Trump’s post ‘prohibiting’ Israeli strikes on Lebanon leaves Netanyahu ‘stunned, alarmed’

US President Donald Trump (R) and Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu was personally “stunned and alarmed” by a social media post by US President Donald Trump, in which the latter said the Israeli regime was “PROHIBITED” from attacking Lebanon, a report says.

American website Axios published the report on Friday, citing sources as saying that Israeli officials first saw the post in media reports rather than finding out about it through official channels.

In an interview, he reinforced his position, saying, “Israel has to stop. They can’t continue to blow buildings up. I am not gonna allow it.”

Trump had announced on Thursday that the regime and Lebanon had agreed to a 10-day ceasefire.

It followed the US president’s announcement of a two-weak lull in unprovoked aggression targeting Iran. Making the latter announcement, Trump said a 10-point ceasefire proposal forwarded by Iran was a “workable basis on which to negotiate and the main framework” for talks with the Islamic Republic. Among other things, the proposal has identified cessation of Israeli attacks on Lebanon as an indivisible part of termination of the cycle of unprovoked aggression and retaliatory strikes across the region.

Under the agreement with Lebanon, the Israeli regime is barred from carrying out offensive military operations against Lebanese targets, including civilian and state infrastructure.

The Israeli officials experiencing alarm at Trump’s post, including ambassador to Washington Yechiel Leiter, have sought clarification from the White House, moving quickly to determine whether US policy has shifted and raising “concerns” with the White House.

Trump’s announcements regarding the cessation of attacks on Iran and the ceasefire in Lebanon both followed scores of determined and successful retaliatory strikes staged by the Islamic Republic’s Armed Forces and regional resistance movements, including Hezbollah in Lebanon.

Some of the strikes would be carried out through coordination among the forces staging the reprisal.

[…]

The chance of a Türkiye-Israel war has never been more real

The chance of a Türkiye-Israel war has never been more real

By Murad Sadygzade

The latest wave of discussion about a possible Turkish-Israeli confrontation was triggered by media reports claiming Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan threatened to invade Israel.

Soon afterward, however, that interpretation was challenged in Türkiye. The specific quote turned out to be old and taken out of context, and Turkish voices insisted that Erdogan had made no direct statement about being prepared to launch a war against Israel. Still, he has undeniably been escalating his harsh rhetoric towards Israel, including calling it a terrorist state and comparing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to Hitler.

Yet even setting aside the dispute over the precise wording, the intensity of the reaction to the ‘invasion threat’ reports is revealing in itself. It shows that relations between Ankara and West Jerusalem have already reached a stage at which even an ambiguous phrase is instantly treated as a political signal, and any sharp comment can become part of the wider picture of a major regional confrontation. The ground for such a perception has long been prepared by the very trajectory of Turkish-Israeli relations.

A slide towards conflict

At first glance, this may appear to be no more than another burst of emotional rhetoric of the kind that has long been common in the Middle East, where dramatic threats and demonstrative statements have become part of the political language. But that explanation is too shallow and therefore misses the real point. What we are witnessing in fact reflects a much deeper and more dangerous process. Türkiye and Israel are gradually ceasing to see one another merely as occasional opponents divided by particular disputes, and are increasingly beginning to view each other as strategic rivals in a long game. That is what makes the current exchange of statements especially alarming. Once states enter a phase of systemic rivalry, rhetoric itself starts shaping how elites, societies, and security institutions imagine a future conflict as something almost natural.

In one sense, there is nothing surprising about this. The Middle East is structured in such a way that several ambitious centers of power can rarely coexist without an escalating competition between them. When multiple states claim exceptional status, the role of regional guarantor, or the right to speak for the region or at least for a large part of it, their interests will sooner or later collide. Türkiye and Israel are now moving ever more clearly toward precisely that point. Both states lay claim to a special mission. Both want to be indispensable to outside powers. Both believe that yielding to a rival today may become a historic defeat tomorrow. And both build their strategies not only around the defense of national interests but also around the idea of regional primacy. In such a context, even temporary tactical cooperation does not alter the deeper reality. Competition over space, influence, routes, alliances, and symbolic leadership continues to accumulate at a systemic level.

A history of partnership

It is particularly important to understand that Türkiye and Israel were by no means destined for hostility. On the contrary, for decades their relations developed along a very different trajectory. Ankara became the first Muslim-majority country to recognize Israel in the middle of the twentieth century. During the Cold War, the two maintained working ties grounded in pragmatism, shared links to the Western world, and an understanding that in an unstable regional environment it was better to have additional channels of interaction than to turn ideological differences into a permanent source of conflict. But the true flourishing of Turkish-Israeli cooperation came in the 1990s. That was when both sides began to see in the other an important element of their own security strategy.

