Malibu Residents Step Up Fight Against T-Mobile 5G Transmitters Near Homes

small cell tower, t-mobile logo and crown castle logo

Residents of Malibu, California, with the help of Children’s Health Defense (CHD), are stepping up their fight to stop the city from allowing T-Mobile and wireless developer Crown Castle to install 5G infrastructure within feet of their homes and property lines.

“We want decisions that affect our homes, our health and our environment to be made openly, lawfully and with real public input — not rushed through behind the scenes or shaped by corporate pressure,” Malibu For Safe Tech Executive Director Lonnie Gordon told The Defender.

Gordon and her organization have been working with 12 Malibu residents who appealed the city’s decision to approve the 5G small cells, or wireless transmitters.

In a motion filed Tuesday with the Malibu hearing officer, the residents alleged that city staff “rigged” the appeal process.

The current appeal process is “unfair and designed to result in slanted proceedings that deny Appellants a fair hearing,” according to the motion.

For instance, the city’s procedure prohibits the public from participating. “The public must be allowed to attend, and public comment should be allowed,” the motion states.

The residents asked the hearing officer to adopt a new appeal procedure and timeline to ensure that residents’ concerns are taken seriously.

Gordon said:

“What concerns us most is that these 5G small cells are being placed extremely close to people’s homes and they’re being installed in clusters, not as single poles. That means overlapping [radiofrequency] emissions in the places where families live, sleep and spend most of their time.”

CHD is assisting the residents through its Stop 5G initiative.

Miriam Eckenfels, director of CHD’s Electromagnetic Radiation (EMR) & Wireless Program, said that the residents’ “tenacious efforts underscore the importance of community activism and coordination.”

The motion also asked the hearing officer to consolidate the residents’ appeal cases to allow for efficient handling of their concerns.

The hearing officer is expected to respond by April 16, according to W. Scott McCollough, CHD’s chief EMR & Wireless litigator and one of the lawyers representing the residents in their appeal cases.

McCollough said:

“These cases are about whether residential neighborhoods will have any meaningful voice in important decisions regarding placement of intrusive and potentially dangerous infrastructure near homes and sensitive environmental areas.”

Some of the residents have EMR Syndrome, meaning they experience negative health symptoms when exposed to wireless radiation, Gordon said. The 5G small cells T-Mobile and Crown Castle want to install would dramatically increase residents’ exposure.

It’s not just people who face adverse impacts, Gordon added. “Birds, pollinators, trees and plants located near these sites are affected too.”

People’s lives and millions of dollars at stake due to telecom fire risk

The residents’ motion is the latest in a legal battle that has been going on for years.

“Many of the appeal cases have been pending for more than four years because the wireless companies would not provide essential electrical and fire safety-related information required by Malibu’s wireless rules,” McCollough said.

The city should have required the companies to provide documentation that their 5G equipment was safely designed to mitigate fire risks, McCollough said.

But the city didn’t do that. Instead, city officials in 2025 “struck a secret deal” with the wireless companies that allowed the appeals cases to go forward, even though the companies hadn’t shown their designs were safe, he said.

Malibu has experienced many fires, including one last year that burned over 770 acres in three hours.

In 2018, telecom equipment sparked the Woolsey Fire in Malibu, which burned for over a month and destroyed almost 500 homes and resulting in $6 billion in damages.

That’s why it’s essential that telecommunications companies show their safety designs when they want to install new equipment, McCollough said.

“Lives are at stake, as are many millions of dollars in potential property damages from yet another devastating telecom-caused fire,” the motion states.

Residents hope to set a precedent

Gordon said she hopes the residents’ appeal efforts will set a precedent that will help residents in other towns fight the onslaught of 5G infrastructure. She said:

“Our hope is that by standing up now, we protect not only our own neighborhoods but also other communities facing the same pattern of aggressive, clustered small‑cell rollouts.

“We’re the ‘little guys’ in this fight. But we’re standing up because we believe communities deserve a voice, families deserve safety and people deserve transparency.”

Last month, scientists with the International Commission on the Biological Effects of Electromagnetic Fields published a report showing that existing safety limits for wireless radiation emitted by wireless devices such as cellphones, cell towers and 5G small cells are at least 200 times too high to protect people from cancer risk.

Current limits are also eight to 24 times too high to protect against male reproductive harm, including decreased sperm count, sperm vitality and testosterone levels, the scientists concluded.

Meanwhile, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), which sets the U.S. safety limits, continues to defy a 2021 court order to produce a better explanation for how its current limits — which haven’t been updated since 1996 — adequately protect human health.

The court order directed the FCC to review 11,000 pages of evidence supporting claims that wireless radiation at levels currently allowed by the FCC harms people — especially kids — and the environment.

Instead of complying with the court order, the FCC proposed a rule change that, if adopted, would allow for the uncontrolled proliferation of new cell towers and 5G small cells.

[…]

Via https://childrenshealthdefense.org/defender/malibu-residents-step-up-fight-against-t-mobile-5g-transmitters-near-homes/

While Pentagon Spends Billions on War, Military Families Say They’re Getting Short-Changed

 

A welcome sign is on display at the Fairchild Food Pantry at the Fairchild Air Force Base in Washington. The pantry offers groceries and household supplies to Airmen and their families free of charge. U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Lillian Patterson.

By

On April 21, nearly two months into the Iran war, the Pentagon unveiled a $1.5 trillion budget request that promised to bolster services for members of the military and their families.

The proposed budget for the fiscal year that begins in September includes $90 million in additional funding specifically for the design of military child development centers and barracks, as well as pay increases ranging from 5% to 7% for service members.

“With this funding request, we directly invest in our people, recognizing and respecting our warfighters, their families and the daily sacrifices they both make for our nation,” said Lt. Gen. Steven P. Whitney, who oversees force structure, resources and assessment at the mammoth agency.
  
