Gabbard releases intelligence showing federal government funded 120 biolabs in 30 countries

Non-Aligned Countries Demand Answers about US Military Biolabs ...

“The information surrounding the existence, history, locations and funding of these US funded biolabs has been intentionally covered up by powerful people falsely, claiming that they do not exist.” 

Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard announced Friday that she is releasing never-before-seen documents concerning the U.S. government funding 120 biolabs in 30 countries, including Ukraine.

“In support of President Trump‘s Executive Order to end federal funding of dangerous gain of function research around the world, and increase transparency and accountability, ODNI [Office of the Director of National Intelligence] will continue working with partners across the administration to identify where these labs are, what pathogens they contain, and what ‘research’ is being conducted,” Gabbard said in X.

In Friday’s announcement, Gabbard said that the Intelligence Community had previously warned that a biolab funded by the U.S. existed in Ukraine and likely contained dangerous pathogens. As the war with Russia continues, the labs are vulnerable to Russian attack, seizure or damage.

Many of the 120 labs engaged in research involving highly contagious pathogens and gain-of-function research with little oversight, according to the ODNI release.

“Despite the obvious potential for catastrophic global impact research on dangerous pathogens in biolabs can have, politicians, so-called health professionals like Dr. [Anthony] Fauci, and entities within the Biden administration’s national security team lied to the American people about the existence of U.S.-funded and supported biolabs, and threatened those who attempted to expose the truth,” Gabbard said in a statement.

[…]

Via https://justthenews.com/government/federal-agencies/gabbard-releases-intelligence-showing-federal-government-has-funded-120

Handala hacks FBI drones, threatens to target World Cup

Handala hacks FBI drones, threatens to target World Cup

Press TV

The pro-resistance Handala hacking group has announced that it breached drones of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) of the United States and threatened to target the underway World Cup.

On Friday, the monitoring group SITE Intelligence Group published a statement from Handala saying they had had access “for months” to “every image and every suspect” captured by first-person view (FPV) drones used by the FBI.

According to the statement, the drones featured facial recognition and license plate screening deployed for counterterrorism.

“Better tighten your World Cup security, we don’t like some of those teams at all. Don’t forget: FPVs are everywhere; you never know when one might end up right in your team’s bus,” Handala said in the statement quoted by SITE.

Handala released photos and footage that it said were taken from the hacked drones.

The FBI is reportedly deploying drones around World Cup stadiums to protect against unauthorized aircraft.

Drone flights will be banned over US stadiums hosting matches, as well as over fan events related to the tournament that began on Thursday.

In March, Handala said it brought the so-called “impenetrable” systems of the FBI “to their knees” within hours as its team has gained full access to data belonging to FBI Director Kash Patel.

Handala stated that the cyberattack came after the FBI announced a $10 million reward for the capture of its members.

The group reiterated that Washington can never “silence the voice of resistance” through “bribes and threats.”

Handala dedicated this cyber operation to the 84 navy personnel martyred aboard Iran’s IRIS Dena on March 4.

The vessel was on an official mission in international waters to participate in a naval exercise in India when it was struck by a US Navy MK 48 torpedo from a submarine, approximately 40 nautical miles off the coast of Galle, Sri Lanka.

[…]

Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/06/12/770316/Handala-hacks-FBI-drones-threatens-target-World-Cup

Hamas says Israel expanding ‘yellow line’ in Gaza to ‘blow up’ ceasefire talks

Israeli soldiers occupy a military position overlooking the so-called yellow line in the central Gaza Strip, May 26, 2026. (AP photo)

Press TV

Hamas has condemned Israel’s expansion of the “yellow line” in Gaza, saying the move was meant to “blow up the negotiation track” and undermine the US-brokered ceasefire agreement.

Hamas spokesperson Hazem Qassem said in a statement on Friday that the expansion of the line, along with continued bombardment and displacement of Palestinians, amounted to a “flagrant violation of the ceasefire agreement.”

He said Israel’s actions represented the “actual implementation of threats” to increase its control over the Gaza Strip.

“Israeli actions reflect its unwillingness to implement the ceasefire agreement and aim to blow up the negotiation track and thwart the efforts being made, while continuing escalation to serve political and electoral considerations,” Qassem said.

The Hamas official also criticized the international community’s silence and inaction, pointing in particular to the lack of action by the so-called Board of Peace, as well as mediating and guarantor governments.

He said their failure to intervene had allowed the Israeli regime to continue violations of the ceasefire on the ground.

The Hamas spokesman added that the escalation was taking place while negotiations in the Egyptian capital, Cairo, were still ongoing.

Egypt, Qatar and Turkey, held week-long talks with Hamas and other Palestinian factions on implementing the second phase of President Donald Trump’s Gaza plan, which according to Hamas would focus on Israel’s implementation of the first phase, and reaching common ground on proceeding toward the second phase.

In a Thursday statement, senior Hamas official Hussam Badran said the talks had achieved “real progress” and called on mediators to compel Israel to stop truce violations.

According to sources, factions, including Hamas, agreed on 14 points of a 15-point blueprint presented by Trump’s Board of Peace.

A Palestinian official said demands to decommission Hamas’s arms and infrastructure emerged as a new “Israeli obstacle” on Wednesday, disrupting a “positive atmosphere.”

