Thursday, March 12, 2026

New Iranian Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei sends written message, no proof of life shown - Shir Perets

 

by Shir Perets

In his message, Khamenei stated that the Strait of Hormuz must remain closed, and if necessary, other fronts will be opened.

 

Iran’s new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, the second son of late Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, attends a meeting in Tehran, Iran, March 2, 2016.
Iran’s new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, the second son of late Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, attends a meeting in Tehran, Iran, March 2, 2016.
(photo credit: Rouhollah Vahdati/ISNA/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via REUTERS )

A Thursday message attributed to Iran's new Supreme Leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, was read out by a newscaster on Iranian state television while a photo of the supreme leader was shown. There have not been any signs of life from Khamenei since his appointment.

In the statement, Khamenei wrote that the Strait of Hormuz must remain closed, and if necessary, other fronts will be opened.

"The will of the masses is to continue the effective and regrettable defense," Khamenei's statement read.

"Also, the lever of blocking the Strait of Hormuz must definitely continue to be used. Studies have been conducted on opening other fronts where the enemy has little experience and will be extremely vulnerable in them, and their activation will be carried out if the war situation continues and based on the observance of interests."

He was quoted as thanking Yemen's Houthis and Hezbollah in Lebanon for their "defending the oppressed people of Gaza," and "coming to the aid of the Islamic Republic despite all obstacles," as well as the Iraqi resistance for their "courage."

Commander of the IRGC Navy Alireza Tangsiri wrote that the IRGC "will deliver the most severe blows to the aggressor enemy," by keeping the Strait of Hormuz closed on his X/Twitter.

Attacks in the Strait of Hormuz and around Iran cause rising oil prices 

Oil prices hit nearly $100 a barrel on Thursday as ships in the region of Iran came under attack. A container ship owned by Germany's Hapag-Lloyd and chartered to Denmark's AP Moller-Maersk became the seventh ship to be hit in the region in the past day, and is one of the at least 19 ships that have been hit or damaged in the Persian Gulf since the beginning of the war, the Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday.

In its latest monthly oil market report, the International Energy Agency (IEA) announced that global supply is expected to drop by 8 million barrels per day in March, equal to almost 8% of global demand, due to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

Middle East Gulf countries, including Iraq, Qatar, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, and Saudi Arabia, have cut total oil production by at least 10 million barrels per day as a result of the conflict, the IEA said, adding that without a rapid restart of shipping flows, these losses were set to increase.

"Shut-in upstream production will take weeks and, in some cases, months to return to pre-crisis levels depending on the degree of field complexity and the timing for workers, equipment, and resources to return to the region," the agency said.

Continuing strikes against US bases in Gulf states

In the statement, Khamenei reaffirmed that Iran will continue to attack the US bases located within the Gulf, adding that these countries had been "explicitly warned" that such attacks would occur.

"From now on, we will inevitably continue to do so, although we still believe in the need for friendship between ourselves and our neighbors. These countries must make their duty clear to the invaders of our beloved homeland and the murderers of our people. I recommend that they close those bases as soon as possible, because they must have realized by now that the claim of establishing security and peace by America was nothing more than a lie," the statement read. 


Shir Perets

Source: https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/iran-news/article-889759

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Trump says Iran was linked to the USS Cole attack: a federal judge also ruled Iran was complicit - Jerry Dunleavy

 

by Jerry Dunleavy

Trump highlights a lesser-remembered but deadly pre-9/11 al-Qaeda terrorist attack in making his case against the Iranian regime. Federal courts appear to agree with him on the facts.

 

President Donald Trump has repeatedly argued that the Iranian regime bears some responsibility for the terrorist suicide bombing of the USS Cole in 2000. The president has gotten pushback from some in the press, but a federal judge has repeatedly agreed with him.

In an oft-forgotten terror attack, al-Qaeda terrorists bombed the U.S. Navy guided-missile destroyer USS Cole in October 2000 — less than a year before 9/11 — killing 17 U.S. sailors and wounding dozens more. Abd al Rahim Hussayn Muhammad al Nashiri was a top associate of Osama bin Laden and the alleged mastermind of the attack against the U.S. naval ship parked in the waters off the Yemeni coast, and this summer he will likely face a military trial at Guantánamo Bay for his role in the bombing.

Trump has repeatedly cited the attack in recent days as part of the U.S. justification for strikes against Iran — saying the Iranian regime had likely been aware of and involved in the plot — although multiple journalists contend this is not true.

But in lawsuits brought in U.S. federal court by victims and family members of the terrorist bombing in the Gulf of Aden more than two and a half decades ago, an Obama-appointed judge has repeatedly held the Iranian regime at least partly responsible for the suicide attack, due to the extensive assistance Iran had provided to al-Qaeda in the 1990s.

Trump counts Cole bombing as part of Iran’s 47 years of terror

“For 47 years, the Iranian regime has chanted "Death to America" and waged an unending campaign of bloodshed and mass murder, targeting the United States, our troops, and the innocent people in many, many countries,” Trump said in his Feb. 28 video on Truth Social announcing the commencement of U.S. strikes against the Iranian regime and its military. He added: "In 2000, they knew and were probably involved with the attack on the USS Cole. Many died."

Trump doubled down on this in remarks to the press on Monday. “They [the Iranians] have been doing this for 47 years — killing people for 47 years,” the president said. “The USS Cole, where they were involved — very strongly. They always denied it, but they were very strongly involved."

This brought pushback from some members of the media. “Trump repeated his claim that Iran ‘was involved very strongly’ in the USS Cole bombing in 2000. "However [...] the U.S. long ago determined al-Qaeda was responsible for the attack, and has actually held the accused mastermind at Guantánamo for 24 years,” Abigail Hauslohner, the U.S. foreign affairs correspondent for the Financial Timestweeted Monday.