But for some military families whose loved ones are currently deployed overseas, those changes may be too little, too late. The vast sums being spent on the war effort, at least $29 billion as of May 12, has not prompted the Trump administration to provide enough support services to help those families cope with their extra burdens.

The war-related inflation — gas prices rising more than $1.50 a gallon, higher energy bills and more expensive groceries — is hitting military families especially hard, say spouses of active-duty military and advocacy groups for military families. They also say that they’re not seeing the support services that have been offered during previous wars, such as the Iraq War.

“Our costs keep rising and it’s hard to keep up,” said the wife of a serviceman deployed overseas in the Mideast since last fall. She lives near a cluster of military bases south of Denver, has a full-time job and is studying at night for her PhD, forcing her to pay for babysitting for her 8-year-old son. She and another spouse of active-duty military deployed in the Middle East requested anonymity to speak openly due to their fears of reprisal.

The Department of Defense did not respond to a request for comment.

Before the government shutdown last fall, the Military Families Advisory Network surveyed members and found that one in four active duty military families were struggling with food insecurity. The group is finalizing a more recent survey and already sees that the degree of food insecurity has “significantly increased,” said Shannon Razsadin, the executive director of the group.

“One of the things that families are citing as a pain point is the rising cost of groceries, which is one of the first times that we’ve seen that specifically called out in the research.”

At some military bases, families have depended on local food pantries, said several spouses. “At my kid’s school, there’s a nonprofit that does a fresh produce giveaway, and they pack up 500 bags of food and it’s gone within like 40 minutes,” said a military spouse at the Los Angeles Air Force Base in El Segundo.

The affordability crisis hitting military families climaxed during the government shutdown last fall, causing “sheer panic from families,” said Razsadin. Her organization opened up an emergency grocery support program — and within 72 hours, more than 50,000 military families had signed up, she said.

“What that shows you is that so many families are living in this bubble of just getting by, so that a delay in pay would throw everything off kilter and really put them in a situation of vulnerability around putting food on the table.” That type of situation impacts readiness and retention, making it a national security issue, she added.

The spouses also say they struggle with child care costs.

The Pentagon runs child development centers on bases that offer services to about 200,000 children of military service members and staffers. The largest employer-sponsored child care program in the U.S., it has experienced significant staff disruptions — with yearly turnover in the Air Force and Army programs ranging from 34% to 50% in 2022, per a Government Accountability Office study.

“This is not the picture of a healthy system,” wrote K-12 education policy expert Elliot Haspel in a recent op-ed.

Despite being well funded, the child development centers are still unable to maintain staff “so they’re never operating generally at full capacity,” said Kayla Corbitt, a military spouse who founded the Operation Child Care Project to advocate for better child care for military families.

Some military families are unhappy with the centers because of the understaffing, as well as a lack of support for special needs children, Corbitt said. Though the proposed 2027 fiscal year budget includes funding for the centers, she is not hopeful that it will improve the quality of the centers.

“We will continue to see a lot of funding thrown at construction of [child development centers], but no one’s fixing the staffing issues. We’re now seeing a lot of families intentionally opt out of military-operated [child] care, mostly due to kind of accountability and transparency issues.”

The military spouse stationed in Colorado told Capital & Main that her base shut down one of its two child development centers due to staffing issues. She stopped using the facilities because she said she felt it was not a safe environment for her son.

When her son was in summer camp at one of the centers, “‘They had the kids running wild around the entire building. There would just be a teacher sitting in the corner while the kids watch TV or play video games, but there was very little structure or control in the room, which makes me uncomfortable.”

The issue came to the fore during an April 29 hearing of the House Armed Services Committee where Rep. Gabe Vasquez (D-New Mexico) pressed Secretary of War Pete Hegseth about “critical staffing issues” at child development centers at Holloman Air Force Base in his state.

“Spending $1 billion a day on a war overseas while leaving our service members out to dry is not America first — it’s a betrayal,” Vasquez said.

Hegseth vowed to tackle the problem but disputed Vasquez’s claims. “We will get you whatever we can, but that doesn’t meet with what we’ve seen, which is running as fast as this department ever has on quality-of-life issues,” Hegseth told the committee.

Eileen Huck, the deputy director of the National Military Family Association, said that she hopes to see increased funding by the Pentagon for child care. That one thing could make a big difference in family quality of life.”

Housing costs have been another challenge for military families not living on a base. They receive a housing allowance to help cover the cost of rent, which is adjusted depending on local price points, but it’s often not enough, say military families. In certain regions like San Diego and northern Virginia, “The housing allowance just doesn’t keep pace with the cost of housing,” said the military spouse stationed in Los Angeles.

The challenge of keeping up with food and child care prices “is that much greater when you have a family stationed in a high-cost area, where the cost of living is already high and the housing allowance is probably not keeping pace with the cost of rent,” said the Los Angeles spouse.

At the recent congressional hearing, Rep. Vasquez also raised housing issues, noting that the Pentagon has received billions of taxpayer dollars.At a time when cost of living is the top issue for families, including those who serve, the [Defense] Department is in the position to address these costs of housing, child care, groceries and other needs.”

During wartime, the Pentagon traditionally offers supplemental programs for military families — often triggered by high deployment rates — that focus on emergency financial aid, food security and family support, primarily provided by branch-specific relief societies and nonprofits like Operation Homefront and Soldiers’ Angels.

The supplemental programs include interest-free loans, mortgage assistance, food distribution and specialized children’s programs that address needs from deployment-related stress to financial hardship. Military OneSource, a Defense Department resource, offers specialized support and counseling for caregivers.

But it appears that the availability of such programs and the notification given to military families varies from base to base.

Razsadin, the Military Families Action Network director, said that there has been “an uptick coming out of Military OneSource as far as resources that are out there and available and really encouraging people to utilize things like family life counselors.”

As to how it’s actually being experienced by military families, she said that it’s a “case-by-case situation as far as what different installations and commands are doing to support families. People really were not seeing this [war in Iran] coming and so in a lot of cases some of those programs that were in place during the global war on terror, they haven’t been activated in a while.”