A transition to the second phase of the ceasefire, which was supposed to involve a gradual withdrawal of the Israeli military and the disarmament of Hamas, has been stalled for months.

Meanwhile, the Israeli regime has continued to extend its presence in Gaza by controlling around 58 percent of the Palestinian territory by December, according to the research agency Forensic Architecture.

The so-called yellow line which was agreed under the US-brokered ceasefire in October last year separates Israeli-controlled areas from the rest of the Gaza Strip. The demarcation line was intended as a temporary boundary pending further Israeli withdrawals.

The line, however, has shifted forward in several areas, expanding the Israeli-controlled zone beyond the 53 percent of Gaza territory outlined in the original ceasefire maps.

In some areas, the line is marked with yellow concrete blocks, which were reportedly moved during December and January as Israeli forces advanced, particularly in urban zones.

Residents in multiple areas have reported waking up to find the boundary had shifted overnight, placing their neighborhoods into newly restricted or high-risk zones.

[…]

Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/06/12/770315/Hams-slams-Israel-expansion-Gaza-yellow-line-ceasefire-violation

Claims of US, Iran signing deal in Geneva Sunday ‘not true’

The file photo shows women holding Iran’s national flags during an anti-US and Israel protest in Tehran. (Photo by AFP)

Press TV

An informed source close to the Iranian negotiating team has strongly rejected recent claims by US President Donald Trump and certain foreign media outlets that a final agreement is ready to be signed in the Swiss city of Geneva on Sunday.

“The claims raised by Trump and some foreign media that the agreement has been finalized and is going to be signed on Sunday in Geneva are completely untrue,” the source told Fars news agency on Friday.

The source explained that the decision-making process within Iran has not yet been concluded and ruled out both the specified date and the place.

“The review and decision-making process in Iran has not been finalized yet. Therefore, both the announcement of Sunday and the location of Geneva are categorically denied,” the source added.

The remarks come amid speculation over the status of the Iran-US negotiations, with reports claiming that the two countries are close to signing a memorandum of understanding, with a possible signing ceremony in Geneva as early as Sunday.

The potential arrangement comes as Group of Seven (G7) leaders are set to gather in Evian, France, on June 15-17.

Following claims made by the US president on Thursday about an imminent deal between Tehran and Washington, an informed source also told Tasnim news agency on Friday that the text of the understanding has not been approved up to this moment.

Meanwhile, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei said that the possible Iran-US understanding is at the “internal finalization stage”, and no final decision has been made yet.

He added that official notification regarding any agreement is contingent upon reaching a final outcome and will be carried out immediately thereafter.

“The decision-making process in the Islamic Republic of Iran is completely clear, and the relevant authorities must reach a conclusion on every detail of the text and any possible understanding,” the Iranian spokesperson reiterated.

He explained that details concerning the manner of signing the potential understanding will be discussed in subsequent stages, and “what has been raised so far in this regard has largely been within the framework of media speculation.”

The United States and Israel launched their unprovoked war of aggression against Iran on February 28.

Iran’s Armed Forces responded with 100 waves of retaliatory strikes under Operation True Promise 4, launching hundreds of ballistic and hypersonic missiles, as well as drones, against American military bases across West Asia and Israeli positions throughout the occupied territories.

On April 8, forty days into the war, an Islamabad-brokered ceasefire went into effect. However, the first round of Tehran-Washington negotiations failed to reach an agreement, with the latter imposing an inhumane “naval blockade” of Iran.

Since then, both Israel and the US have violated the truce, triggering Iran’s strong retaliatory strikes.

[…]

One year after 12-day war: Iran rises as regional superpower while US Empire slips into oblivion

By Press TV Strategic Analysis Desk

After a year in which the full spectrum of the enemy’s military, political, economic, intelligence, and psychological warfare machinery was mobilized to topple the Islamic Republic, the strategic outcome has been dramatically reversed.

Far from accomplishing its stated but improbable objectives, the US war machine has suffered a staggering collapse into oblivion, while Iran has consolidated its position as a regional superpower with a clear and widely recognized upper hand.

The regional balance of power has shifted decisively in the wake of the three imposed wars against the Islamic Republic in less than a year. Tehran is now positioned to impose strategic conditions, while Washington finds itself increasingly forced into reactive diplomacy.

It was in June last year when the United States, the Israeli regime, and a coalition of their regional allies launched what they believed would be a swift, decisive, and terminal operation – a 12-day war of aggression designed to bring about “regime change” in Iran.

They banked on the much-hyped doctrine of shock, surprise, and cumulative pressure, unleashing every lever of power: military, political, economic, and psychological.

Their war plans, repeatedly refined since 1979, were executed twice in less than a year – most recently in February, a war lasting nearly 40 days that ended with the US retreat.

Today, on the anniversary of the 12-day imposed war, the region’s strategic map has been reversed. The United States is no longer the predator circling weakened prey. It is the petitioner, eagerly seeking a deal to escape a wider and more dangerous catastrophe.

Iran has not merely survived, but it has emerged as a formidable regional superpower, imposing conditions on Washington for the first time in decades.

The year of maximum pressure – What the enemy unleashed

Between June 13, 2025, and June 12, 2026, the enemy coalition – led by the United States, operationalized by Israel, and facilitated by Arab logistical support and European betrayals – activated every option in its playbook. This was not a single war but a cascade of catastrophes, designed to overwhelm Iran’s capacity for resistance through simultaneity.