Andrew Feinberg, the White House correspondent for The Independenttweeted Monday that “@realDonaldTrump appears to blame Iran for the 2000 attack on USS Cole, which was found to have been carried out by al-Qaeda.”

Links between al-Qaeda, Hezbollah, and the Iranian regime

Last week, New York Times reporter Carol Rosenberg had also suggested that Trump was “conjuring up an Iran connection.”

Despite the differences, the Iranian regime has a long history — both before and after 9/11 — of collaborating with al-Qaeda. The DOJ and U.S. investigators have pointed to links between al-Qaeda, Hezbollah, and the Iranian regime during the pre-9/11 era, and the State Department and other agencies have repeatedly lamented over many years that Iran has continued to shield al-Qaeda operatives inside their country after 9/11.

Federal courts in the U.S. have also concluded that Iran used al-Qaeda as a tool against the U.S. before 9/11 and later assisted the terrorist group and the Taliban in their successful efforts to evict the U.S. from Afghanistan.

Regarding the attack on the USS Cole, Judge Rudolph Contreras — appointed by then-President Barack Obama to the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia in 2012 — has ruled at least three times that the Iranian regime had “complicity” in the deadly al-Qaeda bombing which killed and injured scores of American sailors.

Just the News reported late last month, as war between the United States and Iran loomed, that the Shiite theocratic Iranian regime continued to shield one of the leaders of the Sunni jihadist terrorist group responsible for the 9/11 attacks, with the FBI's "Most Wanted" Saif al-Adel running the global terror network under Tehran's protection.

Judge says Iranian regime had “complicity” in al-Qaeda’s bombing of the Cole

Judge Contreras detailed the close pre-9/11 relationship between al-Qaeda and the Iranian regime in a 2015 lawsuit ruling.

“In the 1990s, al-Qaeda was able to deepen relationships with Iranian officials and Hezbollah. Al-Qaeda also used Iran as a ‘transit point’ for moving money and fighters,” the judge wrote. “In the years leading up to the Cole bombing, Iran was directly involved in establishing al-Qaeda’s Yemen network and supported training and logistics for al-Qaeda in the Gulf region. Throughout, Iran used Lebanese Hezbollah, long-trusted yet easily distanced in public, as its primary ‘facilitator’ for providing training and communications support.”

The judge added that “at the time of the bombing of the Cole, the links between the Iranian defendants and Bin Laden and al-Qaeda were firmly established: Iran was actively tied to al-Qaeda in the years when the attack on USS Cole was being planned and when it was executed.”

“Initial reports indicated the bomb used for the USS Cole attack bears similarities to shaped bombs designed by Hizballah, and it is possible that al-Qaeda learned such techniques when training in Lebanon in the early 1990s,” the judge assessed. Contreras also found that “Iran supported al-Qaeda as an organization and made it stronger overall, and this made al-Qaeda better able to carry out terrorist attacks such as the USS Cole bombing” as he argued that “this support is not consistent or unqualified, but over the years it has helped make al-Qaeda a formidable organization.”

The judge went on to rule that the Iranian regime was indeed complicit in the al-Qaeda attack in 2000.

“In light of the evidence of the Iranian … defendants’ conspiracy to support the terrorist activities of al-Qaeda, which ultimately executed the Cole bombing, joint and several liability for all damages is appropriate,” Contreras ruled. The Obama appointee added: “As a result of Iran’s complicity, it is likely that Abd Rahim Hussayn Muhammad al Nashiri, one of the masterminds of the attack on the Cole, traveled through Iran when moving between Yemen and Afghanistan both before and after the bombing.”

Contreras reached much the same conclusion when he ruled against the Iranian regime in 2023 in favor of the USS Cole's bombing victims' families.

“Plaintiffs have established that Iran intended to injure the sailors aboard the Cole when it provided material support and resources to Bin Laden and al-Qaeda,” the judge said. “Thus, Plaintiffs have carried their burden to show that the consequences of Iran’s act were reasonably certain, and the sole question for this Court is the damages amount.” Contreras again ruled against Iran in 2024.

“The Court concludes that Plaintiffs have established Iran’s liability,” the judge found. “The Court agrees with its finding that satisfactory evidence establishes that Iran’s provision of financial, training, and travel support to Bin Laden and al-Qaeda facilitated the planning and execution of the attack on the Cole.”

Nashiri’s defense lawyer denies that her client has been to Iran

Allison Miller, Nashiri's defense lawyer, told The New York Times last week that her terrorist client had “no ties to Iran, nor ever visited Iran.” The outlet said that Miller had said that “any link he might have had to Iran has never come up in more than a decade of pretrial hearings or in hundreds of thousands of pages of evidence that prosecutors have turned over to Mr. Nashiri’s defense team.”

It was also reported that “his lawyers, who are paid by the Pentagon to defend him, formally asked prosecutors this week to disclose any U.S. intelligence supporting the president’s assertion.” The outlet said the defense lawyers argued that “prosecutors have offered up no evidence supporting a link that the president claimed between Iran and the attack in Yemen in 2000.”

Nashiri’s lawyer did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Just the News. Nashiri’s lawyers reportedly presented the chief prosecutor with an offer in 2024 for their client to plead guilty in exchange for avoiding the death penalty.

The Department of War confirmed on Tuesday that Nashiri’s trial is slated to begin at the start of June.