Razsadin said that one challenge has been the quick start of the war, in comparison to the Iraq War and other conflicts that involved more preparation. “In those cases, people had pretty significant notice before a deployment. That’s not the case right now. And so people are in a lot of cases having to respond very quickly. And in some ways that’s uncovering some fractures in the support system that exists around military families.”

Only 31% of military families surveyed by advocacy group Blue Star Families in the wake of the war’s launch said they’re getting the support they need right now. And 59% said the conflict decreases their likelihood to recommend military service to others with 39% saying it greatly decreases it.

Corbitt said that she’s not seeing such support programs — “unlike the former war. We see things advertised a lot that you actually can’t get access to. And if it is, it’s minimal or nonexistent for every branch right now.” She says that such programs are not getting surplus funding. “Maybe that’s because of how this conflict is being classified — not as a war, but something else.”

The military spouse at Los Angeles Air Force Base said that she hasn’t been officially informed about such programs. “That’s not something that’s been shared with me or offered to my family at all.” She said that most of her peers have to “figure it out themselves, patchwork it together — you pay for the babysitter, do a parent’s night out at the church, phone a friend. You just make it work.”

[…]

Via https://capitalandmain.com/while-pentagon-spends-billions-on-war-military-families-say-theyre-getting-short-changed

US and Israel preparing to renew attack on Iran next week

A United States Marine Corps Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II flying in San Diego, California, the US on May 14, 2026.

RT

Published 16 May, 2026 18:55

The US and Israel are actively preparing for a renewal of hostilities with Iran and could resume attacks as early as next week, The New York Times has reported, citing sources.

Indirect negotiations between Iran and the Trump White House have remained deadlocked since a fragile ceasefire was established in April following over a month of hostilities. Both sides have repeatedly dismissed the other’s demands as unrealistic, and both Tehran and Washington still insist they hold the upper hand.

Meanwhile, disruptions continue in the Strait of Hormuz, which has heavily affected global shipping and caused oil shortages worldwide. While Iran has announced its own mechanism to regulate maritime traffic in the waterway, Washington has rejected the scheme and is enforcing a naval blockade on Iranian ports in retaliation.

Two unnamed Middle East officials told the NYT on Friday that preparations for new strikes by Israel and the US have greatly accelerated over the past few days, and the conflict could resume as early as next week, according to the sources.

The options could include “more aggressive bombing runs” against Iranian military targets and infrastructure sites, anonymous US officials told the newspaper. Another option involves staging a raid to seize Tehran’s enriched uranium stockpile, believed to be buried underground in the aftermath of the June 2025 US bombing of Iranian nuclear facilities.

US President Donald Trump has repeatedly threatened to renew the attack on Iran, increasingly voicing his dissatisfaction with Tehran’s proposals. Trump tore into Iran’s response to an American proposal last weekend, branding it a “piece of garbage” and slamming the current ceasefire as “unbelievably weak.”

Tehran says it is ready to “deliver a well-deserved response to any aggression.” It has expressed wariness about the stalled negotiations but shown willingness to engage in diplomacy nonetheless.

“We have every reason not to trust the Americans,” Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said on Friday. “There is no military solution, and the US must understand this reality. They cannot achieve their goals through military action, but the situation would be different if they pursue diplomacy.”

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/news/640079-us-israel-attack-iran/

French judge launches inquiry into Khashoggi killing

Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, photographed in Istanbul, Turkey, on May 6, 2018.

Press TV

In a significant development in the ongoing saga surrounding the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, a French judge has been appointed to oversee an investigation into the case.

The inquiry comes following a May 11 ruling by the Paris Court of Appeal, which deemed the complaints filed by human rights organizations, including TRIAL International and Reporters Without Borders, admissible, the country’s national anti-terrorism prosecutor’s office (PNAT) announced on Saturday.

The French inquiry will delve into charges of torture and enforced disappearance, offering a crucial new legal avenue in a case that has seen limited judicial outcomes thus far.

However, a separate complaint from DAWN, Khashoggi’s employer, was ruled inadmissible by the PNAT—highlighting the challenges in pursuing justice for the slain journalist.

The international response to the Khashoggi case has been varied, with the Turkish judicial system previously taking steps to hold the accused accountable. However, in a controversial move, a Turkish court halted its trial of 26 Saudi suspects in 2022, subsequently transferring the case to Saudi jurisdiction, a decision that faced criticism from various human rights advocates.

In the United States, the Biden administration faced backlash after granting Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman immunity following his appointment as prime minister. This decision led to the dismissal of a civil lawsuit by Khashoggi’s fiancée in a US federal court.

French law permits judges to initiate inquiries into serious offenses committed beyond its borders. However, prosecutions typically require the presence of suspects on French soil, which may complicate efforts to enact justice for Khashoggi and his supporters.

Khashoggi, a former advocate of the Saudi royal court who later became a critic of bin Salman, was killed and his body was dismembered by a Saudi hit squad after being lured into the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on October 2, 2018.

Saudi Arabia initially denied that Khashoggi had been murdered, saying he left the consulate. Later, and under mounting international pressure that came as new evidence emerged, Riyadh said the journalist had been murdered by “rogue” elements.

The Washington Post, for which Khashoggi was a columnist, reported in November 2018 that the CIA had concluded that MBS ordered his killing.

The crown prince has denied ordering the ​killing but acknowledged it took place “under my watch.”

[…]

Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/05/16/768732/French-Judge-launches-inquiry-into-Khashoggi-killing

Trump leaves Beijing empty-handed as Iranian debacle shifts power balance, reshapes world order

By Press TV Strategic Analysis Desk

The recent war imposed on Iran and its aftermath have fundamentally altered the balance of power in the world, and rewritten global rules of engagement, with Tehran emerging as the decisive force shaping great-power competition.