The assassination of the Leader of the Islamic Revolution was the biggest salvo – the crossing of the Islamic Republic’s highest red line. In any conventional strategic framework, the decapitation of a state’s top-most authority should have triggered collapse.

Instead, it triggered something the enemy had neither calculated nor imagined – a quick and seamless transfer of leadership and a nation galvanized by unity and resolve to resist.

The 40-day war in February this year was the sequel to the 12-day war in June last year. The June 2025 war was a full-scale military assault on sensitive military, security, and nuclear nodes inside Iran. When that failed to break the country, the enemy escalated to a 40-day war, an expanded campaign targeting civilian and scientific infrastructure, media industry, administrative centers, and economic lifelines, accompanied by mass civilian killings in cities like Minab, Lamerd, and Karaj – including the massacre of over 150 schoolchildren.

Simultaneously, separatist terrorist elements, trained and armed abroad by familiar suspects, struck from the northwest and southeast borders.

But the most insidious operation was the armed coup attempt before the 40-day war in January and early February. It was the deployment of extensively trained terrorist cells across the country, activated simultaneously with maximum brutality.

Thousands of Iranian citizens were murdered in this coordinated campaign of domestic terror, for which Donald Trump recently took public responsibility.

Europe, for its part, abandoned fifteen years of JCPOA diplomacy, triggering the “snapback” mechanism, a juridical betrayal that confirmed Tehran’s long-held suspicion – Western agreements are tactical instruments, not binding commitments.

A complete US naval blockade in the form of maritime banditry and piracy was imposed to strangle Iran’s economy. Every regional ally of the United States – Persian Gulf Arab states, Israeli military bases, and regional logistics hubs – was activated against Iran.

And throughout this year of open warfare against the Iranian nation, Washington and its partners repeatedly engaged in simultaneous talks and diplomacy, using negotiation as cover for surprise attacks. Each Iranian gesture of goodwill was met with betrayal.

The enemy’s stated goal, which was admitted openly in Western and Israeli strategic circles, was the overthrow of the Islamic Republic, the disintegration of the country into ethnic fragments, and the plunder of its rich resources.

The miscalculation – Why Iran did not fall

The enemy’s assessment, briefed to American and Israeli war cabinets, was that Iran would collapse within the first few days of the Ramadan War. They had imagined the Islamic Republic as a brittle system – aging leadership, economic distress, popular discontent, a military stretched thin. They were catastrophically wrong, as they later realized.

What the enemy failed to understand is that civilized and revolutionary states do not fight like conventional powers. The assassination of the Leader of the Islamic Revolution did not create a vacuum, but it gave the nation a martyr. The new Leader – the martyred Leader’s worthy successor, elected amid bombings – demonstrated something the West has never internalized: in Shia revolutionary doctrine, the system is larger than any individual.

The outcome, after twelve months of maximum pressure and maximum violence against the Iranian nation, is an Iran that holds the clear upper hand.

Now, let us consider the balance sheet. On Iran’s side:

First is the strategic defeat of the enemy’s core objective. The United States and Israel sought to break Iran’s will and project their own invincibility. Instead, it proved counterproductive as the enemy lost its credibility and deterrence. The sight of American warships quietly withdrawing from the Strait of Hormuz under Iranian tactical control traveled across every news platform in the region. The psychological effect was seismic.

Second is an unprecedented national cohesion. Western analysts had long predicted that economic pressure would drive a wedge between the people and the Islamic Republic. The opposite happened. The two imposed wars produced exceptional national unity. Public presence in defense of the country – volunteer armed groups, civilian logistics networks, popular mobilization – reached levels unseen since the 1980s Imposed War. The armed forces, the Basij, and ordinary civilians fused into a single resistance organism.

Third is the preservation and strengthening of strategic assets. Iran’s civilian nuclear program, missile arsenal, and regional network of resistance allies emerged not only intact but enhanced. International experts now note that Iran’s exclusive operational control over the Strait of Hormuz has created a strategic asset “greater than nuclear weapons.”

Fourth is the demonstration of offensive and defensive superpower capability. Iran proved it could initiate and end a war with Israel on its own terms. It demonstrated deterrent power so clearly that regional states relying on American bases – Saudi Arabia, UAE, Bahrain and others – have been forced into a recalibration of their security doctrines. The US guarantee is no longer credible if Washington cannot protect its allies from Iranian retaliation.

Fifth is a decisive shift in global public opinion. Despite an unprecedented Western propaganda campaign, popular sentiment across the Global South – and even within Western civil societies – moved in favor of Iran. The image of a small power standing alone against the full might of the American Empire, and winning, resonated deeply in post-colonial societies worldwide.

The humiliation of the United States – A superpower unmasked

While Iran’s position has grown significantly, America’s power has collapsed. The anniversary of the 12-day war finds the US in its weakest strategic posture since the 1975 fall of Saigon.

The damage to the American “superpower” image is irreversible. For decades, Washington projected an aura of military invincibility and inevitable victory. That aura was shattered in the skies over Iran and the waters of the Strait of Hormuz.

The enemy failed to achieve any of its declared objectives. It was forced to downgrade its war aims from “overthrow the Islamic Republic” to “prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons” – an objective Iran has repeatedly and officially stated it does not seek.