The case against Nashiri

The charging sheet against Nashiri, issued by the Office of Military Commissions in 2011, lays out the host of crimes that the Saudi-born al-Qaeda operative is accused of, including using treachery or perfidy, murder in violation of the law of war, attempted murder in violation of the law of war, terrorism, conspiracy, intentionally causing serious bodily injury, attacking civilians, attacking civilian objects, and hijacking or hazarding a vessel or aircraft.

The waterborne suicide attack by al-Qaeda proved a morbid warning of the terror group’s potency less than a year before it hijacked planes and killed nearly 3,000 people on Sept. 11, 2001. The suspected mastermind, Saudi-born Nashiri, is being held in Guantánamo Bay and still hasn’t been tried for his role.

The FBI page on the “USS Cole Bombing” says that “two suicide pilots of a small bomb-laden boat pulled alongside the USS Cole at midship, offered friendly gestures to several crew members, and detonated their explosives” on Oct. 12, 2000.

“The blast ripped a 40-foot-wide hole near the waterline of the Cole, killing 17 U.S. sailors and injuring nearly 40 other crew members,” the FBI said. “The extensive FBI investigation ultimately determined that members of the al Qaeda terrorist network planned and carried out the bombing.”

The bureau added: “The investigation also revealed that the USS Cole bombing followed an unsuccessful attempt on January 3, 2000, to bomb another U.S. Navy ship, the USS The Sullivans. In this earlier incident, the terrorist boat sank before the explosives could be detonated. However, the boat and the explosives were salvaged. The boat was then refitted, and the explosives were tested and reused in the USS Cole attack.”

9/11 trial remains stalled out

The Guantánamo Docket, a project of The New York Timesstates that an estimated 15 detainees — including Nashiri as well as the alleged mastermind of 9/11 — remain at Gitmo out of the roughly 780 suspected terrorists who passed through the island detention center since 2002.

The Guantánamo Project says that, of the 15 remaining terrorists, nine have been charged with war crimes, with two convicted and seven yet to be put on trial, while three detainees are held in “indefinite law-of-war detention” and another three are held in “law-of-war detention but have been recommended for transfer with security arrangements to another country.”

In the nearly two and a half decades since 19 al-Qaeda terrorists crashed hijacked planes into the World Trade Center buildings, the Pentagon, and a field near Shanksville in Pennsylvania, killing nearly 3,000 people, the five men believed to be responsible for the planning and execution of the plot have yet to stand trial. The key question of whether confessions obtained by the FBI after their CIA custody should be admissible remains unresolved.

The defense teams are seeking to throw out confessions that the five men made to FBI “clean teams” at Guantánamo Bay after they had been subjected to “enhanced interrogation techniques” — considered torture by some — at the CIA black sites.

KSM confessed to planning the 9/11 attacks in a March 2007 statement to the Combatant Status Review Tribunal, saying, “I was responsible for the 9/11 operation, from A to Z."

The U.S. government alleges that the men in custody carried out a criminal conspiracy in planning and executing the 9/11 plot, and prosecutors listed the names of all 2,977 victims killed on 9/11 in the 90-page 2011 charging sheet. The five men, who were arraigned in 2012, were also charged with attacking civilians, hijacking, terrorism, violations of the rules of war, and more.

Biden offers leniency, appeals court rejects it

Republicans have also repeatedly and harshly criticized any deal with the 9/11 defendants which would have taken the death penalty off the table as the Biden administration spent years attempting to reach a plea deal with the terrorists.

Air Force Colonel Matthew McCall, a military judge handling the 9/11 case, ruled in November 2024 that Austin was not able to withdraw the plea deal which had been offered to the terrorists and agreed to by them. The judge ordered the plea deal proceedings to move forward.

The Pentagon, through the Justice Department, appealed this ruling, and first received a stay on the plea deals early last year. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia then sided with the Pentagon in a 2-1 ruling by a three-judge panel. The two appeals court judges vacated the military judge’s order, which had prevented Austin and then Hegseth from withdrawing from the plea deal, and the two judges prohibited the military judge from conducting hearings where the guilty pleas would be allowed to be entered.

Hegseth visited Guantánamo Bay in February of last year, where he said that he had seen the 9/11 defendants. “I saw them all […] I saw Khalid Sheikh Mohammed […] I hope he finds justice soon,” Hegseth told Fox News. “And it’s one of the rare things that I agree with my predecessor on, Lloyd Austin, that he deserves the death penalty. And I hope he finds it soon through that system.” 


Jerry Dunleavy

Source: https://justthenews.com/government/courts-law/trump-says-iran-was-linked-uss-cole-bombing-federal-judge-also-ruled-iran-was

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Katz: If Beirut fails to stop Hezbollah, IDF will ‘take control of the territory’ - JNS Staff

 

by JNS Staff

"The prime minister and I have instructed the Israel Defense Forces to prepare to expand its operations in Lebanon," the defense minister said.

 

Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz attends the signing of a housing framework agreement at Jerusalem City Hall in Jerusalem, Dec. 15, 2025. Photo by Chaim Goldberg/Flash90.
Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz attends the signing of a housing framework agreement at Jerusalem City Hall in Jerusalem, Dec. 15, 2025. Photo by Chaim Goldberg/Flash90.

If Lebanon’s government fails to prevent Hezbollah rocket and drone attacks on Israel, Jerusalem will “take control of the territory and do it ourselves,” Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz threatened on Thursday.

“The prime minister and I have instructed the Israel Defense Forces to prepare to expand its operations in Lebanon and to restore quiet and security to the northern communities,” the defense minister stated.

“We promised quiet and security to the northern communities, and that is exactly what we will do,” Katz added in a Hebrew-language statement.