What was initially projected as yet another episode of “maximum pressure” against Iran has instead become a revelatory moment of strategic transformation – one in which the Iranian nation demonstrated its extraordinary resilience, adaptability, and rising geopolitical weight.

On the other hand, Washington’s failure to impose its preferred outcomes has exposed the deepening limits of American power in an increasingly multipolar world.

These unfolding developments have reinforced Tehran’s position as an indispensable actor in regional and global affairs, with consequences affecting energy markets, maritime security, superpower competition, and the future structure of international order itself.

US President Donald Trump’s recent high-stakes trip to China became one of the clearest illustrations of this emerging geopolitical reality.

The visit was seen as an opportunity for Washington to regain its strategic leverage by persuading China to pressure Iran economically and strategically. Instead, the summit exposed the declining effectiveness of American leverage and highlighted the reality that Iran is no longer a peripheral issue that can simply be negotiated over by major powers.

Exiting Beijing empty-handed

Trump left Beijing without any meaningful discussions on Iran, without a breakthrough on Taiwan, and without the kind of strategic victories Washington had hoped to showcase.

China demonstrated neither willingness nor urgency to accommodate American demands.

The significance of this failure extends far beyond diplomacy. It reflects a deeper transformation in global politics: the emergence of a more resilient Iran operating in a world where American dominance no longer guarantees compliance from allies or adversaries.

One of the most telling moments came when Trump himself acknowledged that his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, emphasized the continuation of purchases of Iranian oil. That declaration alone represented a diplomatic setback for Washington.

It signaled that Beijing considers its relationship with Iran a strategic matter tied to long-term energy security and geopolitical balance – not a negotiable issue to be traded away under American pressure and concessions.

Before the Beijing summit, some analysts had speculated that China might use its economic influence over Tehran to push Iran toward concessions or compromise. Washington hoped Beijing would cooperate, especially given China’s dependence on Iranian energy supplies and its role as the largest buyer of Iranian oil. But, China clearly and categorically refused to move in that direction.

Equally significant was the Chinese government’s refusal to publicly engage with American narratives about Iran during the visit. Beijing deliberately avoided endorsing Washington’s position while simultaneously reiterating its opposition to policies aimed at escalating confrontation with Tehran. Soon after Trump’s return, Chinese officials reaffirmed Iran’s right to peaceful nuclear energy and renewed criticism of coercive American policies.

Indeed, the optics of the summit strongly favored Beijing. Chinese officials projected calm confidence and strategic patience, while the American side appeared eager for deliverables but unable to secure them. International observers described the visit as rich in symbolism but poor in substantive outcomes on the core issues dividing the two global rivals.

US defeat to Iran and Trump’s China visit

This outcome matters because it reveals a critical geopolitical reality: Iran’s position after the war has become strong enough that even China – despite maintaining broad relations with the US – does not view Tehran as expendable. Iran is now deeply embedded within the strategic calculations of global politics, energy security, and the multipolar world order.

What is perhaps most remarkable is that Iran’s growing leverage has not primarily depended on external powers. Tehran’s central strategic lesson from the recent imposed war is that national resilience and internal strength remain the decisive foundations of power and leverage.

The recent war demonstrated that Tehran could withstand sustained military, economic, and political pressure without collapsing internally or abandoning its strategic posture. This may ultimately prove more important than any battlefield outcome. In international politics, resilience itself generates power. States that survive prolonged pressure often emerge stronger because they reshape the expectations of allies, rivals, and neutral actors alike.

When the US-Israeli war machine launched the aggression, Iran received no decisive military intervention from major powers and allies such as China or Russia. Tehran faced it on its own. Yet instead of breaking under pressure, it relied on internal cohesion, military endurance, and domestic mobilization to retaliate with force and deny Washington a victory it needed.

That outcome transformed perceptions across the region and globe as well.

For years, American strategy toward Iran depended heavily on the assumption that escalating pressure would eventually force Tehran into submission, fragmentation, or strategic retreat. The recent full-scale war shattered that assumption completely.

Iran demonstrated not only its capacity to endure but also its ability to impose heavy costs on aggressors. This is precisely why the balance of leverage has shifted.

Before and after the war against Iran

The United States entered the war believing Iran was vulnerable. It now faces an Iran that is stronger, more experienced and strategically adaptable. Washington also faces the reality that military escalation failed to produce the rapid political collapse many hawks anticipated.

At the same time, the war exposed the limits of American coercive power. Despite enormous military capabilities, Washington struggled to achieve clear strategic objectives. Instead, the war of aggression became a prolonged war of attrition – one that increasingly works against the United States politically, economically, and diplomatically.

Trump’s contradictory posture and rhetoric reflect this dilemma clearly. On one hand, he continues issuing bellicose threats about renewed military aggression against Iran. On the other hand, reports indicate ongoing indirect communications and efforts to explore diplomatic off-ramps. This dual-track behavior signals uncertainty rather than confidence.

Strategic indecision is dangerous for great powers because credibility depends not only on strength but also on clarity. The more Washington oscillates between escalation and negotiation, the more it projects confusion to both allies and adversaries.

This confusion was also visible during Trump’s Beijing visit. On Taiwan – the most sensitive issue in US-China relations – Trump avoided taking a definitive position. Discussions remained vague, and Washington failed to secure concessions while avoiding direct confrontation with Beijing.

The symbolism was powerful. The United States arrived in Beijing seeking leverage but instead appeared constrained by its own geopolitical overstretch. China understood that Washington was simultaneously dealing with the war and its impact in West Asia, rising economic pressures at home, and broader strategic competition abroad.

Iran’s resistance, therefore, had consequences extending well beyond the region. By denying Washington a victory, Tehran indirectly weakened America’s negotiating position globally.

Perhaps nowhere is Iran’s growing leverage more visible than in the Strait of Hormuz.