The humiliation in the Strait of Hormuz stands as one of the greatest strategic disasters. The United States, the world’s maritime superpower, lost operational control of the planet’s most vital waterway to a non-naval power. The damage to American global power projection is permanent. Every allied navy in the world has already taken note.

Economic and material losses are staggering, including hundreds of billions of dollars in direct and indirect costs; the depletion of expensive strategic reserves – air defense missiles, precision-guided munitions, naval assets – with no prospect of replenishment at a pace matching Iranian asymmetric resupply. The US military industrial base, already strained by Ukraine and Israel, has been further hollowed out.

Loss of credibility with allies is perhaps the most consequential long-term damage. Persian Gulf monarchies that paid billions for US protection watched American forces retreat, their air defense systems bypassed, their territories vulnerable to Iranian retaliation. The phrase “all options are on the table” was exposed as rhetorical theater. When the US repeatedly retreated from re-entering the war with Iran, ending the 40-day war without any gains, every regional ally understood the new reality.

Domestic and international disgrace is complete. Western and regional analysts, even those hostile to Iran, have been forced to acknowledge the transfer of initiative in war and peace into Tehran’s hands. Inside Iran, the collapse of US prestige has been particularly devastating for Western-oriented groups who long promoted the narrative of America as a “benevolent hegemon.” That flawed narrative is now completely dead.

The Trump calculus – Desperation disguised as diplomacy

At the time of writing this, Trump has reportedly received signs of a final agreement with Iran with what can only be described as desperation. His renewed threats of attacks on Iranian targets were quickly withdrawn Thursday evening. It recalls the posture of a desperate gambler who has run out of chips.

Several structural realities must be understood about the current US pursuit of a deal.

First, after failing militarily, the United States is now pursuing a submissive diplomatic approach. Washington hopes Iran will agree to terms that allow the US to declare a face-saving exit. But make no mistake: any deal America seeks is not about mutual benefit, but about the survival of the remaining fragments of US credibility in the region.

Second, the United States is engaged in an intense and all-out war of disinformation. Through social media posts, contradictory press releases, and manipulated narratives, the Trump administration officials seek to project a false image of “achievement.” They will claim they “prevented” something worse, or that Iran “conceded” something. These are propaganda weapons aimed at domestic and allied audiences, not reflected by facts.

Third, any agreement with Iran must not be misread as a partisan tactic of Trump or the Republican Party. This is a broader, bipartisan structural bid by the entire US machinery: the deep state, the military establishment, and global Zionist networks.

Political figures are visible operators, but the machinery behind them is national and transnational. The retreats we see are tactical moves designed to preserve the larger goal of maintaining Western power credibility over the long arc.

Iran should not – and cannot – afford to mistake a tactical pause for a strategic conversion.

The rules of any future agreement – Iran’s non-negotiable lines

If Iran chooses to enter an agreement – and that is an “if,” not a “when” – the terms must reflect the new balance of power. The following are non-negotiable:

First, Iran must not compromise its fundamental rights – not for a temporary ceasefire, not for sanctions relief, not for any American promise. If negotiations collapse and war is reimposed, Iran must be able to return from a position of strength and authority.

Second, the goal of any agreement must be the removal of the shadow of war, not a temporary truce, not a managed escalation ladder, but the establishment of durable deterrence. Real security comes from power projection and the absence of weakness signals. Every concession, no matter how small, will be interpreted by Washington as an invitation for further pressure.

Third, full Iranian sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz must be recognized without any conditions. This is now a strategic reality. Any agreement that does not explicitly acknowledge Iran’s control and right to manage this waterway is an agreement built on a lie.

Fourth, Iran’s nuclear rights, defense capabilities, and regional resistance structure must remain intact. The United States has no standing to demand limitations on a sovereign nation’s defensive capabilities, especially after failing to destroy those very assets.

Fifth, compensation for damages caused by US and Israeli aggression must be addressed. The destruction of Iranian infrastructure, the murder of thousands, the economic strangulation – these are not abstract costs but crimes for which reparations are due.

Sixth, the role of the Iranian people’s resistance and presence must be formally recognized. Any agreement that ignores the popular mobilization that saved the country betrays the very source of Iran’s strength.

The new confrontation – What comes after any deal

The most important strategic insight for Iranian decision-makers is that any agreement marks not the end, but the beginning of a new confrontation with the unreliable enemy.

The United States is fundamentally opposed to Iran’s existence as a unified, powerful, and independent state. That has not changed and it will not change with any agreement on the table. What has changed is the method from direct military assault to a renewed campaign of subversion, economic pressure, and political isolation.

To consolidate the gains of the past year, Iran must now focus on internal factors. National strength must be reinforced by addressing economic vulnerabilities, maintaining popular unity, and ensuring that the military and security apparatus remain resupplied and ready.

Simultaneously, weakening factors, especially Western-dependent thinking, defeatist psychological operations, and fifth column elements, must be systematically eliminated.

It is important to understand that the enemy’s next war will not look like the last one. It will be fought in the currency of doubt, division, and delay.

On the first anniversary of the 12-day imposed war, the Islamic Republic of Iran and the people of Iran have emerged as undisputed winners. The enemy employed every option on the field and on the table but left with nothing but staggering losses.