Hezbollah overnight on Wednesday launched its largest rocket barrage at the Jewish state since the start of the current war, in what the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said was a combined assault that also included several volleys of ballistic missiles launched by Iran.

According to the Magen David Adom emergency response group, two people sustained light wounds from “flying objects” during the attacks.

The two—a woman with a head injury and a man with a hand wound—were taken to Galilee Medical Center in Nahariya. In addition, several people were treated for injuries sustained while running for shelter.

Speaking during an operational briefing at IDF Northern Command on Monday morning, Katz said that the decision to advance into Lebanon following Hezbollah’s March 2 decision to join the war on Iran’s behalf was “morally and operationally correct, and enables what comes next.”

“It gives confidence to the communities that what happened will not return,” the minister stated, referencing Jerusalem’s past decision to evacuate northern communities for well over a year in response to Hezbollah’s cross-border attacks that started on Oct. 7, 2023, and paused following a U.S.-brokered ceasefire on Nov. 27, 2024.

This time, he vowed, “There will be no evacuation, no abandonment.”

“Everyone remains on their land, in their home, wherever they are. This is the number one mission—to defend the communities and give them security against raids and against anti-tank fire,” continued Katz.

The evacuation of Southern Lebanon and large parts of Beirut will allow the IDF to “thwart threats we have not yet managed to thwart previously, making this region even safer than before ‘Operation Roaring Lion.'”

Katz added, “We certainly must not only refrain from withdrawing in the face of Hezbollah, but take advantage of the opportunity to strike it.”

Lebanon’s official government has failed to live up to its commitments under the 2024 ceasefire, which forbade the presence of terrorists in the south and tasked the Lebanese Armed Forces with disarming them.

“They allowed Hezbollah to move south,” Katz charged. “The conclusion is always that what we do not do, no one else will do. They are obligated and they must act, and we must ensure that these things happen.”

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun on Monday accused Hezbollah and Iran of working to “collapse” the Lebanese state and expressed his openness to holding “direct negotiations” with Israel, per AFP.

“Whoever launched those missiles wanted to bring about the collapse of the Lebanese state, plunging it into aggression and chaos … all for the sake of the Iranian regime’s calculations,” he told European officials.

Aoun’s proposal reportedly called for “establishing a full truce” with the Jewish state, “logistical support” for the Lebanese Armed Forces to disarm Hezbollah, and direct talks under international auspices.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had warned Beirut over the weekend that if it fails to uphold the ceasefire deal, the Iranian-backed aggression “will bring catastrophic consequences upon Lebanon.”

“It is time for you, too, to take your destiny into your hands,” he told the Lebanese government, declaring that “in any case,” Jerusalem will do “everything necessary to protect our communities and our citizens.” 


JNS Staff

Source: https://www.jns.org/katz-if-beirut-fails-to-stop-hezbollah-idf-will-take-control-of-the-territory/

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Iran’s cluster bombs raise war crime concerns - JNS Staff

 

by JNS Staff

More than 10 such missiles have been launched since the conflict began, Israel’s bomb disposal unit says.

 

Rescue personnel at the scene of an Iranian ballistic missile attack in Israel’s central region, March 8, 2026. Photo by Chaim Goldberg/Flash90.
Rescue personnel at the scene of an Iranian ballistic missile attack in Israel’s central region, March 8, 2026. Photo by Chaim Goldberg/Flash90.

Iran has fired missiles carrying cluster-munition warheads at Israel, raising concerns among observers about a possible violation of the laws of war.

Chief Superintendent Doron Lavi, head of the Israel Police’s bomb disposal unit, said more than 10 such missiles have been launched since the conflict began on Feb. 28, The New York Times reported on Wednesday.

Cluster munitions carry warheads that burst into smaller bomblets, or “submunitions” that can cause widespread and indiscriminate harm when used against civilians.

For this reason, legal experts said international law barred countries from using cluster munitions in populated areas.

Legal experts told the Times that using cluster weapons near civilians may violate international humanitarian law because the bomblets
cannot be targeted and can leave “unexploded duds,” remnants that remain dangerous long after fighting ends.

More than 100 countries have banned cluster munitions since 2008, the Times reported. Iran and Israel haven’t joined the ban. Neither have major powers, including the United States, Russia and China.

Footage from Or Yehuda, a city near Ben-Gurion International Airport, on March 4 appeared to show a submunition exploding on a street. Another clip from March 5 showed bomblets spreading across the night sky during a missile attack, an analyst who reviewed the footage told the Times.

Iran used cluster bombs against Israel during the June 2025 war, but the IDF’s international spokesman, Lt. Col. Nadav Shoshani, said the Islamic Republic has drastically increased their use in the current war.

After a missile strike on the city of Beit Shemesh killed nine on March 2, he condemned the Iranian regime.

“Since the beginning of ‘Operation Roaring Lion,’ the Iranian regime has been targeting civilians. We know that this is their strategy,” Shoshani said. 


JNS Staff

Source: https://www.jns.org/irans-cluster-bombs-raise-war-crime-concerns/

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Before Pouring Billions into Gaza, Trump's 'Board of Peace' Needs To Ask A Few Hard Questions - Khaled Abu Toameh

 

by Khaled Abu Toameh

For the past 33 years, the international community has failed to track the flow and use of aid money donated to the Palestinians, enabling high-level corruption. Tens of billions of dollars in international aid given to the Palestinian Authority and the Hamas regime in the Gaza Strip have been lost to corruption, siphoned off by terror groups or mismanaged by the PA leadership. 

 

Khaled Abu Toameh is an award-winning journalist based in Jerusalem.