Iran’s approach to Strait of Hormuz

For decades, the Strait has represented one of the world’s most critical strategic chokepoints. Yet the ongoing crisis demonstrates that Iran’s approach to Hormuz is not simply based on threats of closure. The current situation reveals a more sophisticated and consequential reality. Iran is developing a model of intelligent, calibrated control rather than simplistic disruption.

The decision to allow large numbers of Chinese vessels and oil tankers to transit safely through the Strait carried enormous geopolitical significance. This was about demonstrating sovereign authority. Tehran showed that it can distinguish between adversaries and partners, between escalation and restraint, and between tactical confrontation and strategic calculation.

This approach strengthens Iran’s bargaining position significantly.

Instead of appearing reckless, Tehran is presenting itself as a power capable of managing one of the world’s most sensitive energy corridors according to political and strategic calculations. This increases Iran’s value to major global economies while simultaneously complicating American attempts to isolate it. The crisis has exposed a profound American strategic dilemma.

The economic consequences have already become visible. Instability linked to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz to hostile vessels and the broader war against Iran has intensified market anxieties, raised oil prices, and deepened global economic uncertainty.

In other words, it has revealed that Iran possesses the ability to generate systemic economic pressure far beyond the region itself, increasing its deterrent capacity.

Strategic confusion can be more dangerous than strategic failure because it undermines credibility. Allies begin questioning commitments, adversaries test boundaries, and neutral actors seek alternatives. The perception of American indecision is now visible not only in relation to Iran but also in broader confrontations involving China and other rising powers.

The Taiwan issue during Trump’s China visit illustrated this perfectly. Washington found itself unable to firmly escalate or clearly compromise. Repeating old positions risked exposing diplomatic failure, while making concessions would have signaled weakness toward Beijing. The result was ambiguity, which in great-power competition often reflects declining confidence.

Iran’s ‘unused options’ and US calculations

At the same time, uncertainty regarding Iran’s “unused options” has further complicated American calculations. Analysts and media discussions increasingly focus on the possibility that Iran could expand pressure beyond traditional military channels if the full-scale war resumes.

Among the concerns raised are vulnerabilities related to undersea fiber-optic infrastructure, additional maritime chokepoints, and new asymmetric naval warfare capabilities. Whether or not Iran intends to employ such options is almost secondary. Their mere existence increases strategic ambiguity, and ambiguity itself functions as a powerful deterrent.

Washington now faces not just known Iranian capabilities but also uncertain escalation scenarios whose economic and geopolitical consequences could be enormous. This uncertainty weakens America’s ability to make clear strategic decisions and raises the political cost of renewed confrontation against Iran.

The broader political consequences inside the United States are equally significant.

The recent war against Iran exposed the continuity of bipartisan American policy toward Iran. While Democrats and Republicans often differ rhetorically, the underlying strategic objective, limiting Iran’s regional autonomy through pressure and coercion, has remained consistent.

Discussions surrounding the JCPOA reinforced Iranian suspicions that even diplomatic engagement was ultimately viewed in Washington as part of a broader strategy of containment and eventual confrontation. For many in Tehran, this validated long-standing skepticism toward American intentions regardless of which party occupies the White House.

Ironically, this bipartisan continuity may have strengthened Iran internally rather than weakening it. The perception that external pressure transcends American domestic politics reinforces narratives of resistance and self-reliance inside Iran.

Globally, this dynamic is also resonating beyond the West Asian region. Across large parts of the Global South, Iran is increasingly viewed not simply as a sanctioned state but as a country resisting Western coercive power and sanctioning the aggressors. Iran’s ability to withstand sustained pressure has generated significant respect among states opposed to US hegemony.

Turning point in redistribution of geopolitical leverage

This explains why the recent war may ultimately be remembered more as a turning point in the redistribution of geopolitical power and leverage.

Iran emerged from it strategically elevated. The US military industrial complex emerged frustrated. And Trump’s trip to Beijing reinforced this contrast dramatically: Washington arrived seeking cooperation, concessions, and leverage over Iran, yet departed with symbolic gestures and vague statements while China maintained its strategic ties with Tehran and refused to fundamentally alter its position.

The deeper lesson is now becoming increasingly clear. In a changing international system, endurance itself has become a form of power.

[…]

Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/05/16/768719/trump-leaves-beijing-empty-handed-defeat-iran-shifts-power-balance-reshapes-world-order

Texas Doctor Offers Free COVID Vaccine Exemptions to Medical Students Amid Mandate Dispute

Dr. Mary Talley Bowden and covid vaccine bottles

Dr. Mary Talley Bowden says she will write free medical exemptions — and help fund legal challenges — for Texas medical students facing COVID-19 vaccine requirements at teaching hospitals. “If they deny my exemption, I will help you find a lawyer and raise money to sue them,” she said on X.

Houston physician Dr. Mary Talley Bowden offered to write medical exemptions for medical students studying in Texas teaching hospitals that mandate the COVID-19 vaccine.

“I will write a medical exemption for any student in Texas facing this mandate — free of charge,” Bowden wrote in a post on X. “If they deny my exemption, I will help you find a lawyer and raise money to sue them,” she added.

Bowden said she would provide free exemptions for students at five Texas institutions, including Baylor College of Medicine and Houston Methodist, that require the updated COVID-19 vaccine for students seeking to do rotations there.

Children’s Health Defense CEO Mary Holland said she admired Bowden’s “brave act of civil disobedience.”

“These medical products should not be on the market; they have been proven unsafe and ineffective,” Holland said. “No person should be mandated to take these injections or any others. No doubt Dr. Talley Bowden understands that in the current medical and legal environment, she risks losing her medical license for doing this.”

Texas Rep. Mayes Middleton announced his support for Bowden on X. He said COVID-19 vaccine mandates are banned in Texas under a law that he wrote. “It’s a $50,000 per occurrence penalty and also protects those applying as contractors, which students are because they will receive a benefit from performing work,” he wrote.