Iranian people, leadership, and armed forces achieved what theorists in the West believed was impossible: they defeated a “superpower” in a full-spectrum war – not once, but twice in less than a year – without surrendering a single core principle.

The United States now seeks a deal to escape from the quagmire of its own making. And whether the deal finally materializes or not, the foundation of Iran’s security must remain what it has always been: not American promises, but Iranian power.

[…]

Massie honors USS Liberty survivors on House floor, calls for investigation into attack

Massie honors survivors of USS Liberty on House floor, calls for investigation into attack: 4 Articles‘The Israelis were intent on leaving no survivors,’ Massie says of the 1967 attack [File: Kylie Cooper/Reuters]

Monday, in a historic event, Thomas Massie spoke out on the Congressional floor about Israel’s lethal attack on the USS Liberty that killed 34 Americans and injured at least 174. Fifteen of the surviving crew members, wives, widows, and sons were there.

[…]

(1/4) Massie honors survivors of USS Liberty on House floor, calls for investigation into attack

By Charlotte Hazard, Reposted from KATU, June 08, 2026

“It’s a great honor, maybe one of the biggest honors of my lifetime, to stand here on the floor and do something that’s 59 years overdue: to recognize the survivors and those who gave their lives on the USS Liberty 59 years ago today,” Massie said at the start of his remarks.

The USS Liberty was a U.S. ship that was attacked by Israeli jet fighters and torpedo boats on June 8, 1967. The attack happened off the coast of Egypt, resulting in 34 service members being killed and over 170 injured.

Twelve surviving members of the attack watched Massie’s speech from the House gallery.

Massie said he spoke to the survivors before coming out to speak. He said that the ship was unarmed and sent to observe a six-day war going on in the Middle East and the U.S. flag was very visibly waving on the ship.

“But what happened next surprised them all,” Massie said. “French mirage jets showed and for 25 minutes strafed and attacked the USS Liberty. They shot rockets, they shot 30 millimeter cannons into the hull and into the ship. They even dropped napalm on the bridge of the ship.”

He said this was an effort to kill everybody on board.

“According to eyewitness accounts, the Israelis machine gunned the lifeboats that they put down,” Massie said. “They machine gunned the firefighters who were on the deck.”

U.S. officials and Israeli officials have described the incident as a tragic mistake of mistaken identity.

Massie said that there were ships sent to help the USS Liberty, but they were recalled. He later added that officials such as former Secretary of State Richard Helm and former CIA Director Bobby Ray Inman don’t think the attack was an accident.

“None of these distinguished men think this was an accident,” he said. “They think it was intentional murder by the country of Israel, either as a false flag operation or because they simply didn’t want anybody observing what they were doing that day.”

He concluded his speech by calling for an investigation into what happened.

“Honor these individuals,” Massie said, referring to the survivors. “Quit ignoring they exist. Go to their website USSLiberty.org. Support them, and while they’re still alive, they need closure. Let’s give them closure. Let’s have an investigation. Let’s pass a resolution honoring them. It’s long overdue.”


(2/4) US congressman demands probe into Israel’s 1967 attack on USS Liberty

‘Thomas Massie suggests the deadly assault was not an accident and calls on the US government to honour its survivors.

Reposted from Al Jazeera , June 08, 2026

Republican Congressman Thomas Massie has urged the United States to reopen its investigation into a 1967 Israeli attack on a US Navy ship, the USS Liberty, that killed 34 service members and injured 171 others.

Monday marked the 59th anniversary of the attack, and Massie honoured the occasion by delivering a speech on the floor of the House of Representatives, in the presence of survivors.

The Israeli government has long maintained the incident was a “friendly fire” accident. But some crew members from the USS Liberty have disputed that assessment, calling the attack deliberate.

Massie highlighted their testimonies in his speech, which questioned the official version of the events.

“While they’re still alive, they need closure,” Massie said of the survivors.

“Let’s give them closure. Let’s have an investigation. Let’s pass a resolution honouring them. It’s long overdue. And then they can have their justice.”

The House floor speech represented a rare congressional acknowledgement of the lingering questions surrounding the attack.

It also comes at a time of growing opposition to the US’s policy of giving unconditional aid to Israel.

In the wake of Israel’s genocidal war in Gaza and the joint US-Israeli war against Iran, public opinion polls have shown that the US ally is becoming increasingly unpopular among the American public.

Critics have argued for decades that the USS Liberty incident and the alleged cover-up that followed illustrate a lopsided alliance with Israel that does not serve Washington’s interests.

The war on Iran and horrific atrocities in Gaza and Lebanon have renewed scrutiny of that partnership, as well as of the 1967 attack itself.

Massie is among those skeptical of the US-Israeli relationship. He has opposed the war on Iran, as well as efforts to further integrate the US and Israeli militaries.

The outgoing congressman ultimately lost his primary last month to a challenger backed by US President Donald Trump and pro-Israel groups.

In Monday’s speech, he cast doubt as to whether Israel could have unintentionally targeted the USS Liberty.

“The visibility was unlimited. The American flag was flying proudly on the USS Liberty,” he told the House, describing the ship as being “viciously attacked”.

Israel’s supporters, however, insist that the assault was a misidentification accident not uncommon in war.