In those years, Turkish-Israeli relations did indeed approach a near-strategic level. Military and intelligence cooperation was particularly close. For Türkiye, this meant access to technology, modernization, coordination on security matters, and the strengthening of its armed forces. For Israel, an alliance with a large Muslim country occupying a position of immense geographic importance carried both symbolic and practical value. It demonstrated that the Jewish state was capable of building durable ties in the region and moving beyond the usual boundaries of diplomatic isolation. Joint exercises, military contacts, defense agreements, technical modernization, intelligence exchanges, and political coordination all created the impression that a long-term axis was taking shape between the two states.

It is to that period that the story of Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) leader Abdullah Ocalan belongs, a story that still carries symbolic weight for understanding how Turkish-Israeli closeness was perceived both in Türkiye and across the region. What remains a confirmed fact is that Ocalan was captured by Turkish intelligence in Kenya in 1999. Yet almost immediately, a broader narrative took hold suggesting that Israeli intelligence may have assisted Türkiye in the operation. That theme became part of the half-shadowed political memory of the region. For some, it was evidence of the depth of the Turkish-Israeli partnership. For others, it became part of a wider myth that Israel, at critical moments, stood with the Turkish state in its struggle against the Kurdish movement. Even if one leaves aside the question of how accurate those perceptions were, the more important point remains. Such narratives could only take root because, in the 1990s, Turkish-Israeli cooperation appeared so close that many found it entirely plausible that Israel might have had a hand in some of Türkiye’s most sensitive operations.

And this is where one of the most striking ironies of modern Middle Eastern history lies. What once seemed like a durable strategic partnership gradually turned into a field of irritation, mutual suspicion, and then near-open rivalry. Erdogan’s rise to power did not produce an immediate rupture, but it steadily altered the ideological framework of the relationship. The new Turkish leadership viewed the region differently. It sought not merely to preserve ties to the Western security architecture, but to construct its own autonomous axis of influence, drawing upon the Islamic factor, a more active policy across former Ottoman spaces, and the projection of moral leadership on issues tied to the Muslim world. Within that model, Israel could no longer remain for Ankara simply a pragmatic partner. It increasingly became a convenient point of ideological contrast and at the same time an important target of foreign policy pressure.

Much more than just Palestine

The turning point in public perception came with the Mavi Marmara incident of 2010, when Israeli forces raided a flotilla of ships carrying aid to the blockaded Gaza, which Türkiye had helped to organize. During the attack, nine people were killed aboard the Turkish ship Mavi Marmara, most of them Turkish nationals. After that, relations deteriorated sharply, and mutual distrust moved far beyond the walls of diplomatic offices. It became part of mass political consciousness. For Turkish society, Israel increasingly appeared as a state acting from a position of force and disregarding moral restraints. For much of the Israeli establishment, Türkiye came to look like a former ally moving rapidly toward radicalization, using the Palestinian issue for its own rise, and shifting toward a more confrontational model of behavior. Later, both sides made efforts to normalize relations. There were apologies, negotiations, a return to formal diplomatic channels, and eventually the restoration of full relations. But that warming proved to be more of a pause than a lasting reversal. The war in Gaza shattered the relationship once again, and it became obvious that the old level of trust no longer existed.

The current tension cannot be reduced to the Palestinian issue alone, even though that remains the most powerful emotional accelerator of the conflict. In reality, Türkiye and Israel now diverge along several strategic lines at once. The first is linked to Syria. For Türkiye, the Syrian arena is directly connected to questions of national security, the Kurdish issue, refugees, border control, and its own capacity for projecting force. For Israel, Syria forms part of a much broader equation involving Iran, Hezbollah, weapons routes, and the danger of hostile military infrastructure taking shape near its borders. For the moment these interests overlap only in part, but the sheer density of the two states’ presence in the same theater is gradually increasing the risk not only of political friction but of operational military clashes as well.

The second line runs through the Eastern Mediterranean. Here the question is not only about energy and maritime boundaries, but about the very architecture of the region’s future order. Türkiye sees itself as a natural center of power in this space and reacts sharply to any configuration in which it is isolated or pushed aside. Israel, meanwhile, seeks to deepen ties with coalitions capable of constraining Turkish ambitions while at the same time expanding its own strategic room for maneuver. The more actively each side searches for an external support system, the more the other interprets that effort as a project of encirclement and exclusion.

