World News
Latest world news and updates
Total: 2277

Double Carrier in the Gulf: Washington’s Show of Force to Pressure Iran — and a Risky Gamble on Readiness
The U.S. has ordered the USS Gerald R. Ford carrier strike group to the Middle East to join the USS Abraham Lincoln, a move intended to increase pressure on Iran during negotiations and to demonstrate the Ford’s operational readiness. While the double‑carrier presence expands U.S. airpower and deterrent signalling, it also raises regional tensions and the risk of miscalculation.

Rafah’s Partial Reopening Leaves Over 20,000 Patients Stranded as Gaza’s Medical System Collapses
Gaza’s health ministry says Rafah’s limited reopening is insufficient, leaving over 20,000 patients, including cancer, cardiac and renal disease sufferers and critically wounded people, unable to exit for treatment. The ministry appealed for international pressure to fully and permanently reopen the crossing as Gaza’s hospitals struggle to treat complex cases.

Partisan Fight Over Immigration Forces U.S. Homeland Security Into Shutdown, Risking Travel and Emergency Services
A partisan standoff over federal immigration enforcement has left the Department of Homeland Security without a full appropriation as Congress goes into recess, creating the first DHS shutdown. Essential staff will keep working unpaid, but prolonged funding gaps could disrupt TSA screening, FEMA response, the Coast Guard and Secret Service duties, and revive memories of last year’s debilitating federal shutdown.

China’s Navy Sends Lunar New Year Greetings From the Frontline — A Show of Readiness and Resolve
Ahead of the Lunar New Year, China’s navy has circulated images and video of sailors delivering festive greetings while remaining on duty. The posts serve dual purposes: boosting domestic morale and signalling continued operational presence without aggressive rhetoric.

Beirut Florists Brace for Valentine's Day as Small Businesses Seek Normalcy
Photographs from Beirut show florists preparing for Valentine's Day, a small but telling sign of economic and social life continuing amid Lebanon's prolonged crises. Holiday sales provide vital income for small retailers and offer a lens on consumer confidence and supply-chain conditions in the capital.

Beijing’s 24‑Hour Counterpunch to Lai Ching‑te: Diplomacy and Air Power Tighten the Noose
Beijing responded within 24 hours to Vice President Lai Ching‑te’s comments and Taiwan’s defence budget push with coordinated diplomatic rebuke and intensified PLA air‑sea patrols. The episode highlights the erosion of informal cross‑strait norms and the rising tempo of coercive signalling that raises the risk of miscalculation in the Taiwan Strait.

Two Carrier Strike Groups and a Deadline: Trump's Harder Line on Iran Raises Stakes in the Middle East
President Trump has shifted to a more confrontational policy on Iran, ordering a second carrier strike group to the Middle East and issuing a one‑month ultimatum. The move aims to pressure Tehran into concessions but raises substantial risks of miscalculation, regional escalation, and economic fallout.

Palestinian Leadership Condemns Israeli Move to Reclassify West Bank Land as De Facto Annexation
Palestinian authorities and Hamas denounced an Israeli decision to resume West Bank land registration that would reclassify lands as 'state property', calling it de facto annexation and a violation of international law. The move could facilitate settlement expansion, deepen territorial divides, and provoke renewed international and legal responses.

Munich Security Conference Closes Under a Shadow of Transatlantic Strain
The 62nd Munich Security Conference ended on 15 February with transatlantic tensions prominent throughout the event. Debates over burden‑sharing, approaches to Russia and China, and the limits of U.S. reliability highlighted growing strategic divergences between Europe and America.

Why Beijing Called Its 052D a 'Frigate' at a Saudi Arms Fair — and Why It Matters
At the Riyadh defense expo, Chinese displays labeled the 052D destroyer as a “6,000-ton-class frigate,” prompting debate about nomenclature, export strategy and fleet planning. The shift likely reflects marketing calculations and wider international trends toward larger, multi-mission 'frigates,' while leaving the ship’s combat capabilities unchanged and possibly clearing conceptual space for even larger PLAN surface combatants.

Inside Iran’s Intelligence Counterstrike: How a 60,000‑Weapon Seizure Upended a Covert Playbook
Iran says it intercepted a 60,000‑item arms shipment in Bushehr and dismantled a Mossad‑trained network it accuses of funding violent acts inside the country. The seizure, if verified, underlines Tehran’s expanding counterintelligence reach and complicates U.S. and Israeli covert options in the region.

European Leaders at Munich Call for True Strategic Autonomy — Not Just Rhetoric
At the Munich Security Conference on February 13, Chancellor Friedrich Merz and other European leaders publicly pressed for stronger "strategic autonomy," citing vulnerabilities exposed by war, pandemic and shifting U.S. priorities. Turning the idea into policy will require painful budget choices, industrial coordination and careful management of transatlantic ties.