At the time, Israel was locked in the Six-Day War with several Arab countries. The USS Liberty had been sent to international waters nearby for observation and intelligence collection.

But on June 8, 1967, Israeli jets opened fire and dropped napalm on the USS Liberty, before torpedoing the vessel.

“The Israelis were intent on leaving no survivors,” Massie said in his speech, noting that Israeli jets had been seen surveilling the vessel the day prior to the attack.

To back up his argument, Massie cited statements from several top diplomatic, intelligence and military officials, including former US Secretary of State Dean Rusk and ex-top General Thomas Hinman Moorer, both of whom have said they believe the attack was deliberate.

“None of these distinguished men think this was an accident,” Massie said. “They think it was intentional murder by the country of Israel, either as a false flag operation or because they simply didn’t want anybody observing what they were doing that day.”

Israel illegally seized the West Bank, East Jerusalem, Gaza and Syria’s Golan Heights by the end of the conflict in 1967.

Decades later, in 2003, Ward Boston — a US Navy official who served as an adviser to the court of inquiry that looked into the attack — released sworn testimony that lead investigator Isaac Kidd had faced pressure to rule the incident as a case of mistaken identity.

But an assessment from the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) that was released in 2006 claimed that Israeli pilots “failed to identify” the USS Liberty as a US ship.

Congressman Dan Crenshaw criticized Massie, a fellow Republican, on Sunday for his plans to speak about the attack on the vessel.

“The USS Liberty incident is a tragic one, but it’s an incident with a clear conclusion if one uses any objective analysis of the facts,” Crenshaw wrote on the online platform X.

But the USS Liberty Veterans Association praised Massie in a social media post. The group, composed largely of survivors, has been calling for accountability in the case.

“A dynomite [sic] telling telling of our story in such a short amount of time,” the group said of Massie’s speech. “The story NO other member of Congress will even listen to.”


(3/4) Why was Israel spared scrutiny for the 1967 USS Liberty attack?US Representative Thomas Massie honors the crew of the vessel on the House floor, bringing attention to the 1967 Israeli attack.

Reposted from Al Jazeera, June 08, 2026

On June 8, 1967, at least 34 US sailors were killed and 171 others were wounded in an Israeli attack on the USS Liberty, a United States Navy technical research ship stationed in the Mediterranean Sea off Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula.

Israel claimed it was a case of mistaken identity, saying its naval forces thought the vessel was Egyptian. However, some of the survivors and researchers have disputed the Israeli version of the incident. They lament that successive governments did little to uncover the truth behind one of the deadliest attacks on the US Navy by its closest ally, Israel.

This year, the attack has come under renewed attention after US Representative Thomas Massie called for an investigation into the “unprovoked” attack during a speech on the floor of the House of Representatives on Monday.

So what do we know about one of the most controversial chapters of the US Navy?

What happened on June 8, 1967?

Israeli air and naval forces bombarded the intelligence-gathering vessel in international waters near the Sinai Peninsula during the 1967 war, when Israel captured Egypt’s Sinai, Gaza and the West Bank.

The assault began when Israeli jets attacked the vessel, striking the ship’s deck with antipersonnel weapons and armour-piercing bullets.

This was followed by a devastating strike from Israeli torpedo boats that blew a massive hole in the ship’s starboard side, instantly killing 25 men in the lower research spaces. In total, 34 sailors were killed in the attack.

The crew had been flying the US flag and had even exchanged waves with low-flying Israeli aircraft earlier that morning, making their identity clear. Israel has long maintained the strike was a tragic error, claiming exhausted pilots mistook the US naval vessel for an Egyptian warship.

Was there an attempt to cover up?

Nearly 60 years on, records related to the attack remain classified, survivors and advocates say.

Richard Brooks, chief engineer on the vessel, told Al Jazeera in a 2015 interview that “it wasn’t a tragic accident”.

“It was a deliberate attack. They knew who we were. They tried to sink us. They wanted us out to either bring the Americans into the war by blaming the Arabs, or we picked up some information about their war plans.”

A naval board of inquiry was hastily convened while the severely damaged ship was dry-docked in Malta, but the proceedings concluded swiftly.

Ernie Gallo, president of the USS Liberty Survivors Group, dismissed Israel’s “mistaken identity” excuse as a lie and accused the US government of complicity for accepting the false narrative. He continues to demand a full official inquiry.

The US Congress never formally questioned the attack or formed a committee to investigate the tragedy.

Speaking in the House on Monday, Massie said the unarmed ship was flying a clearly visible US flag when it came under sustained attack.

“According to eyewitness accounts, the Israelis machine-gunned the lifeboats that they put down,” Massie said as 12 survivors watched from the gallery of the US House of Representatives. “They machine-gunned the firefighters who were on the deck.”

Israeli officials have long claimed the attack was a case of mistaken identity, but Massie said senior officials, including former CIA officials, rejected that explanation.

The USS Liberty anniversary has renewed relevance because Massie has criticised Washington’s longstanding reluctance to hold Israel accountable, even when US citizens are killed. He has also opposed the latest war on Iran, which Israel dragged the US into, and which has killed at least 13 US soldiers and wounded more than 380.


Rep. Thomas Massie plans a House floor speech this week as survivors and a FOIA lawsuit renew attention to the 1967 attack.