Middleton said that since the law passed, medical schools said they would stop requiring the vaccine at their Texas facilities. However, schools that have partnerships with facilities out of state may be subject to different laws.

In February 2025, President Donald Trump signed an executive order to halt federal funding for all schools, including colleges and universities, that still impose COVID-19 vaccine mandates on students.

But the order didn’t apply to healthcare students. That’s because, to graduate, healthcare students must complete their clinical rotations — and hospitals and clinical facilities have required these students to take updated COVID-19 vaccines even when faculty and staff no longer must comply.

The Association of American Medical Colleges, known as the AAMC, offers a standardized immunization form that lists all the vaccines medical students should get — including the COVID-19 shot.

Bowden told The Defender that 97 teaching hospitals use this form. She said this creates a legal gray area about whether some teaching hospitals in Texas are still allowed to mandate the shots. She said if students challenged it legally, they may succeed.

“The problem is, if you are a student, you’re a lot less likely to rock the boat,” Bowden said. She said students applying to programs who see this form may not know what their rights are, or may be hesitant to demand them.

Bowden said she used to be more private about writing medical exemptions, “but I feel like we’re way past that.” She said that with each exemption, she follows proper procedures, establishing a doctor-patient relationship.

In response to whether she feared being attacked for writing exemptions, Bowden said, “I’m going through the proper procedures. So if they do come after me, it will bring a very important debate to the forefront of the news. If that’s the case, then so be it.”

In the meantime, she is also attempting to help connect students in other states to practitioners who will write exemptions for them.

She retweeted an X post from a student in New York seeking an exemption.

Her offer gained support from Dr. Kirk Moore, who retweeted Bowden’s original X post, writing “ditto.”

Moore said he will do the same for students in Utah.

Bowden gained national attention during the pandemic for developing protocols — including the use of ivermectin — for preventing COVID-19 and treating COVID patients.

The Texas Medical Board issued a formal reprimand to Bowden for her actions, which she is fighting in court. The reprimand carries no penalties, but Bowden said she is fighting it “on principle.”

[…]

Via https://childrenshealthdefense.org/defender/mary-talley-bowden-free-covid-vaccine-exemptions-texas-medical-students-mandate-dispute/?utm_id=20260419

The Decision to Cut Off Oil Pipeline to Germany

Satellite Images Reveal Damage to Druzhba Oil Pipeline Facility in Russia
Dmitry Orlov

Around the end of April an article appeared on Oilprice.com: “Germany Scrambles for Polish Oil Route as Russia Halts Druzhba Flows”:

“Germany is hunting for solutions to reroute crude oil supplies to the PCK Schwedt refinery after Russia said it would halt Kazakh oil deliveries through the Druzhba pipeline starting May 1, with roughly 43,000 barrels per day now at risk. Berlin is now in talks with Poland over moving replacement barrels through the port of Gdansk, with potential deliveries flowing onward to Schwedt, the refinery that supplies much of eastern Germany, including Berlin, with fuels. Kazakhstan shipped 2.146 million metric tons to Germany through Druzhba last year, up 44% from 2024, with another 730,000 tons delivered in the first quarter. Poland says it has the technical capacity to handle additional flows, but port access, shipping schedules, crude availability and refinery configurations all matter, too. Replacing pipeline crude with seaborne barrels is rarely a one-for-one swap… Alternatives do exist for Schwedt, but they are costlier and more complicated. The refinery has increasingly leaned on crude arriving through Baltic routes and Germany’s Rostock port, but those channels are limited.”

And this is all you would know of this if you relied exclusively on English-language sources. But dig a little into Russian-language publications, and a much more detailed picture emerges. The operator of the Russian-owned Druzhba (“Friendship”) pipeline is the Russian company Transneft while the oil for it did indeed come mainly from Kazakhstan’s three largest fields – Tengiz, Karachaganak and Kashagan – which were developed and are operated on the basis of production sharing agreements (PSA). The partners of these agreements are as follows:

• Tengiz: Chevron — 50%, ExxonMobil — 25%, and state-owned KazMunayGas — 20%.
• Karachaganak: Shell — 29.25%, Eni — 29.25%, Chevron — 18%, and state-owned KazMunayGas — 10%.
• Kashagan: Eni — 16.81%, Shell — 16.81%, TotalEnergies — 16.81%, CNPC — 8.33%, and state-owned KazMunayGas — 16.88%.

Thus, Kazakhstan itself has a minority stake in all of them while the majority stakes are owned by US and European companies. This situation begs an obvious question: Could Russia’s Transneft have secured permission for rerouting Kazakh oil away from Druzhba by itself, by orders from the Kremlin, or by request from the Kazakhstanis? Obviously, not. It must have secured agreement from all majority stakeholders.

The next obvious question is, Why would these Western majority stakeholders wish to deprive Germany of access to cheap oil (because pipelined oil is normally cheaper than oil shipped by sea)? This answer is also obvious: with a pipeline, the seller is captive — only able to ship oil to the end point of the pipeline while with seaborne oil the seller is free to ship to anywhere in the world where the price is the highest. Demand for real, physical oil is currently at an all-time high and shipping through Russia’s Baltic Sea oil ports such as Ust’-Luga and Primorsk eliminates dependence on a single buyer.

Is this profitable? Absolutely! Is this beneficial for Kazakhstan’s state budget? Of course! The higher the prices achieved, the greater the revenues to the budget and/or the state-owned company KazMunayGas — and, of course, for Chevron, ExxonMobile, Shell, Eni, TotalEnergies and, last but not least, China’s CNPC.

Is this beneficial for Russia? If oil from these companies is loaded at Ust-Luga and Primorsk, wouldn’t these companies suddenly become most interested in the security of Russia’s ports and in ending Ukrainian drone flights which have been threatening them? The sudden, simultaneous imposition of a ban on Kiev’s use of their airspace from Vilnius, Riga, and Tallinn had everything to do with supporting the interests of Chevron, ExxonMobile, Shell, Eni and TotalEnergies.