Source: https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/22339/pouring-billions-into-gaza

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If Saudi Arabia Wants U.S. Alliance, It Must End Support for Sudanese Armed Forces — Aligned with Muslim Brotherhood and Iran — Not Fund It - Anna Mahjar-Barducci

 

by Anna Mahjar-Barducci

Saudi Arabia's ideological red lines have long included deep hostility to the Muslim Brotherhood — but only within its own borders. Beyond the kingdom, Saudi policy has increasingly shown support to Muslim Brotherhood-backed groups.

 

  • Sudan's ongoing civil war is not just a clash between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and their former military allies-turned rivals, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF). It is a calculated power grab by the Sudanese Muslim Brotherhood, recently listed by the US as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist (SDGT).... Meanwhile, the terrorist organization appears to be using the SAF as a Trojan horse to dominate northeast Africa and the Red Sea – a critical artery for global commerce.

  • Saudi Arabia's ideological red lines have long included deep hostility to the Muslim Brotherhood — but only within its own borders. Beyond the kingdom, Saudi policy has increasingly shown support to Muslim Brotherhood-backed groups. In Yemen, for instance, Saudi Arabia, stirring up trouble in the neighborhood, has been supporting and empowering the Muslim Brotherhood's Islah Party.

  • Since the outbreak of the civil war in Sudan in April of 2023, Saudi Arabia has become the principal supporter of the SAF. Saudi Arabia also financed a major arms deal between Pakistan and the SAF, valued at approximately $1.5 billion. More recently, the Sudan's army-backed government signed a deal with a Saudi company for gold exploration along the Red Sea coast.

  • Saudi support to the SAF risks continuing the entrenchment of Islamist jihadi aggression, whether Sunni or Shiite, that threatens regional stability.

  • For the West, the lesson of 2026 is straightforward: oppose Iran without apology — and also oppose the Muslim Brotherhood without apology. Anything less rewards terrorism and prolongs instability in the Arab and Muslim world.

  • If Saudi Arabia wants to be considered an ally of the United States, it needs to have zero tolerance for extremist ideology and to understand that Washington cannot accept any rehabilitation of the Muslim Brotherhood. Supporting the SAF, which is infused with Muslim Brotherhood affiliates who maintain ideological and operational links with Iran's proxies, risks undermining the very objectives that the West claims to pursue in the region. Alliances built on short-term tactical convenience may appear useful in the moment, but they can ultimately empower the same ideological and geopolitical forces that Western governments are trying to contain. The West cannot afford to have fake alliances that ultimately empower the threats the West is claiming to fight.

Sudan's ongoing civil war is not just a clash between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and their former military allies-turned rivals, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF). The Muslim Brotherhood appears to be using the SAF to take over Sudan. Pictured: SAF soldiers sit atop a tank after their capture of an RSF base in Omdurman, on May 26, 2025. (Photo by Ebrahim Hamid/AFP via Getty Images)

Sudan's ongoing civil war is not just a clash between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and their former military allies-turned rivals, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF). It is a calculated power grab by the Sudanese Muslim Brotherhood, recently listed by the US as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist (SDGT). The US announced plans to formally classify the group as a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO) starting March 16, 2026, and accused it of carrying out mass violence against civilians during Sudan's ongoing war. Meanwhile, the terrorist organization appears to be using the SAF as a Trojan horse to dominate northeast Africa and the Red Sea – a critical artery for global commerce.

The Muslim Brotherhood appears to be using the SAF to take over Sudan. SAF leader Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan and Ali Karti, secretary-general of the Sudanese Islamic Movement (SIM), the local iteration of the transnational Muslim Brotherhood in Sudan, maintain a strategic alliance. This partnership supports both SAF operations amid the civil war and the Muslim Brotherhood's political goals.

To gain influence and bolster their position in the Sudanese civil war, the SAF has relied partially on Iranian support. Before the 2026 war in Iran erupted on February 28 with the US-Israeli strikes that killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Tehran supplied the SAF with weapons (including drones), munitions, intelligence support, and technical assistance.

This deepening alignment was starkly illustrated earlier this month, when a video circulated online featuring Al Naji Abdullah, a Muslim Brotherhood high-ranking figure and a commander aligned with the SAF. In the clip, speaking on behalf of Sudanese "mujahideen" operating within and alongside the SAF structure, Abdullah voiced explicit support for Iran and threatened to mobilize Sudanese fighters if US and Israeli ground forces entered Iran:

"We support Iran and we say it from here in Sudan. If the Americans and the Zionists deploy ground forces in Iran, we will send forces from among us to confront them. We say this openly... we will send all our battalions to fight there."

The SAF, however, was ultimately forced to adjust its public messaging when Iran kept on launching missile and drone barrages at neighboring Gulf states, striking many targets, including in Saudi Arabia. Since the outbreak of the civil war in Sudan, Saudi Arabia has become the principal supporter of the SAF. The Iranian strikes on Saudi territory forced the kingdom to adopt a sharper stance. Saudi Arabia condemned Iran's "brazen and cowardly" attacks, declared its right to respond militarily, and hardened its rhetoric toward Iran in a clear shift from its earlier caution.

This shift exposes a contradiction at the core of Saudi Arabia's regional policy. The kingdom continues to support the SAF, whose battlefield survival has depended in part on weapons and assistance previously supplied by the very Iranian regime now targeting Saudi territory. Saudi Arabia's ideological red lines have long included deep hostility to the Muslim Brotherhood — but only within its own borders. Beyond the kingdom, Saudi policy has increasingly shown support to Muslim Brotherhood-backed groups. In Yemen, for instance, Saudi Arabia, stirring up trouble in the neighborhood, has been supporting and empowering the Muslim Brotherhood's Islah Party.

