a way out of his war with Iran. With 95% of Japan’s oil coming from the Middle East and the yen “grossly undervalued,” as Eurizon CEO Stephen Jen puts it, Asia’s No. 2 economy is highly exposed.

By some measures, the yen’s real effective exchange rate in April fell to its lowest level since Japan shifted to floating rates in 1973. This means that heading into 2027, Japan will be importing energy, food, construction inputs and other key commodities amid a weakening currency and a rising dollar.

Meanwhile, Taiwan’s rally looks even more astonishing once you factor in demographics: a 23‑million‑person economy outpacing giants despite having less than 1/60th of India’s population.

Regulatory shifts in Taipei may add even more fuel to the fire, especially for TSMC. Taiwan’s financial regulator has raised the cap on how much a domestic equity fund can put into a single stock.

Funds can now allocate up to 25% of their net assets to any company whose weighting on the Taiwan Stock Exchange exceeds 10%, up from the previous limit of 10%. At the moment, only one company qualifies: TSMC.

Taiwan is weathering the war in the Middle East far better than India. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s economy is being squeezed by soaring energy costs, weak corporate earnings and a shortage of companies tied directly to the data‑center buildouts powering the AI boom. The rupee recently fell to an all-time low.

By contrast, Taiwan — despite the geopolitical uncertainty surrounding China’s intentions and Washington’s commitment to defend it — is structurally aligned with the AI cycle. Lai Ching‑te’s economy sits squarely in the slipstream of global demand, with the semiconductor sector giving it a far stronger position to ride the wave.

“Taiwan’s rising market capitalization is fundamentally a reflection of its heavy concentration in tech hardware, which is currently at the center of the AI investment cycle,” Yi Ping Liao, a fund manager at Franklin Templeton, tells Bloomberg. “Markets with limited exposure to tech hardware are increasingly being overshadowed by tech hardware–heavy markets such as Taiwan and Korea.”

That is, assuming the wave continues to move forward. The worry is that if the AI trade takes a breather, today’s valuations could collapse amid a frenetic race to file “sell” orders.

Then, investors’ attention could pivot back to pre-existing economic conditions. Taiwan, Japan and South Korea all should be riding the tailwinds generated by China’s growth and AI to reinvigorate economic reforms.

Goal one: diversifying growth engines away from exports. Twenty-five years of all three economies pledging to recalibrate economic models away from exports toward domestic demand haven’t gone particularly well. Nor are Lai, Japanese leader Sanae Takaichi or Lee rolling up their sleeves to recalibrate growth engines.

The problem for Taiwan could be complacency. Lawmakers seem to think the AI trade will offset the economy’s challenges forever and spare them the hard work of boosting competitiveness.

“Overall, Taiwan is currently in a structural growth phase driven by the AI technology revolution,” says Xav Feng, a researcher at LSEG Lipper Asia Pacific.

“In the short term, exports, investment, and economic indicators are all reaching new highs simultaneously, indicating strong economic momentum. In the medium to long term, Taiwan’s key position in the global semiconductor and AI supply chains enables it to continuously benefit from the expansion of technology capital expenditures. Supported by the AI supercycle, Taiwan’s economy is moving toward a new phase of high growth and high value-added development.”

Yet the words “continuously benefit” are doing a lot of work in this argument. Aside from market froth, the Strait of Hormuz closure is disrupting chip supply chains. Asian chipmakers, including giants TSMC and Samsung, are facing disruptions to their supplies of oil and other essential commodities.

In the short term, blocked shipments of oil and gas cause “ruptures to the very long supply chain containing oil’s downstream derivatives,” says Roger Sheng, vice president of research at the tech consultant Gartner.

Yet the AI universe must also worry about the shortage of goods needed to make chips like bromine, helium, sulfur and a broad range of thinners.

All of this will matter more and more to Taiwan, which imports more than 95% of its energy. Key sources of its overall energy mix, like LNG, are far more difficult to store than oil or coal.

On average, Taiwan only has an 11-day reserve on hand. This is a key vulnerability for a place that produces around 90% of the world’s most advanced chips. It does not require much imagination to think about the many ways the globe’s AI toll booth could soon be due for a reckoning.

Follow William Pesek on X at @WilliamPesek

Windows’ classic 3D Space Cadet pinball is getting a physical re-creation

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Windows’ classic 3D Space Cadet pinball is getting a physical re-creation

If you owned a Windows computer in the late ’90s or early ’00s, you probably remember 3D Pinball for Windows – Space Cadet, a surprisingly competent virtual table included for free with multiple Microsoft OS releases through Windows XP. Despite the game’s authenticity to real pinball, Space Cadet wasn’t based on an extant physical table, but was merely one part of the Full Tilt! Pinball software collection sold by Maxis starting in 1995.

In the intervening years, hobbyists and enthusiasts have discussed the possibility of crafting a homebrew physical table based on Space Cadet many times, without much tangible progress to show for it. A company called Deeproot Pinball went so far as to develop a reskinned prototype of Space Cadet‘s layout for a planned 2021 release before the whole company went under amid fraud allegations.

Where Deeproot failed, though, hobbyist CNCDan hopes to succeed in creating a physical Space Cadet table. In a video, he documents the start of his build process, which already includes 3D-printed mechanical flippers, pop bumpers (complete with embedded LEDs), slingshots, and even a raised playfield, all designed to mimic the look and feel of the original Windows table.

While the Windows Space Cadet table didn’t have to deal with any real-world constraints, CNCDan has already run into issues with the size and positioning of table elements. After scaling and skewing the on-screen, perspective-shifted view of the Space Cadet playfield onto a 1-meter-tall table, he ended up with a rectangular playfield just 56 cm wide. That’s on the smaller side for commercial pinball tables and maps to playfield bumpers that are just 53 mm wide—way smaller than any prebuilt bumpers that are commercially available.

Once CNCDan dealt with issues with unreliable plastic microswitches for those tiny bumpers (Hall effect magnets seemed to help), he ran into a separate problem with the even smaller bumpers on the raised playfield. The wiring for those bumpers had to be arranged very carefully to avoid blocking a kickback return alley underneath, a positioning problem that the original designers of the virtual table didn’t have to consider at all. CNCDan also ended up adding a physical mechanism to simulate the short delay 3D Space Cadet players may remember, when the ball dropped down a hole from the raised playfield back to the flippers below.

CNCDan says he’s currently looking for artists to help him with a hand-drawn re-creation of the original Space Cadet playfield, which he doesn’t want to use AI for. “I’m sure [AI] can do it, but I’d much rather give this job to a real human being,” he said in the video.

While CNCDan is still a long way from having a complete Space Cadet table in his workspace, we’re intrigued by his progress so far and hopeful that our nostalgic memories of classic Windows pinball will soon be a tangible reality.

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