Germany is not being deprived of the oil it needs. If Germany wishes to continue to import oil from Kazakhstan, all it has to do is:

1. Pay the highest price in the world for each tanker load, as determined at the time of sailing from Ust’-Luga or Primorsk. Or they could just go and shop around. The fact that Scwedt is fine-tuned to process Kazakh oil shouldn’t stop them.
2. Negotiate a transshipment agreement with the Polish company Orlen, which owns berths in the port of Gdańsk (formerly, Danzig). This should be easy; after all, the Germans and the Poles are age-old friends, right?
3. Put enough international pressure on all involved to provide for the security of Primorsk and Ust-Luga and the sailing of tankers, including Russian-flagged ones, throughout the Baltic.

[…]

Via https://boosty.to/cluborlov/posts/94f7cdde-1c3d-4139-8ba3-a464625231ee

Israeli minister announces illegal settlement plans in Lebanon, mass displacement of Palestinians

Far-right Israeli security minister Itamar Ben-Gvir (File photo)

Press TV

Israeli far-right minister Itamar Ben-Gvir has announced that the Tel Aviv regime intends to establish illegal settlements in southern Lebanon while encouraging the mass displacement of Palestinians from the besieged Gaza Strip and the occupied West Bank.

“We have more plans to encourage migration from Gaza, encourage migration from the West Bank, and promote settlement in Lebanon. We will not hesitate to eliminate anyone who rises up to kill us,” Ben-Gvir said at a Thursday event marking the anniversary of Israel’s occupation of East al-Quds.

The remarks come as the Israeli military aggressively seeks to seize additional land to redraw the borders of both Gaza and Lebanon.

On Thursday, Israeli regime’s prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu admitted that Israel now controls around 60% of the Gaza Strip, significantly more than the area stipulated under last year’s ceasefire agreement.

“Today we control 60% of the Gaza Strip,” Netanyahu said.

Senior Hamas official Bassem Naim stated earlier that Israel has shifted the so-called “yellow line” westward by an additional 8–9%, bringing the total area under Israeli control to over 60% of the besieged strip.

Palestinian officials and human rights groups report that Israeli occupation forces have gradually pushed beyond the original demarcation line into deeper areas of Gaza, recently referred to in reports as the so-called “orange line.”

Israel’s Haaretz newspaper has confirmed that the current area under Israeli control exceeds the limits set by the ceasefire agreement that took effect in October 2025.

Hundreds more Palestinians have been killed as Israel continues its daily violations of the ceasefire in the blockaded Gaza Strip.

Since launching its genocidal war on the people of Gaza more than two years ago, the Tel Aviv regime has killed over 72,500 people.

Meanwhile, Israel has also repeatedly breached the truce in Lebanon, killing 2,896 people and injuring 8,824 others since March 2.

Tel Aviv regime forces have occupied at least five strategic locations and several border towns in southern Lebanon under the pretext of creating a so-called “buffer zone.”

In the same speech, Ben-Gvir boasted about the harsh new restrictions he has imposed on Palestinian detainees in Israeli prisons, following the passage of legislation allowing the death penalty for Palestinian prisoners.

“Israeli prisons have become real prisons,” he said. “No jam or chocolate, no academic studies, no deposits, no television or radio. They are left with only the bare minimum.”

On March 30, the Israeli Knesset passed the controversial law by a vote of 62–48, with one abstention. The legislation permits death sentences by hanging for Palestinian prisoners who Israel accuses of carrying out or planning attacks that killed Israelis.

It also allows courts to impose the death penalty without a request from the prosecution and without requiring a unanimous judicial decision.

The UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination has urged Israel to “immediately” repeal the law.

More than 9,600 Palestinian prisoners, including women and children, are currently held in Israeli jails, where they face systematic torture, starvation, and medical neglect that have already caused the deaths of dozens.

[…]

Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/05/15/768672/Israeli-minister-announces-illegal-settlement-plans-in-Lebanon,-and-mass-displacement-of-Palestinians

Stock trade disclosure reveals Trump made massive gains on Big Tech bets

Stock trade disclosure reveals Trump made massive gains on Big Tech bets ·Euronews

Donald Trump’s latest financial disclosure has opened an unusually detailed window into the scale and pace of trading activity tied to the US president’s investment portfolio.

The filing, submitted on Thursday to the US Office of Government Ethics through two OGE Form 278-T reports, disclosed more than 3,600 transactions executed between January and the end of March 2026.

The cumulative value of the trades ranged from at least $220 million (€188mn) to as much as $750 million (€641mn) as federal ethics disclosures only require broad valuation bands rather than precise figures.

US presidents are not banned from trading financial markets but must disclose personal trades. No charges were made or proven acts of insider trading have been outlined but the revelation still draws ethics scrutiny and a push for trading restrictions.

The filings do not specify whether Trump directed the trades. His personal assets and business empire are actively run and managed by his sons Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump, but some entries also indicate broker involvement.

The documents reveal extensive exposure to some of Wall Street’s biggest names, particularly in technology and specifically AI.

FILE. Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump at the State of the Union address, 24 Feb. 2026
FILE. Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump at the State of the Union address, 24 Feb. 2026 – AP Photo/Alex Brandon

Individual purchases of Nvidia, Microsoft, Broadcom, Amazon, Apple and others ranged from $1 million (€856,000) to $5 million (€4.27mn) in disclosed value while buy orders of AMD, Intel, Goldman Sachs, Alphabet, Airbnb, DoorDash, Micron, Bloom Energy and others ranged from $500,000 (€427,500) to $1 million (€856,000) in disclosed value.

US President Donald Trump also reported hundreds of stock sales ranging from $15,000 (€12,825) to up to $25 million (€21.37mn).

According to the report, and assuming the holdings have remained relatively the same since the end of March, Trump is 20% or more in profit on almost all of the names indicated here and others.