By Haley Fuller, Reposted from Military.com , June 08, 2026

Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), plans to address the USS Liberty on the House floor this week and has invited survivors of the 1967 attack to attend, bringing renewed attention to one of the most controversial incidents in U.S. naval history.

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Survivors Continue to Seek Answers

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The renewed attention also comes as the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals considers a Freedom of Information Act, or FOIA, lawsuit seeking the release of records related to the attack.

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Via https://israelpalestinenews.org/thomas-massie-uss-liberty/

New Mideast Trade Corridor Emerges After Strait of Hormuz Closed. Alternative Routes for Energy Exports

Global energy markets continue to face mounting uncertainty as tensions between Washington and Tehran show no signs of easing.

Governments across the Middle East and beyond are accelerating efforts to develop alternative routes for energy exports and international trade.The prolonged closure of the Strait of Hormuz represents one of the most severe economic shocks in modern history.

US President Donald Trump and his partner, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, chose to attack Iran rather than continue diplomatic negotiations in an unprovoked massive attack on Iran costing thousands of civilian lives. Trump appears to be unable to stop the war he started, or was coerced into.

A complete closure has removed between 15 and 20 million barrels of oil per day from international markets. In addition, nearly 20% of global LNG trade, much of it originating from Qatar, has faced significant disruption.

Energy analysts estimate that oil prices could rapidly climb above $120–150 per barrel during an extended closure, with some worst-case scenarios projecting temporary spikes toward $180–200 per barrel if alternative supply routes fail to compensate for the lost exports.

Natural gas prices, particularly in Europe and Asia, have surged as LNG shipments are delayed or rerouted.

Inflationary Effects

Energy costs feed directly into almost every sector of the global economy. Higher fuel prices increase the cost of transportation, manufacturing, electricity generation, agriculture, and logistics.

As a result, the long-term closure of the Strait of Hormuz would likely trigger a new wave of inflation worldwide.

Economists generally estimate that every sustained 10% increase in oil prices can add approximately 0.2 to 0.4 percentage points to annual inflation rates in advanced economies, with even larger effects in energy-importing developing countries.

Consumers would likely experience rising prices across a broad range of everyday goods, including food, bread, agricultural commodities, fuel and electricity, air travel and shipping, and consumer goods dependent on global supply chains. In short, everything the average American buys “Made in China”.

Higher inflation would also force many central banks to maintain elevated interest rates, slowing investment and economic growth.

Impact on Global Trade and Shipping

The Strait of Hormuz is not only an energy corridor but also a vital artery for international commerce.

Insurance premiums for vessels operating in the Gulf would rise sharply during any prolonged crisis, while shipping companies would be forced to reroute cargoes or absorb higher security costs.

Overall Economic Losses

While the precise cost would depend on the duration of the disruption, economists generally agree that a prolonged closure could erase hundreds of billions of dollars from the global economy.

For this reason, many countries—including Turkey, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Iraq, Egypt, and others—are accelerating investments in alternative railways, pipelines, ports, and overland trade corridors designed to reduce dependence on the Strait of Hormuz and improve the resilience of global energy supplies.

A major geopolitical and economic realignment may be taking shape across the Middle East, as Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and several regional partners explore the revival of the historic Hejaz Railway and the development of a broader overland trade network stretching from Europe to the Arabian Sea.

Turkey has revealed that Ankara is in active discussions with Saudi Arabia regarding the modernization and expansion of the historic Hejaz Railway, with the long-term objective of extending the line all the way to the Sultanate of Oman.

The project is envisioned not merely as the restoration of a historic railway but as the creation of a modern transportation corridor serving both commercial freight and tourism.

A Modern Revival of the Hejaz Railway

Originally constructed between 1900 and 1908 during the Ottoman era, the Hejaz Railway initially connected Damascus with Medina, eventually reaching a total length of nearly 1,900 kilometers through subsequent extensions.

The historical route is being converted into a contemporary logistics network connecting Turkey, Syria, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and ultimately Oman.

The first phase of the modern Hejaz Railway project will connect a line from Turkey to Aleppo, with the Aleppo–Damascus–Jordan section already existing.

The “Development Road Project,” aims to connect Iraq’s Grand Faw Port with Turkey and onward to Europe.

The project is technically ready for implementation and will be developed as a joint venture involving Iraq, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, and Qatar, creating an integrated logistics network capable of reshaping regional commerce.

A Broader Regional Vision

Constructing a new Middle Eastern order based on the principle of “regional ownership,” whereby the countries of the region assume primary responsibility for addressing their own political and security challenges without excessive external intervention.

Syria at the Center of the Corridor

A central element of the proposed trade network involves reopening the historic overland transit route through Syria.

The corridor would extend from the Bab al-Hawa border crossing in northwestern Syria, passing through Aleppo, Damascus, and Daraa before reaching the Nassib border crossing with Jordan—a route of approximately 500 kilometers.

The new route is benefiting not only Turkey’s exports but also facilitating the movement of European goods into Gulf markets and vice versa.

The corridor would require extensive security guarantees to protect shipments from extremist groups, particularly ISIS.

The success of such a project depends upon a stable legal and regulatory framework capable of attracting private investment.

Given Syria’s ongoing economic and security challenges, many analysts believe that fully restoring large-scale transit operations remains unrealistic in the immediate future.