The third line concerns the struggle for symbolic leadership. This is an especially important factor, although it is often underestimated. Israel proceeds from the assumption that it must preserve military and technological superiority, as well as political initiative in questions concerning regional security. Under Erdogan, Türkiye has become ever more insistent in claiming the role of a state that speaks for a broad Muslim audience, especially where Palestinians, Jerusalem, and resistance to Israeli policy are concerned. For Erdogan, this is part of a long-term project in which Türkiye is meant to appear not as a peripheral member of the Western world, but as an autonomous center of power combining military capability, historical memory, and civilizational ambition. From that perspective, confrontation with Israel brings Ankara not only risks but political dividends.

Yet for Israel as well, the current escalation is not devoid of internal logic. In a climate of chronic crisis, military tension, and deep social fractures, the image of an external enemy once again becomes an instrument of consolidation. For a government accustomed to thinking like a besieged fortress, an outside threat is a useful tool of political survival. After the conflict in Gaza, after tensions on the northern front, and against the background of constant confrontation with Iran, Türkiye may begin to be seen by part of the Israeli establishment as the next major systemic challenge. And it’s a challenge unlike any Israel has faced before: not an ideological enemy on the margins and not an ostracized rogue state, but a strong regional power with ambitions, an army, industry, demography, and a desire to reshape the regional balance in its own favor.

In that sense, the danger of Turkish-Israeli confrontation does not lie in the idea that the two countries stand today on the threshold of immediate war. What matters far more is that they are increasingly placing one another on their long-term maps of threat perception. Once that happens, political rhetoric begins to perform a preparatory function, accustoming society to the idea that a future clash is inevitable. It generates expert justifications for greater harshness. It legitimizes force buildups, new alliances, more aggressive moves in adjacent arenas, and a lower threshold of sensitivity to risk. At such moments, conflict may remain below the threshold of open war for a long time, but the underlying developments already start working in favor of its arrival.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/news/638595-israel-turkiye-war-real/

New Federal Bill Would Bring Age Verification to Every Operating System in America

Image: Deposit Photos
Image: Deposit Photos

C da Costa

Your laptop might soon demand proof of age before letting you browse freely. H.R. 8250, a federal bill winding through Congress, requires every operating system provider in America to verify user ages and expose that data through APIs. This isn’t limited to social media apps—we’re talking about the core software running your PC, smartphone, and smart home devices.

The bill mirrors California’s A.B. 1043, which passed unanimously and takes effect January 2027. Similar legislation is advancing in Colorado, Illinois, Louisiana, New York, Texas, and Utah. The pattern is clear: age-gating is coming to your desktop whether you like it or not.

Your Internet Gets the Training Wheels Treatment

Apps default to most restrictive settings when operating systems can’t provide age signals.

Here’s where things get dystopian. Under these laws, apps and websites query your OS for age bracket information. No signal? You get treated like a child regardless of your actual age. System76, a Linux manufacturer, warns that “Linux distributions that do not provide an age bracket signal will result in a nerfed internet.”

You are trying to access news sites, streaming services, or productivity tools only to hit content restrictions designed for elementary schoolers. Open-source operating systems—beloved by developers and privacy advocates—face impossible compliance burdens. Small Linux distributions can’t afford the infrastructure for age verification, potentially facing fines up to $7,500 per violation.

The Surveillance State Wears a Child Safety Mask

Critics argue the legislation enables government monitoring while failing to protect minors.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation argues these mandates strike at “the foundation of the free and open internet.” They’re not wrong. Creating government-mandated user tracking systems affects everyone, not just kids. Your age verification data becomes another point for potential surveillance abuse.

The cruel irony? This probably won’t protect children. Savvy teens already use virtual machines and fake birthdates to bypass restrictions. Meanwhile, legitimate users face privacy invasion and restricted access to information.

Your Computing Freedom Hangs in the Balance

Device fragmentation and compliance costs could reshape how Americans interact with technology.

If H.R. 8250 passes, expect your device costs to rise as manufacturers build compliance infrastructure. Operating systems might fragment between “verified” and “unverified” versions. The free, open internet that made modern computing possible gets replaced by walled gardens and government oversight.

This represents a fundamental shift from personal computing freedom to state-supervised digital experiences. Your choice: accept surveillance as the price of internet access, or watch your devices become increasingly hobbled by regulations disguised as child protection.

Trump thanks Iran for opening Strait of Hormuz as oil prices in freefall

Trump follows through on 14-year history opposing Iranian nukes | Fox News
RT
Published 17 Apr, 2026 13:45 | Updated 17 Apr, 2026 17:21
The US president vowed, however, to continue to blockade Iranian ports

Iran has announced that it will allow passage for “all commercial vessels” through the strategic Strait of Hormuz following the declaration of a 10-day Israel-Lebanon ceasefire. However, US President Donald Trump has vowed to maintain his blockade of Iranian ports.