In particular, Trump is over 100% in profit on AMD, Intel, Iridium Communications, Bloom Energy, Intuitive Machines, Marvell Technology, Penguin Solutions, SanDisk, Seagate, Vishay Intertechnology and other stocks.

Based on the dates of the transactions it is also apparent that Trump heavily bought the price dip in March caused by the start of the Iran war. The S&P 500 dropped over 8% and bottomed at the end of the month, subsequently rising around 19% to record highs.

Efforts to ban public officials from trading stocks

There is currently a live bipartisan push in the US Congress to pass a stock trading ban for public officials, and several proposals are at different stages of the legislative process.

The most prominent effort is the “Restore Trust in Congress Act”, a bipartisan bill introduced in the US Congress by Republican Representative Chip Roy and Democratic Representative Seth Magaziner in September 2025.

The legislation would ban members of the US Congress, their spouses and dependent children from owning or trading individual stocks and other covered investments. A companion Senate version was introduced in January 2026 by Republican Senator Ashley Moody and Democratic Senator Kirsten Gillibrand.

According to the bill’s sponsors, the US Congress version has attracted more than 120 co-sponsors while a discharge petition launched by Republican Representative Anna Paulina Luna aims to force the legislation onto the House floor even without leadership approval.

There is also a separate debate over whether any ban should extend beyond the US Congress to include the president and vice president.

Some Democratic-backed proposals would apply the restrictions to the executive branch as well, partly in response to concerns surrounding US President Donald Trump’s business and trading disclosures.

In the Senate, a version of the ETHICS Act also advanced through committee in 2025 and would prohibit stock trading by members of Congress, the president and the vice president, although compromises and carve-outs have complicated its political path.

Despite unusually broad public support for tighter trading restrictions, the issue remains politically contentious. Republican and Democratic lawmakers disagree on whether officials should be required to fully divest existing holdings or simply stop purchasing new stocks.

There is also disagreement over whether spouses and family members should be covered, and whether restrictions should apply to the president.

Several proposals have advanced through committee or gained enough support to potentially reach the House floor, but no comprehensive ban has yet become law.

[…]

Via https://finance.yahoo.com/markets/stocks/articles/stock-trade-disclosure-reveals-trump-111526929.html

Israel kills seven in Lebanon, agrees to ‘ceasefire’ extension at talks in US

Israel and Lebanon have agreed to extend a ceasefire that was due to expire on Sunday by 45 days, the US said, after direct talks in Washington DC concluded, despite ongoing Israeli attacks and ceasefire violations in Lebanon.

“The April 16 cessation of hostilities will be extended by 45 days to enable further progress,” said US State Department spokesperson Tommy Pigott on Friday, after the second day of talks concluded.

Pigott, who described the talks as “highly-productive”, said that political negotiations would continue on June 2 and June 3, while a “security track” would begin on May 29 at the Pentagon, involving Lebanese and Israeli military delegations.

“We hope these discussions will advance lasting peace between the two countries, full recognition of each other’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, and establishing genuine security along their shared border,” Pigott said.

The latest talks were the third round of direct negotiations between the two sides this year, but few details have emerged of the specifics that were discussed in the latest round.

It came as Israel launched new attacks on Lebanon on Friday, killing at least seven people in the south, according to the Lebanese state news agency NNA. The Lebanese Ministry of Health said 2,951 people have been killed in Israeli attacks since March 2, when fighting between Israel and Hezbollah reignited.

Since then, Israel has lost 20 troops including another soldier killed in fighting with Hezbollah on Friday.

Direct talks

Lebanese and Israeli officials are yet to comment on the latest round of talks.

Both sides are approaching the talks from different positions, with Lebanon insisting that Israel fully end its attacks and occupation of its territory. Israel is focused on the disarmament of Iran-backed Hezbollah – and a potential normalisation agreement between the two countries.

Despite these differences, the talks were significant, being face-to-face and the third round this year.

Lebanon sent Presidential Special Envoy Simon Karam, while Israel’s Deputy National Security Adviser Yossi Draznin also attended.

Despite encouragement from US President Donald Trump, Lebanon has so far refused a meeting between President Joseph Aoun and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Aoun has insisted that full normalisation is not on the table, and that Lebanon is pushing for the ceasefire to be enforced before negotiations continue.

The Lebanese president is treading carefully, seeking to balance US pressure and a desire to stop Israel’s attacks without appearing to be conceding too much to Israel.

While some Lebanese would tolerate the meetings between Lebanese and Israeli officials if they end the war, Hezbollah and its allies are adamant that the talks should have been indirect.

Israeli attacks

Many in Lebanon view Israel’s continued attacks as evidence that it is not serious about ending the war, which it has conducted to varying levels of intensity since October 2023.

The most recent eruption came on March 2, after Hezbollah fired rockets at Israel following the US-Israeli assassination of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Israel had previously attacked Lebanon more than 10,000 times since the November 2024 ceasefire, killing approximately 400 people.

Israel has launched devastating attacks in Lebanon since March, but eventually agreed to a US-brokered ceasefire on April 16, which is set to expire on Sunday.

Despite the ceasefire, attacks on Lebanon have not stopped.

Friday’s attacks included the killing of two people in a drone strike on a car in the southern Lebanese city of Nabatieh, Mohammed Ahmed Abu Zaid and Jamal Noureddine were collecting humanitarian aid. Three ambulances were damaged in the attack, Lebanon’s state news agency reported.

Another drone attack in Harouf killed three people and two others died in Tabeen.

Israeli attacks in Tyre district injured 37 people on Friday, according to the Ministry of Health.

Israel issued forced evacuation orders for five villages in southern Lebanon, claiming it was striking Hezbollah targets in the area. Hezbollah said it carried out several drone attacks on Israel and Israeli troops in Lebanon, with several “explosive drones” falling in northern Israel.

[…]

Via https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/5/15/lebanon-talks-israel-attack