Since the outbreak of the civil war in Sudan in April of 2023, Saudi Arabia has become the principal supporter of the SAF.

Saudi Arabia also financed a major arms deal between Pakistan and the SAF, valued at approximately $1.5 billion. More recently, the Sudan's army-backed government signed a deal with a Saudi company for gold exploration along the Red Sea coast.

Under these circumstances, the SAF quickly pivoted to echoing Saudi Arabia's hardened rhetoric, condemning Iran and aligning its public messaging with that of its principal financial patron. Yet the SAF's deep ideological links to the Muslim Brotherhood suggest that this rhetorical shift does not represent a genuine break with the broader Islamist currents that have historically intersected with the ideology of the Iranian regime. As a result, the SAF's denunciations of Iran do not represent a geopolitical repositioning, but rather an act of political opportunism.

For the West, Saudi Arabia can and should be a partner in confronting the Iranian threat — especially after Iran's direct assaults on Gulf states and global energy security. Partnership, however, cannot mean indulgence. The West needs simultaneously to stand firm against the Muslim Brotherhood's transnational network, which has repeatedly proven destabilizing — from Sudan's decades of Islamist rule and genocide, to its facilitation of jihadist transit and weapons smuggling.

Saudi support to the SAF risks continuing the entrenchment of Islamist jihadi aggression, whether Sunni or Shiite, that threatens regional stability.

For the West, the lesson of 2026 is straightforward: oppose Iran without apology — and also oppose the Muslim Brotherhood without apology. Anything less rewards terrorism and prolongs instability in the Arab and Muslim world.

If Saudi Arabia wants to be considered an ally of the United States, it needs to have zero tolerance for extremist ideology and to understand that Washington cannot accept any rehabilitation of the Muslim Brotherhood. Supporting the SAF, which is infused with Muslim Brotherhood affiliates who maintain ideological and operational links with Iran's proxies, risks undermining the very objectives that the West claims to pursue in the region. Alliances built on short-term tactical convenience may appear useful in the moment, but they can ultimately empower the same ideological and geopolitical forces that Western governments are trying to contain. The West cannot afford to have fake alliances that ultimately empower the threats the West is claiming to fight. 


Anna Mahjar-Barducci

Source: https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/22337/sudan-saudi-arabia-muslim-brotherhood

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Tehran targets oil supply, threatens to bring down world economy - David Isaac

 

by David Isaac

Iran has effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz, through whch 20% of the world’s petroleum supply normally passes.

 

Thai bulk carrier Mayuree Naree is seen after it was attacked in the Strait of Hormuz on March 11, 2026. Source: Handout/Royal Thai Navy/AFP via Getty Images.
Thai bulk carrier Mayuree Naree is seen after it was attacked in the Strait of Hormuz on March 11, 2026. Source: Handout/Royal Thai Navy/AFP via Getty Images.

Iran on Wednesday threatened a “war of attrition” that would destroy the global economy as it targeted oil tankers and neighboring energy infrastructure.

Rear Adm. Ali Fadavi, adviser to the IRGC commander-in-chief, a member of the military’s “war command room” and former deputy commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, told Iranian state television on Wednesday that the U.S. and Israel “must consider the possibility that they will be engaged in a long-term war of attrition that will destroy the entire American economy and the world economy.”

Saudi Arabia’s Defense Ministry reported on Thursday that its air defenses intercepted ​a drone ​heading ‌toward the Shaybah ‌oilfield. Iranian attack boats set fire to two Iraqi fuel tankers near the Iraqi port city of Basra earlier that day.

On Wednesday, three merchant vessels were hit near the Strait of Hormuz by “unknown projectiles.” One Indian sailor was killed.

Iran has effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz, which accounts for 20% of the world’s oil supplies, about 25–27% of all seaborne oil trade.

One-hundred fifty tankers sit at anchor outside the Strait, Container News reported on Thursday. Before hostilities began on Feb. 28, 140 to 150 vessels transited Hormuz daily. In the first week of March, that number sank to between one and four, reported the news site, which covers the container shipping industry.

Iran reportedly laid a few dozen mines at the Strait on Tuesday. The Washington, D.C.-based Institute for the Study of War said that Iran likely doesn’t want to heavily mine the Strait as it transports its own crude through Hormuz.

On Tuesday, U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) posted to X that its forces eliminated numerous Iranian naval vessels on Monday, “including 16 minelayers near the Strait of Hormuz.”

 

President Donald Trump put the number higher during a visit to Ohio on Wednesday, telling reporters, “They started talking about mines, so we hit 28 mine ships as of this moment.”

Brent crude oil surged past $100 a barrel Thursday as Iran said the world should prepare for $200 a barrel.

Before Feb. 28, Brent crude was trading at around $70 per barrel and West Texas Intermediate (WTI) at around $65 per barrel.

International Energy Agency (IEA) Executive Director Fatih Birol said on Wednesday that member states agreed to release a total of 400 million barrels from their strategic reserves of oil, calling it a “major action” geared at relieving the oil disruption.

As part of that 400 million, the U.S. will ​release 172 million barrels of oil from its strategic ‌petroleum reserve, Energy Secretary Chris Wright said on ​Wednesday.

The White House has expressed confidence it can weather short-term price spikes, with Trump saying a temporary surge in prices is “a small price to pay” to bring down the Islamic Republic.

“Short term oil prices, which will drop rapidly when the destruction of the Iran nuclear threat is over, is a very small price to pay for U.S.A., and World, Safety and Peace,” he said in a Truth Social post on March 9.