The announcement was made by Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi, who said that the strait is “completely open” for the remaining period of the truce on the route approved by the Iranian authorities. The statement marks a significant shift from Iran’s previous stance, when Tehran prohibited passage for any US or Israeli ship.

The 10-day ceasefire entered into force on Friday following several weeks of fighting between Israel and Hezbollah, which claimed more than 2,000 lives in Lebanon.

Here are the latest developments:

• Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said the Strait of Hormuz is “completely open” to commercial vessels for the remainder of the ceasefire, which is due to expire on Tuesday

• Trump thanked Tehran and said the strait is “open and ready for business,” but added that the US naval blockade on Iran “remains in full force” until a deal is “100% complete”

• Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) warned the US and Israel they will face a “regret-inducing” response if attacks continue

• A ten-day Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire came into force on Friday, with Trump insisting the group is part of the US-Iran ceasefire deal

• At least 2,196 people have been killed and 1.2 million displaced in Lebanon amid Israeli airstrikes and evacuation orders to expand a “security zone”

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/news/638566-trump-thanks-iran-hormuz/

Tehran announces complete reopening of Hormuz strait for duration of ceasefire in Lebanon

Iran declares Hormuz ‘completely open’ to all commercial vessels

RT

April 17, 2026

Passage for all commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz is now completely open, Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi declared on Friday. He added that the waterway will remain open for the remainder of the ceasefire in Lebanon.

Araghchi’s announcement came shortly after a 10-day truce came into force between the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and the Hezbollah militant group in Lebanon, which has been one of the major obstacles to a peace deal between Iran and the US.

Writing on X, the Iranian minister stated that “in line with the ceasefire in Lebanon, the passage for all commercial vessels through Strait of Hormuz is declared completely open for the remaining period of ceasefire.”

He noted however, that the vessels would be allowed to move along the “coordinated route as already announced by Ports and Maritime Organisation of the Islamic Rep. of Iran,” suggesting that the strait will remain under Tehran’s control.

US President Donald Trump has responded to Araghchi’s announcement on his Truth Social account, appearing to thank Tehran for fully reopening the “strait of Iran.”

The Strait of Hormuz has been shut down ever since the US and Israel launched an unprovoked attack on Iran in late February. The closure has driven up energy prices and rattled the global economy, disrupting one of the world’s most important trade arteries, which handles around 20% of global crude exports.

In the minutes following Araghchi’s announcement, oil prices plummeted by more than 10%, with Crude oil dropping to just over $83 per barrel and Brent coming in at around $88.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/news/638564-iran-opens-hormuz-strait/

A last-gasp bluff: Trump’s ‘naval blockade’ threat proves US strategic defeat in West Asia

By Mohammad Molaei

US President Donald Trump’s threat to impose a complete “naval blockade” on Iranian ports and control of the Strait of Hormuz is not a strategic military move, but the final attempt of a dying Empire to reformulate the equations of a war it has already lost.

The threat, issued after the collapse of ceasefire talks in Pakistan, is in line with the US military might at face value, but in reality has no long-term operational support, rational economic foundation, or international backing.

By doing this, the United States will not only be unable to deter Iran but will also severely harm its own strategic ties with other countries, as it will further deteriorate the global energy crisis, push inflation and even cripple its own supply chains.

In military terms, Trump’s threat of a naval blockade is completely detached from modern asymmetric warfare. Despite the Fifth Fleet of the US in Bahrain having the most modern Arleigh Burke-class destroyers and Aegis systems, it is completely susceptible to the hybrid war of Iran and regional resistance allies.

The implementation of such a blockade, according to military experts like James Stavridis, the former NATO commander, would necessitate at least two groups of carrier strike, over a dozen destroyers and frigates not within the Persian Gulf, and at least six more warships, as well as the support of the naval forces of the UAE and Saudi Arabia within the Persian Gulf.

Even this number of forces would not allow a standing blockade in case of a new round of war due to saturation missiles, drone attacks and unmanned boat attacks.

Moreover, the American fleet has not dared to come closer to the Iranian coasts since the start of the Ramadan War until now, not to come within the range of the Iranian ballistic anti-ship and supersonic cruise missiles, which comprise the major and most advanced weapons in the Iranian arsenal in terms of anti-ship weapons.

As the experience of the so-called 2023-2024 “Operation Prosperity Guardian” in Yemen demonstrated, despite the large presence of the American and coalition fleet, the Yemeni military managed to decrease Red Sea traffic by up to 70 percent.

Iran, also, with its vast web of anti-ship cruise missiles, long-range suicide drones and massive mining capacity, can make any American warship or naval force a target without necessarily engaging them.