Countering Competing Trade Routes

Some regional observers argue that significant investments in Syria’s coastal infrastructure and ports could provide a viable alternative to the proposed India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC) and reduce the strategic importance of Israel’s Port of Haifa.

Under this scenario, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and Pakistan could establish a new logistics and investment axis that might eventually gain broader international support, including from the United States.

Gulf States Seek Alternatives to the Strait of Hormuz

Parallel to these railway and highway initiatives, Gulf energy producers are accelerating efforts to develop alternative export routes that bypass the Strait of Hormuz.

As part of this strategy, Iraq intends to sign an agreement with Syria to transport, store, and handle shipments of Basra Light, Basra Medium, and Basra Heavy crude through the Mediterranean ports of Baniyas and Tartus.

A New Regional Economic Architecture

Taken together, the revival of the Hejaz Railway, the Development Road Project, expanded Syrian transit corridors, Gulf pipeline investments, and Iraq’s Mediterranean export strategy point toward the emergence of a new regional economic architecture.

If successfully implemented, these interconnected initiatives could redefine trade flows between Europe, the Middle East, and Asia, lessen reliance on vulnerable maritime chokepoints, and establish a new era of economic integration driven primarily by regional powers themselves.

Whether these ambitious projects can overcome the significant political, security, and financial challenges ahead remains uncertain. However, the scale and coordination of the current diplomatic and infrastructure efforts suggest that the Middle East may be entering a new phase in which transportation corridors become as strategically important as energy resources themselves.

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Via https://www.globalresearch.ca/new-middle-east-trade-corridor/5929499

After Killing Three Indian Mariners, US Bombs Another Tanker in the Gulf of Oman

The father of an Indian cadet killed by the previous US attack called it a war crime and said his government should take a strong stance

US Central Command announced on Thursday that it bombed an oil tanker for the third time this week in the Gulf of Oman as part of its enforcement of the blockade of Iranian ports, which comes after India confirmed the previous US attack on a tanker killed three Indian crew members.

CENTCOM said its latest attack targeted the Guinea-Bissau-flagged tanker Jalveer. “A US aircraft fired two Hellfire missiles into the ship’s engine room after the crew repeatedly failed to comply with directions from US forces,” the command said.

Indian media on Thursday identified the three Indian mariners who were killed by the previous US attack on the Palau-flagged oil product tanker Settebello as Shivanand Chaurasiya, Patnala Suresh, and Aditya Sharma, a 23-year-old deck cadet who was on the ship for training to become an officer.

Aditya’s father, Rajesh Sharma, called the US attack a war crime and said his government should take a strong stance. “My last conversation with him was on Sunday. I request the government to take a strong stance against the US. I will say it is a war crime to attack a commercial ship with a missile,” Rajesh told NDTV.

“There are a lot of ways to control those cargo ships, you can send a military, you can arrest the crew members, you have no right to attack them with deadly missiles,” he added.

According to CENTCOM’s numbers, its forces have “disabled” nine civilian commercial ships while enforcing the blockade. “The blockade is being enforced impartially against vessels of all nations entering or departing Iranian ports and coastal areas, including all Iranian ports on the Arabian Gulf and Gulf of Oman,” the command said.

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Via https://news.antiwar.com/2026/06/11/after-killing-three-indian-mariners-us-bombs-another-tanker-in-the-gulf-of-oman/

Iran maritime authority announces Hormuz closure until further notice over US aggression

Vessels anchored in the Strait of Hormuz, as seen from Musandam, Oman, June 11, 2026. (Photo: Reuters)

Press TV

The Iranian authority controlling the Strait of Hormuz in the Persian Gulf says the strategic waterway is closed until further notice due to tensions initiated by American forces in the region.

In a brief announcement on its X account on Thursday, the Persian Gulf Strait Authority (PGSA) said that “Given the tensions created by the aggressor US forces in the region and the statement issued by the Iranian Armed Forces last night, the Strait of Hormuz will remain closed until further notice.”

It further said that “Applicants who have already received transit authorization are requested to remain patient and await further guidance from the PGSA.”

The announcement came hours after the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters, Iran’s highest operational command unit, ordered the closure of the narrow waterway shortly after the launch of fresh American military aggression against the country, despite the Islamic Republic’s warnings against such military adventurism.

The headquarters noted that the order has been issued “following the continued acts of aggression by the criminal United States and in view of the start of attacks by that country’s aggressive military against several areas in the southern province of Hormozgan.”

The Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC)’s Navy, also issued a separate statement, announcing that the force had struck two vessels trying to cross the waterway illegally.

Iran has shut down the strategic Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly one-fifth of global petroleum consumption passes, to aggressors and their allies since February 28, when the US and the Israeli regime began their latest bout of wholesale unprovoked attacks against the Islamic Republic.

The closure has driven up energy, fuel, and food prices across large parts of Asia, Europe, and the United States.

Iran began exercising stricter controls on the waterway after US President Donald Trump announced the launch of an illegal naval blockade of Iranian vessels and ports in spite of a ceasefire that Trump, himself, had declared on April 7.

Tehran has vowed not to reopen the Strait of Hormuz until the blockade is lifted and the war permanently ends.

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Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/06/11/770250/Iran-PGSA-Strait-of-Hormuz-Persian-Gulf-US-tension