Thursday, March 26, 2026

Over 90% of Iranian missiles intercepted, but a critical vulnerability is growing, report warns - Efrat Lachter

 

​ by Efrat Lachter

Experts warn the cost gap between cheap Iranian drones and million-dollar interceptors is quietly draining allied stockpiles across the region

 

 


 

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

FOX NEWS EXCLUSIVE: As U.S., Israeli and allied forces continue to intercept the vast majority of Iranian missiles and drones, a new report and expert analysis reveal a growing concern behind the headline success: the cost and sustainability of the defense itself.

More than 90% of Iranian projectiles have been intercepted during the war, according to a report obtained by Fox News Digital from the Jewish Institute for National Security of America (JINSA), thanks to a layered regional air defense system built during years of coordination.

But beneath that success lies a widening imbalance that could shape the next phase of the conflict.

The report highlights a critical trend: Iran’s least expensive weapons are proving the most disruptive and are draining costly U.S. and Israeli interceptors.

IRAN’S REMAINING WEAPONS: HOW TEHRAN CAN STILL DISRUPT THE STRAIT OF HORMUZ

"Unclassified" aerial footage shows a missile launcher being struck by an explosive.

U.S. Central Command released footage showing strikes on Iranian mobile missile launchers. (@CENTCOM via X)

The current air defense architecture, integrating U.S., Israeli and Arab systems, has proven highly effective at stopping incoming threats. Early warning systems, shared radar coverage and pre-positioned assets have allowed multiple countries to work together to defeat Iranian missiles and drones.

During a press briefing on Wednesday, press secretary Karoline Leavitt said, "More than 9,000 enemy targets have been struck to date… Iran's ballistic missile attacks and drone attacks are down by roughly 90%," she said, adding that U.S. forces have also destroyed more than 140 Iranian naval vessels, including nearly 50 mine layers.

A surge of U.S. assets before the war, including Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD), batteries, Patriot systems, two carrier strike groups and roughly 200 fighter aircraft, helped absorb Iran’s opening salvos and maintain high interception rates, according to JINSA's report.

But Ari Cicurel, associate director of foreign policy at JINSA and author of the report, said focusing only on interception percentages misses the bigger picture.

"Overall high missile and drone interception rates have been important but only tell part of the story," Cicurel told Fox News Digital. "Iran came into this war with a deliberate plan to dismantle the architecture that makes those intercepts possible. It has struck energy infrastructure to upset markets and used cluster munitions to achieve higher hit rates."

IRAN’S DRONE SWARMS CHALLENGE US AIR DEFENSES AS TROOPS IN MIDDLE EAST FACE RISING THREATS

Israel Iran Strikes

Israel's air defense targets Iranian missiles in the sky of Tel Aviv on June 16, 2025. (Matan Golan/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images)

Danny Citrinowicz, a Middle East and national security expert at the Institute for National Security Studies and a nonresident fellow at the Atlantic Council, said that imbalance is at the heart of the problem. 

"There needs to be a change in the equation," he told Fox News Digital. "The Iranians are launching drones that cost around $30,000, and we are using missiles that cost millions of dollars to intercept them. That gap is a very problematic one."

He added that the same dynamic applies to ballistic missiles.

"Building a missile in Iran may cost a few hundred thousand dollars, while the interceptor costs millions, especially when we talk about systems like Arrow," he said. "It’s easier and quicker to produce missiles than it is to build interceptors. That’s not a secret."

Iron Dome anti-missile system intercepts rockets in Israel

Israel's Iron Dome anti-missile system intercepts rockets launched from the Gaza Strip, as seen from the city of Ashkelon, Israel, Oct. 9, 2023. (Amir Cohen/Reuters)

This cost imbalance is feeding into a broader concern: interceptor depletion.

The JINSA report warns that stockpiles across the region are already under strain. Some Gulf states have used a significant portion of their interceptor inventories, with estimates suggesting Bahrain may have expended up to 87% of its Patriot missiles, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait have used roughly 75% and Qatar has used roughly 40%. 

Israel is also facing mounting pressure. While officials have not publicly confirmed stockpile levels, the report notes signs of rationing, including decisions not to intercept certain cluster-munition threats in order to conserve more advanced interceptors.