Even the Pentagon itself has verified in its secret evaluations that the expense of such a blockade, considering the fuel use and crew burnout, and the logistical fragility, would soon become unsustainable.

Thus, the threat of Trump becomes more of a psychological and propaganda weapon than an operational one. It is a weapon of diplomatic pressure that will backfire on the battlefield. Just as it did not achieve its goals in the Ramadan War, the naval blockade will also prove futile.

The financial aspects of this embargo are much more devastating than was first thought. IEA and EIA projections suggest that the Bab al-Mandab Strait alone would be transporting about 4.2 million barrels of crude oil and petroleum products per day in the first half of 2026, or about 5 to 6 percent of the global seaborne oil trade.

However, its effects are much stronger than energy: in a typical state of affairs, this strait has to carry up to 14 percent of the world’s seaborne traffic, 30 percent of container transportation, and a considerable part of LNG traffic.

Any further build-up of tension or mutual blockade will instantly send oil prices skyrocketing to amounts never before witnessed and exacerbate world inflation. The experience with the Yemeni attacks of the past indicates that even a reduction of 50 to 60 percent in traffic resulted in a rise in the rates of container shipping on the Asia-Europe routes by 200 to 300 percent, an increase in war-risk insurance rates, and a rise in fuel costs and the voyage duration by another 10 to 14 days.

In this scenario, it will not be able to weaken Iran, which has become resilient with diversification of its export channels and reliance on alternative currencies, but will take the economies of Europe, Asia and even the United States itself, which is a significant importer of energy, as its hostages.

Reportedly, Egypt, the Suez Canal revenues of which have already dropped by 40 to 60 percent in recent years due to similar disruptions, will be one of the largest losers of this policy, according to the reports issued by the World Bank and the Suez Canal Authority.

But why has the United States already thrown away this war? The solution is strategic calculations in the long term. Having exhausted all the effective methods of enforcing its will with years of maximum-pressure policy, unilateral sanctions, and proxy wars, Washington is now left with no effective instrument to enforce its will, and the economy of Iran, now accustomed to the economic siege that has been maintained until today, will not be substantially impacted by a naval blockade.

The asymmetric deterrence of Iran and the Axis of Resistance, based on low-cost but highly effective technologies such as suicide drones, ballistic anti-ship missiles, and integrated intelligence networks, has made every direct action an outrageously costly undertaking.

Think tanks like CSIS and the Atlantic Council have made analytical reports that, despite an ideal scenario in the United States, there is a massive consumption of resources in implementing a blockade, which cannot be offered by the current American fleet considering their global commitments in the Pacific as well as other locations.

Additionally, any actual blockade is accompanied by a threat of a chain reaction: an increase in energy prices, the breakage of food and medicine supply chains, and home protests in Western nations that are already struggling with inflation and recession.

It is the structural weakness in American foreign policy that Trump has only revealed: failure to come to terms with the new reality of West Asia, in which it is no longer the backyard of Washington, but a sphere in which Iran gains dominance with the help of asymmetric weapons.

Next, what will occur if Yemen, in response to the blockade or any other irresponsible act by the Americans, shuts the Bab al-Mandab Strait?

This is not a situation that would hardly be avoided; indeed, it is quite well congruent with the deterrence concept of the Axis of Resistance. The Bab al-Mandab Strait, just 18 miles wide, is the southern entrance of the Red Sea and the Suez Canal and during good times, thousands of ships sailed through it each day.

According to statistics of Lloyds List and IMF PortWatch, during normal times, monthly passage via this strait was as high as 1,200 vessels, and the volume of cargo was 1.6 billion tons per year.

With its demonstrated capabilities to strike, such as ballistic, cruise anti-ship missiles, suicide drones, explosive unmanned boats and smart mining capabilities, Yemeni military has precisely the same equipment that in the last two years allowed it to cut down Red Sea traffic by up to 70 percent, make ship insurance rates 0.7 to 1 percent of cargo value and add to the cost of shipping a container between Shanghai and Rotterdam by Complete closure, or even a solemn threat of complete closure, of the strait, would be accomplished in a few days; but mine- clearance and security operations, in months.

In the case of the simultaneous Strait of Hormuz blockade (or an attempt to blockade) by the Americans and the Bab al-Mandab blockade by Yemen, nearly 10 to 14 percent of all seaborne trade, 5 to 6 percent of all seaborne oil trade, and almost a third of all container traffic, more than under normal conditions, will be immobilized.

Oil prices will be higher than they have ever been, the European and Asian supply chains will be impacted, revenues at the Suez Canal, which is critical to the country, and costs billions of dollars a year will hit zero, and world food and energy inflation will be out of control.