The main concern for Republicans is that rising oil prices will hurt their chances in the Nov. 3 midterm elections. A March 9 Quinnipiac poll found that more than seven in 10 U.S. voters (74%) are concerned that the war will cause oil and gas prices to rise.


David Isaac

Source: https://www.jns.org/tehran-targets-oil-supply-threatens-to-bring-down-world-economy/

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Ex-FBI agent says he witnessed politicization of bureau, warned about improper surveillance - Steven Richards

 

by Steven Richards

Retired Special Agent Bassem Youssef, who ran the FBI’s Communications Analysis Unit from late 2004 until late 2014, witnessed agents hired under Jim Comey's watch, for political leanings and warned of potential for abuse of surveillance programs. Those warnings were ignored.

 

The former FBI agent who ran the bureau’s warrantless spying program said this week that he personally witnessed the director and other senior officials recruiting agents based on political leanings, not qualifications, during Director James Comey’s tenure. 

Bassem Youssef, a retired special agent who ran the FBI’s Communications Analysis Unit from late 2004 until his retirement in late 2014, also says he warned senior officials about the potential for civil liberties abuses in the surveillance program that he oversaw, but said neither Comey nor the White House took his warnings seriously.  

FBI's improper — possibly illegal — snooping

The FBI’s surveillance practices have been back under a microscope in recent months. FBI records released by Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, last year showed the bureau snooped on phone records of Republican elected officials as part of its investigation into Jan. 6. 

Just the News also reported in February that the Government Accountability Office assessed that the FBI opened 1,200 probes related to politicians, journalists, religious leaders, academics and others tied to “sensitive investigative matters,” using a special investigative tool that required no factual predicate to launch. The vast majority of those probes were closed without accusations of wrongdoing or criminal charges against those targets being scrutinized.

Youssef told the Just the News, No Noise TV show on Tuesday that he believes the failure of the bureau to learn from past intelligence collection mistakes, like in the Trump-Russia probe whose underlying allegations were later discredited, is because FBI leadership had begun to hire employees based on political leanings rather than merit or capability.  

Comey's "soft recruitment of people of like mind"

“When I worked in the bureau, in field offices, and then eventually at FBI Headquarters, where I oversaw the Communications Analysis Unit that there was already a process where you could see that from the highest levels of the FBI, meaning the director's office and the executive assistant, directors that there is a soft recruitment of people of like mind that didn't necessarily meet the requirements for the job, but they were recruited because of their leaning, which was, in fact, very politically motivated,” Youssef said. 

Just the News reported this week that President Trump and his supporters were targeted by four consecutive FBI code-named counterintelligence investigations over the last decade that subjected hundreds of Americans to privacy-invading tactics and essentially treated the man twice elected president as a national security threat for most of the first nine years of his political career. 

FBI Director Kash Patel has led an effort in the administration to review the four operations code-named Crossfire Hurricane, Round River, Plasmic Echo and Arctic Frost that stretched from summer 2016 to January 2025. 

Those who have seen the records told Just the News they chronicle how the FBI's expanded counterterrorism and counterintelligence missions after the Sept, 11, 2001, terrorist attacks eventually became hijacked by politics and led agents to deploy tools meant for terrorists and spies against everyday Americans in a bid to find a way to bring criminal cases against Trump.

“It tells you that the FBI, unfortunately, during the previous administration has cast a wide drag net that got so many people who were not involved in any way,” Youssef told Just the News. “And I hate to use that word, but it's really framing those people for some kind of malfeasance when there really wasn't in the first place.”

Before Youssef departed the bureau in 2014, he approached then-Director Comey to warn that he saw the potential for civil rights abuses in the FBI’s warrantless surveillance, which he oversaw from his perch atop the Communications Analysis Unit. 

Snowden's leaks raised, but given mere lip service by Obama

“I had been trying to brief the director at that time, it was Comey, of this special program, the program that was leaked by Snowden, if you remember, in 2012 and the executive assistant director under him was blocking me from briefing him,” Youssef said. 

Edward Snowden, who was a National Security Agency contractor, leaked classified information in 2013 detailing several U.S. surveillance programs, including the FBI’s PRISM program to monitor internet communications and details about the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance (FISA) Court. 

“I had a concern about this particular program,” Youssef said. 

“And eventually, I went up to see [Comey], before I retired, [and] explained to him that the program has some issues and could be misused and abused, and he assured me that the program would be taken a very good look at it,” the former official explained.  

“At that time, the then-President, Barack Obama, gave a press release saying that this is unacceptable, that we will definitely curb the authority of this program, if not shut it down altogether,” said Yousseff. 

“Fast forward to the end of his tenure, the end of his administration, and to find out that the program was not curbed, but in fact, it was expanded, and authority was given to people who had no business in the Intel world, such as the then UN ambassador who was given access to that program,” he said. 

Youseff previously detailed his specific concerns with the program, including an audit that showed it was generating large numbers of “false negatives and positives.” 

Additionally, he said “there was collateral damage in terms of civil liberties” of Americans whose phone records were unnecessarily searched or who were falsely identified as connected to terrorism, Just the News reported in 2020.  


Steven Richards

Source: https://justthenews.com/government/federal-agencies/ex-fbi-official-says-he-witness-politicization-bureau-warned-about

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Federal appeals court hands Trump win, overrules judge who blocked deportations to third countries - Misty Severi

 

by Misty Severi

The ruling, which is still expected to be taken to the nation's highest court, comes just before Murphy's ruling was expected to take effect on Thursday.

 

The First Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals lifted a block Wednesday on a lower court ruling that prevented the Trump administration from deporting illegal migrants to "third countries" that are willing to accept them.

