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Across 76 Years: Navy Unit Reunites Two Chosin Veterans, Turning Memory into Mission
PLA naval personnel visited two elderly veterans of the 1950 Chosin Reservoir battle in Shandong ahead of the Lunar New Year, using filmed footage to reintroduce comrades separated by 76 years and poor health. The visits combined veteran welfare, patriotic education, and a symbolic reaffirmation of continuity between wartime sacrifice and the present military.

U.S. Set to Send About 200 Troops to Nigeria to Train Forces Against ISIS Affiliates
The U.S. plans to send about 200 troops to Nigeria to train local forces against Islamic State-affiliated militants, reinforcing a small existing U.S. presence. The move follows U.S. airstrikes in Nigeria in December 2025 and reflects Washington’s shift toward limited advisory deployments to counter transnational extremist threats in West Africa.

Netanyahu Races to Washington to Shape US‑Iran Talks: Demands Ballistic‑Missile and Proxy Limits
Benjamin Netanyahu made an expedited trip to Washington to press President Trump to insist that any US negotiations with Iran include limits on ballistic missiles and an end to support for regional proxies. Israel intends to deliver fresh intelligence and has warned that a nuclear‑only agreement would leave key Israeli security concerns unaddressed.

Viral Claim of Iranian ICBM Test Debunked by Experts — Why the Hoax Matters
Viral footage claiming Iran test-fired an intercontinental ballistic missile has been dismissed by missile experts as almost certainly fake. Technical inconsistencies, absence of corroborating data, and Iran’s known force structure point to fabrication, highlighting risks from rapid misinformation in security affairs.

Netanyahu’s Warning to Tehran: A Signal of Possible Unilateral Action, or Diplomatic Pressure on Washington?
Israel has accelerated a high-level visit to Washington after warning that Iran’s ballistic-missile programme constitutes an existential threat; Israeli officials say they may strike unilaterally if Tehran crosses unspecified red lines on missile range and numbers. Tel Aviv still prefers coordinated action with the United States, but the signal of possible independent action is meant to sharpen deterrence and press Washington for support.

Muscat Talks Signal New U.S.–Iran Dialogue Track, Raising Hopes — and Risks — for De‑Escalation
A first round of indirect U.S.–Iran nuclear talks in Muscat has produced unusually positive public signals from both sides and appears to have established a new, more visible dialogue mechanism under Omani mediation. While this reduces short‑term escalation risks, substantive agreement will be hard to achieve quickly given domestic constraints and regional spoilers.

Strike a Carrier, Invite a Response: Why Hitting a U.S. Aircraft Carrier Would Force Washington's Hand
A Beijing commentary argued that an Iranian strike on a U.S. aircraft carrier would almost certainly draw U.S. retaliation. Such an attack would challenge American deterrence, risk rapid escalation across the region, and have immediate diplomatic and economic repercussions for global shipping and markets.

On the Snowline: A Tibetan Sergeant’s Eight Years Guarding China’s Unmarked Frontier
A Tibetan sergeant in the PLA’s Tibet Military District has spent eight years conducting perilous high‑altitude patrols along an un‑demarcated frontier, logging nearly 5,000 kilometres and enduring chronic injury. His story — from rescue in an ice river to representing China in elite mountain competitions and attending the 2025 national parade — is used to personify China’s assertion of sovereignty and its investment in plateau military capability.

Tea, Dumplings and Letters: How China Sends the New Year to Its Frontier Troops
Ahead of the Lunar New Year, Chinese cities and civic groups shipped regional foods, letters and supplies to border and coastal troops to boost morale and signal civilian support. The campaign blends cultural ritual with practical care, strengthening civil-military ties and demonstrating local administrative capacity to mobilise society for state objectives.

PLA’s Five‑Day South China Sea Patrol Raises Stakes as Manila Shifts Tactics and Tokyo Deepens Involvement
China’s PLA carried out a five‑day patrol in the South China Sea in early February, a move framed as a response to Philippine actions around Scarborough Shoal and joint exercises with the United States. Manila has signalled a tactical pivot toward pushing a South China Sea code of conduct during its 2026 ASEAN chairmanship, even as Japan deepens support for the Philippines, widening the dispute’s international dimensions.

Gansu Troupe Brings Lunar New Year Pageant to Nairobi, a Quiet Moment of Sino‑African Cultural Diplomacy
A cultural troupe from China’s Gansu province performed a Lunar New Year show at Nairobi’s national theatre on February 9, part of a broader Chinese festival tour in Africa. The visit illustrates how provincial cultural missions are being used as a low‑cost tool of soft power to support broader Sino‑African ties and public diplomacy.

Iran's Dual Track: Offering Dialogue While Drilling In for a Fight
Iran is simultaneously signaling willingness to negotiate with the United States over nuclear issues while publicly reaffirming military readiness and core red lines. Regional intermediaries like Oman are facilitating indirect talks, but continuing US pressure and Israeli demands risk undermining progress unless both sides adopt reciprocal confidence‑building measures.