The American fleet will not be able to stay on two fronts apart and protect them at the same time. Experience has revealed that even combined American and coalition attacks in the Red Sea failed to prevent the attacks of the Yemeni military.

Now that there is not even a coalition, and that America’s allies and Western bloc nations like Spain and Italy are leaning in the direction of China, this will be much more with their outright backing of the Axis of Resistance.

This is just the asymmetric economic war the Axis of Resistance has long been imposing on hostile powers, asymmetrically organizing unbearable costs to the opposing side without inciting outright war of attrition.

Hence, Trump will not alter the dynamics of the war by introducing the challenge of the naval blockade but will bring it to a new level to benefit Iran and the Axis of Resistance.

The geographic impossibility of attacking the Persian Gulf and the Red Sea, the indisputable superiority of asymmetric warfare and the resolute will of the forces put in countermeasure will turn any American deception to failure.

In case the US is, in fact, interested in ending tensions, it needs to abandon the language of threats and come to terms with the new reality: the vital straits of the world have ceased to be instruments of Western domination.

Any attempt to challenge this fact will only add to the global crisis and eventually lead to the widespread acknowledgment that America has suffered a decisive strategic defeat.

[…]

Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/04/16/766975/last-gasp-bluff-trump-naval-blockade-threat-proves-us-strategic-defeat-west-asia

Pentagon taps US carmakers for weapons production

Pentagon taps US carmakers for weapons production – WSJ

RT

The Pentagon has approached major US car manufacturers General Motors and Ford about producing weapons and military equipment, the Wall Street Journal has reported, citing sources.

General Motors already supplies military vehicles to the Pentagon through its GM Defense unit, while Ford has no major military contracts.

The discussions reportedly involved senior executives and focused on whether – and how quickly – civilian factories could be redirected toward producing munitions and other military supplies, as Washington seeks to replenish stockpiles depleted by the Ukraine conflict and the war on Iran, the outlet wrote on Wednesday.

GE Aerospace and vehicle and machinery maker Oshkosh were also involved in the talks, which began before the US-Israeli war against Iran started on February 28, it added.

Officials have cast the push as a move to put industry on a “wartime footing,” the outlet noted, invoking World War II-era mobilization, when Detroit automakers halted car output to produce bombers, aircraft engines and trucks.

The war against Iran has significantly strained US weapons stockpiles. The American military has launched more than 850 Tomahawk cruise missiles during the first four weeks of the campaign. The rate has prompted alarm among some Pentagon officials, the Washington Post reported last month. While the US Department of War does not disclose the exact number of Tomahawks it has, analysis suggests that before Operation Epic Fury, the US Navy had between 4,000 and 4,500 such missiles.

US President Donald Trump has requested a record-breaking military budget of around $1.5 trillion for the 2027 fiscal year, up from nearly $1 trillion this year, according to the administration’s budget outline. The proposal includes more than $1.1 trillion in base defense funding alongside additional allocations tied to ongoing military operations.

The war in Iran is costing the US government roughly $2 billion a day, according to former congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Green.
[…]

Displaced Lebanon Residents Return to Homes as Ceasefire Goes Into Effect

Two people on a motorbike ride past rubble.

A family rides past destruction in following the beginning of a ceasefire in Dahiyeh, greater Beirut. Source: AAP / Sally Hayden / SOPA Images/Sipa USA

SBS

A ceasefire between Israel and Lebanese armed group Hezbollah in Lebanon appears to be holding under a deal brokered by the United States and France, as people in both countries began returning to homes in the border area shattered by 14 months of fighting.

The agreement, a rare diplomatic feat in a region racked by conflict for months, ended the deadliest confrontation between Israel and the Iran-backed militant group in years. But Israel is still fighting the Palestinian militant group Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

Cars and vans piled high with mattresses, suitcases and even furniture streamed through the heavily bombed Lebanese port city of Tyre heading south, carrying some of the roughly 1.4 million people believed to have been uprooted by the conflict.

In the first statement by Hezbollah’s operations centre since the truce was announced, the group made no direct mention of the ceasefire and vowed to continue its resistance.

Hezbollah said its fighters “remain fully equipped to deal with the aspirations and assaults of the Israeli enemy.” Its forces will monitor Israel’s withdrawal from Lebanon “with their hands on the trigger”.

The ceasefire aims to end a conflict across the Israeli-Lebanese border that has killed at least 3,768 people in Lebanon since it was ignited by the war in Gaza last year, according to the Lebanese health ministry.

‘First ray of hope’

United Nations secretary-general Antonio Guterres said the ceasefire was “the first ray of hope” in months of Middle East conflict.

Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araqchi said Iran welcomed the truce and hoped it would be permanent.