The Trump administration had appealed U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy's ruling last week, after he ruled in February that the Department of Homeland Security's deportation policy was unlawful and violates due process protections under the U.S. Constitution. 

The administration argued Murphy's order violated two previous Supreme Court rulings and created an "unworkable scheme" that threatened to derail negotiations with other countries, along with thousands of deportations, per Fox News.

One of the rulings the administration argued it infringed on was the Supreme Court's order that narrowed the scope of specific injunctions and urged lower court judges to be more conservative in their issuance.  

The ruling, which is still expected to be taken to the nation's highest court, comes just before Murphy's ruling was expected to take effect on Thursday.  


Misty Severi

Source: https://justthenews.com/government/courts-law/federal-appeals-court-lifts-block-dhs-deportations-third-countries

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IDF drops indictment against five soldiers in Sde Teiman case for allegedly beating Palestinian - Yonah Jeremy Bob

 

by Yonah Jeremy Bob

According to the IDF Spokesperson’s Unit, the decision followed a comprehensive review of the evidence, legal considerations, and procedural circumstances surrounding the case.

 

An Israeli police officer stands near a gate, while protesters gather outside Sde Teiman detention facility near Beersheba, in southern Israel, July 29, 2024
An Israeli police officer stands near a gate, while protesters gather outside Sde Teiman detention facility near Beersheba, in southern Israel, July 29, 2024
(photo credit: REUTERS/AMIR COHEN)

The IDF Military Advocate General Maj. Gen. Itay Offir on Thursday announced that he has ordered the cancellation of the indictment against five defendants in the Sde Teiman case.

Offir explained that the evidentiary difficulties in the case, combined with the scandal surrounding the leaked video, led to the former prosecutorial team itself being probed, making it too difficult to continue the case.

The case has been the most controversial alleged war crimes case to come out of the war to date, with many Israelis slamming the IDF prosecution for going after the soldiers and many lawyers and critics of Israel blasting the prosecution for moving too slowly on the case, and now closing it.

External major elements to the case include that much of the government had turned against the Israeli legal establishment over a range of issues by the time the indictment was filed, and that much of the world was up in arms over alleged torture at Sde Teiman as early as fall 2023, with little action by Israeli officials to address those criticism until the Israeli Supreme Court ordered Sde Teiman closed in mid-2024.

The case was filed by Offir's predecessor, Yifat Tomer Yerushalmi, in February 2025 against five soldiers for the alleged crimes.

Yerushalmi resigned in October 2025 over her illegal leaking of a video of the alleged beating prior to trial, where it could have been legally and publicly presented. Offir replaced her a month later.

From a domestic political perspective, for the current government, the safest move was always to tank the Sde Teiman case.

IDF officers from Force 100, involved in the Sde Teiman scandal, appear at the Supreme Court in Jerusalem, November 11, 2025
IDF officers from Force 100, involved in the Sde Teiman scandal, appear at the Supreme Court in Jerusalem, November 11, 2025 (credit: YONATAN SINDEL/FLASH90)

He did not call the case a "blood libel," as some coalition politicians have done, but simply closed it for technical reasons, which he blamed on his predecessor.

The technical problems were real and many: Tomer Yerushalmi leaked a video of the five defendants allegedly beating the detainee, harming some of their fair trial rights, the lead prosecutor for the case Lt. Col. Lior Ayash is one of the officials under a criminal probe which disrupted the progress and management of the case, and the government decided to release the Palestinian detainee who was beaten back to Gaza without having testified in court.

No official has ever explained the rationale for why the Palestinian detainee was released without taking pre-trial testimony, a recognized procedure for special circumstances, which was famously used against former prime minister Ehud Olmert in the Talansky Affair.

The IDF statement announcing the decision made it clear that IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Eyal Zamir was ready to support Offir in whichever direction he ultimately decided to go.

But closing the case may be problematic not only for Offir's standing within Israel's legal community, but also before the International Criminal Court.

All of the technical issues above are real, but all of them can also be overcome, and to close the case, Offir has to sidestep the medical report, which appears far more damning against the five soldiers than the widely discussed video.

The soldiers are not outright denying they fought the detainee

The five IDF soldiers, broadly speaking, do not deny that they had a physical altercation with the detainee.

Mostly, they claim self-defense and that they had to get him under control.

But the medical report reveals seven of his ribs were broken and that an object was either shoved up his anus or that his butt was stabbed with an object.

These do not seem like actions consistent with merely getting control over one detainee in self-defense.

Offir said that the medical report was significant evidence, but would have failed to get a conviction at trial without more corroborating evidence, especially given the absence of the victim to testify.

The much-defamed video was not doctored. It, in fact, seems to show IDF soldiers beating the detainee. It is just that it was edited to shorten it from many hours of footage where nothing happened, to the moments when the more critical events occurred.

However, Offir noted that much of the activities and alleged beatings was set in a spot where seeing who exactly did what was obscured in the footage.

Still, ignoring all of the above evidence could permanently harm his standing within the Israeli legal community and make it harder for him to manage the IDF legal division, or the legal community may be so on its back heels right now from a variety of other crises that it might not have wanted to spend energy fighting on this issue.

To date, Offir has received high marks from many IDF legal officials who remained in their posts between his and Tomer-Yerushalmi's tenures.

The ICC will likely reject Israeli explanations that it had taken the beating issue seriously, but that a strange series of events, including Tomer Yerushalmi's personal meltdown, had simply unwound the case on technical grounds.

But many Israeli legal officials are more doubtful at this stage about getting any fair hearing before the ICC. 


Yonah Jeremy Bob

Source: https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/politics-and-diplomacy/article-889768

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