# security
Latest news and articles about security
Total: 25 articles found

Loud Explosion Rattles Tel Aviv as Flames Reported Over City Skyline
A large explosion and visible fires were reported in Tel Aviv on the evening of February 28, with state media publishing images but few details. The cause remains unclear, making official verification and follow-up statements critical for understanding whether this is an isolated incident or a potential trigger for wider escalation.

Kabul on Edge After Pakistan Airstrikes; City Tightens Security Amid Rising Cross‑Border Tensions
Pakistani airstrikes struck parts of Kabul, Kandahar and Paktia on 27 February, prompting Kabul to tighten security with checkpoints and vehicle inspections. Afghan officials reported no casualties at the time, but the strikes heighten cross‑border tensions and raise broader regional stability concerns.

Pakistan Releases Footage Claiming Airstrike on Kabul, Raising Regional Tensions
Pakistan’s security agencies released video claiming an airstrike on Kabul, a move that, if verified, would represent a significant escalation in cross-border operations and heighten regional tensions. The footage serves both as a potential record of action and a strategic signal to militants and regional actors, with verification and diplomatic fallout now central concerns.

Munich Security Conference Opens as Ischinger Calls for a Transatlantic 'Reset' and a Stronger, United Europe
The 62nd Munich Security Conference opened on February 13 with Wolfgang Ischinger warning that the transatlantic partnership is at a crossroads and calling for a unified, stronger Europe. The gathering—attended by more than 1,000 delegates including over 60 heads of state—aims to forge a "transatlantic reset" amid what Ischinger described as unprecedented global security challenges.

OpenClaw’s Viral Surge Is Redrawing AI’s Playbook — But Copycats Won’t Win the Race
OpenClaw — an open‑source agent orchestration framework — has ignited a community frenzy, spawning new social and marketplace experiments and attracting attention from high‑profile Chinese tech figures. Its agent‑to‑agent model shifts productivity dynamics, creating structural opportunities in multi‑agent platforms, security tooling, elastic compute markets and edge hardware, while raising novel privacy and governance risks.

Seoul’s Risky Bid to ‘Co-Manage’ the DMZ: A Play for Autonomy That Could Unravel Stability
Seoul has proposed joint South Korea–US management of the DMZ, a move framed as a compromise but seen by critics as an attempt to reclaim authority from US command. The plan risks undermining alliance cohesion, provoking North Korea, and creating operational confusion unless accompanied by deeper changes to wartime command arrangements and renewed diplomacy.

African Leaders Warn Takaichi’s Rhetoric and Japan’s Militarisation Threaten Post‑War Order
African political figures have criticised Japanese prime minister Sanae Takaichi’s recent rhetoric and Japan’s military expansion as threatening the post‑World War II international order. They warn that such moves risk inflaming regional tensions, undermining treaties and norms, and alienating countries that uphold principles of sovereignty and non‑interference.

Xi and Starmer Agree to Reset: Beijing and London Pledge a 'Long‑Term, Stable' Strategic Partnership
Xi Jinping and UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer met in Beijing on January 29 and agreed to develop a "long‑term, stable comprehensive strategic partnership," a diplomatic formulation Beijing says reflects a new vision for bilateral ties. The declaration signals a mutual interest in resetting relations but leaves major political and security questions open, making concrete follow‑through crucial.

From Darling of AI to Cautionary Tale: How Clawdbot’s Renaming Sparked a $16m Crypto Heist and a Security Reckoning
An open‑source AI agent formerly known as Clawdbot — now Moltbot — surged in popularity before a forced renaming and a brief username vacancy allowed scammers to hijack its identity and pump a fraudulent Solana token, briefly reaching a market value of about $16m. Security researchers have since warned that many instances were exposed to the public internet with plaintext credentials and no authentication, turning the agent into a high‑value target for credential theft.

NATO Plans Arctic Exercises in Coming Months, Says Greenland Will Be Excluded
NATO says it will hold several military exercises in the Arctic in the coming months but that these operations will not include Greenland. Political consultations between Greenland, Denmark and the United States are underway under a cooperative framework, while NATO continues to await formal directives on Arctic tasking.

When the Canteen Is Hit: A Chinese Correspondent’s Close Encounter with Kabul’s Violence
A blast outside a Chinese-run restaurant in Kabul killed at least one local employee and injured others, bringing the everyday risks of exile life into sharp relief for the small Chinese community in Afghanistan. The attack highlights the vulnerability of China’s expanding non-military presence in Kabul and raises questions about how Beijing will protect its citizens while maintaining engagement in a fragile, impoverished country.

Blast Near Chinese Restaurant in Kabul Kills One; Beijing Demands Afghan Action and Urges Evacuations
An explosion outside a Chinese restaurant in Kabul on 19 January killed one Chinese national and wounded five. Beijing has lodged an emergency representation with Afghan authorities, condemned the attack, urged stronger protections for Chinese citizens and advised against travel to Afghanistan.