In Lebanon, some cars flew national flags and others honked horns as people started to return to homes they had fled.

Israel has said its military aim in Lebanon was to ensure the safe return of about 60,000 Israelis who fled communities along the northern border when Hezbollah started firing rockets at them in support of Hamas in Gaza in October 2023.

Lebanon’s army, entrusted with ensuring the ceasefire lasts, said it had begun deploying additional troops south of the Litani River into a region heavily bombarded by Israel. The river meets the sea about 30km north of the Israeli border.

Israel also struck eastern cities and towns and the southern suburbs of Beirut, and Israeli troops pushed around 6km into Lebanon in ground incursions launched in September.

What are the terms of the ceasfire?

Under the ceasefire terms, Israeli forces can remain in Lebanon for 60 days and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he had instructed the military not to allow residents back to villages near the border, after four Hezbollah operatives were detained in the area.

The Lebanese army urged returning residents not to approach areas where Israeli forces were present for their own safety.

Israeli chief of the general staff Herzi Halevi said Israel’s enforcement of the ceasefire would be very determined.

“Hezbollah operatives who approach our troops, the border area, and the villages within the area we have marked will be struck … we are preparing, getting ready for the possibility that this (ceasefire) approach won’t succeed,” he said.

The US says it is pushing for a ceasefire in Gaza

Diplomatic efforts will now turn to shattered Gaza, where Israel has vowed to destroy Hamas, which led the October 7 attacks on Israeli communities. However, there were no hopes of peace returning any time soon to the Palestinian enclave.

Announcing the ceasefire, US President Joe Biden spoke at the White House shortly after Israel’s security cabinet approved the agreement in a 10-1 vote.

“This is designed to be a permanent cessation of hostilities,” Biden said. “What is left of Hezbollah and other terrorist organisations will not be allowed to threaten the security of Israel again.”

Australia and the US are among nations that regard Hezbollah as a terrorist organisation. Others, including the European Union, list only its military wing as a terrorist organisation.

However, Hezbollah itself makes no distinction between its political and military wings.

Biden said his administration was also pushing for an elusive ceasefire in Gaza.

Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhri told Reuters that the group “appreciates” Lebanon’s right to reach an agreement which protects its people, and hopes for a deal to end the Gaza war.

But many Gaza residents said they felt abandoned.

“We hope that all Arab and Western countries, and all people with merciful hearts and consciences … implement a truce here because we are tired,” said displaced Gazan Malak Abu Laila.

[…]

Via https://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/ceasefire-in-lebanon-appears-to-hold-as-some-residents-warned-not-yet-to-return/lhk5tmcvv

Fertilizer Now Too Expensive for Vast Majority of Growers

Featured image

NewsWatchmen.com
April 16, 2026

America’s food supply chain is flashing another warning sign. A new nationwide survey from the American Farm Bureau Federation found that 70% of U.S. farmers say they cannot afford all the fertilizer they need this year, raising fears of lower crop yields, tighter food supplies, and even higher grocery prices ahead. More than 5,700 farmers…

A new nationwide survey from the American Farm Bureau Federation found that 70% of U.S. farmers say they cannot afford all the fertilizer they need this year, raising fears of lower crop yields, tighter food supplies, and even higher grocery prices ahead.

More than 5,700 farmers from all 50 states and Puerto Rico responded to the survey, painting a grim picture of rising costs, shrinking margins, and growing uncertainty across the farm economy.

If farmers cannot afford the nutrients needed to grow crops, consumers may soon feel the impact at the checkout counter.

70% of Farmers Say They Can’t Buy What They Need

The survey found fertilizer affordability has become a national crisis

Regional breakdowns were especially alarming:

  • South: 78% cannot afford needed fertilizer
  • Northeast: 69%
  • West: 66%
  • Midwest: 48%

80% of rice, cotton, and peanut farmers reporting they cannot afford all required fertilizer this season.

That means many growers may cut applications, reduce planted acreage, or accept lower yields.

Why Fertilizer Prices Are Exploding

Farm groups point to a combination of global disruptions and domestic pressures:

  • Middle East conflict affecting energy markets
  • Strait of Hormuz shipping instability
  • Higher diesel fuel costs
  • Natural gas spikes used in nitrogen fertilizer production
  • Port surcharges and transport costs
  • Years of already thin farm profit margins

Since late February, urea prices reportedly surged 47%, while nitrogen fertilizer rose more than 30%.

Farm diesel prices also jumped sharply, creating a double blow for producers.

Why This Matters to Every American

Fertilizer is not optional for modern agriculture.

When farmers use less fertilizer:

  • Crop yields often fall
  • Feed supplies tighten
  • Food inflation rises
  • Livestock costs increase
  • Imports may become more necessary

In short: if farmers grow less, families pay more.

Farmers Already in Crisis

Many producers were already struggling before this year’s fertilizer spike.

Across rural America, farmers have faced:

  • Rising debt loads
  • Bankruptcies
  • Equipment costs
  • Labor shortages
  • Weather volatility
  • Tariff uncertainty

Now input costs may be the breaking point.

One farm leader warned that farmers remain “at the bottom of the food chain” when it comes to profitability.

Long-Term Warning Through 2028?

Some analysts now believe fertilizer markets may stay elevated well beyond this season.

Damage to regional production hubs, shipping disruptions, and unstable global energy markets could keep prices high into 2027 or 2028 depending on geopolitical developments.

That means this may not be a short-term squeeze—it could be the start of a prolonged agricultural shock.

Related Reading: News Watchmen also covered growing concerns over food security, inflation, and supply chain vulnerability in America.

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Final Thoughts

The message from America’s farmers is clear: fertilizer costs are becoming unsustainable.

If 70% of growers cannot afford what they need, this issue will not stay on the farm. It will move to grocery stores, family budgets, and national food security.

When those who feed the nation are squeezed, everyone eventually feels it.

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Via https://newswatchmen.com/2026/04/16/fertilizer-now-too-expensive-for-vast-majority-of-growers/

Iranian launchers ready to sink all US warships

A member of Iran’s Expediency Discernment Council Mohsen Rezaei

Press TV

A military advisor to the Islamic Revolution Leader says Iranian Armed Forces’ launchers are ready to hit American warships and sink all of them.

Speaking in a televised interview on Wednesday, Mohsen Rezaei, who is also a member of Iran’s Expediency Discernment Council and a former commander of the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC), stressed the need to exert more pressure on the enemies.

“Pressure must increase. Our launchers are now locked on the warships, and we will sink them all,” he said.

Pointing to the US efforts to impose a naval blockade on Iran, he added that the plan would definitely fail.

“Just as the United States suffered a historic defeat in trying to open the Strait of Hormuz, it is also doomed to fail in the naval blockade,” Rezaei emphasized.

He said the Iranian Armed Forces would never allow the US to achieve any success in proceeding with its naval blockade and are in possession of “major untapped leverage” to counter it.

The senior Iranian official reiterated that the Americans have no plan to end the war they jointly waged with the Israeli regime against the Islamic Republic late in February.

“In their latest plan, they (Americans) intended to deploy paratroopers in [the Iranian city of Isfahan] and seize our uranium to fabricate an achievement for themselves,” he added.

Iran imposed restrictions on the passage of vessels in the Strait following the illegal US-Israeli war of aggression on February 28.

The administration of Donald Trump said over the weekend it would impose a blockade on Iranian ports in the Persian Gulf and Sea of Oman. The US military claimed the blockade took effect on Monday.

In a post on his Truth Social on Sunday, Trump said the US Navy “will begin the process of blockading any and all ships trying to enter, or leave, the Strait of Hormuz.”

The IRGC warned that any military vessels approaching the Strait of Hormuz would breach a fragile two-week ceasefire reached between Iran and the US to halt 40 days of intense fighting which took effect last week. Iran’s central military command also warned of a broader regional response if Iranian ports come under attack.

On Wednesday, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi warned about the “dangerous consequences” of provocative US positions and actions targeting the Persian Gulf and the strategic Strait of Hormuz.

Ceasefire extension not in Iran’s interests

Elsewhere in his interview, Rezaei said he believes that extending the ceasefire is not in Iran’s interest.

“Only when all agreements and our rights are fulfilled and a resolution is submitted to the UN Security Council, a ceasefire will be meaningful,” he added.

The official cited the “moral and humanitarian” considerations toward other nations as among the reasons that Iran has agreed to a temporary ceasefire.

Pointing to the possibility of holding another round of talks with the US, he stressed the need for “precision” to be observed in details of any negotiations in the future.

“We must be sensitive to every single word,” Rezaei said.

He concluded with two predictions, saying either the US would stop and accept Iran’s ten conditions which he said was unlikely or it will press ahead with its desperate efforts to win the war.

Despite approximately 21 hours of negotiations and diplomatic efforts by high-ranking Iranian and American negotiators in the Pakistani capital of Islamabad over the weekend, the US excessive demands prevented reaching an agreement.

The Iranian delegation, headed by Parliament Speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, presented various initiatives during the talks, but the Americans obstructed progress in the talks.

[…]

Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/04/16/766964/Iranian-launchers-ready-to-sink-all-US-warships–Ex-IRGC-chief