PENTAGON ESTIMATES IRAN WAR COST $11.3B IN THE FIRST SIX DAYS IN CLOSED-DOOR CONGRESSIONAL HEARING: REPORT

The wreckage of a Shahed-136 drone lies on display among other damaged weapons collected as evidence in Kharkiv.

The remains of a Russian-made, Iran-designed Shahed-136 drone, known in Russia as a Geran-2, are displayed with other recovered drones, glide bombs, missiles and rockets in Kharkiv on July 30, 2025. (Scott Peterson/Getty Images)

Citrinowicz said that dynamics become more acute the longer the war continues.

"We are now several weeks into the war, and even if the salvos are limited, the issue of interceptors becomes more significant over time," he said.

Iran has adapted its tactics accordingly, shifting from large barrages to smaller, more frequent attacks designed to maintain constant pressure while gradually draining defensive resources.

These persistent salvos, even if limited in size, force defenders to remain on high alert and continue expending interceptors, accelerating the depletion of already finite stockpiles.

The report underscores that drones pose a unique challenge compared to ballistic missiles.

Unlike missiles, which rely on large launchers and leave detectable signatures, drones can be launched from mobile platforms and can fly at low altitudes that make them harder for radar systems to detect.

For example, A Shahed-136 weighs roughly 200 kilograms and launches from an angled rail mounted on a pickup truck, after which the crew can quickly relocate. That simpler launch profile makes it easier for Iran to disperse, conceal and fire under pressure, the report stated.

Iran also has incorporated lessons from the war in Ukraine, deploying more advanced drones, including those guided by fiber-optic cables that are immune to electronic jamming, and faster variants powered by jet engines.

These innovations complicate interception timelines and increase the likelihood of successful strikes, even against otherwise effective defense systems.

INSIDE THE ISRAELI DRONE UNIT TAKING ON IRAN AND HEZBOLLAH

Missiles launched from Iran are intercepted as seen from Tel Aviv

Missiles launched from Iran are intercepted as seen from Tel Aviv, Israel, June 15, 2025. (Reuters/Tomer Neuberg)

Despite these challenges, the report emphasizes that the defensive architecture has not failed.

"The architecture has held, but the trajectory is moving in the wrong direction," Cicurel said. "Reversing it requires moving assets to where the pressure is greatest, hunting Iranian launchers and drones more aggressively, and convoying ships through the Gulf."

Even with high interception rates, the broader impact of the attacks is being felt.

Iranian strikes on energy infrastructure and shipping have driven oil prices higher and disrupted traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, demonstrating that air defense alone cannot prevent economic and strategic consequences.

The emerging picture is not one of failing defenses, but of a system under growing strain.


Attack on Erbil, Iraq

An explosion is reported near the U.S. Consulate and the airport area, where a U.S. military base is also located, in Erbil, Iraq, with fire breaking out and thick smoke rising following the blast, on March 12, 2026. (Ahsan Mohammed Ahmed Ahmed/Anadolu via Getty Images)

As long as Iran can produce cheap drones and missiles faster than the U.S., Israel and their partners can produce interceptors, the balance may gradually shift.

"As long as the war continues," Citrinowicz said, "the key question will be whether Iran can produce missiles faster than we can produce interceptors."

 

Efrat Lachter is a foreign correspondent for Fox News Digital covering international affairs and the United Nations. Follow her on X @efratlachter. Stories can be sent to efrat.lachter@fox.com.

Source: https://www.foxnews.com/world/more-than-90-iranian-missiles-intercepted-dangerous-imbalance-emerging

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Donald Trump claims Iran seeks deal, Abbas Araghchi rejects negotiations - Reuters

  

​ by Reuters

The conflicting statements came as the economic and humanitarian toll of the war mounted, with fuel shortages spreading worldwide, sending companies and countries scrambling to contain the fallout.

 

US President Donald Trump gestures as he steps from Air Force One upon his arrival in West Palm Beach, Florida, US, March 20, 2026
US President Donald Trump gestures as he steps from Air Force One upon his arrival in West Palm Beach, Florida, US, March 20, 2026
(photo credit: REUTERS/KEVIN LAMARQUE)

 

US President ​Donald Trump said Iran was desperate to make a deal to end nearly four weeks of fighting, contradicting the Iranian foreign minister, who said his country was reviewing a US proposal but had ​no intention of holding talks to wind down the conflict.

The conflicting statements came as the economic and humanitarian toll of the war mounted, with fuel shortages spreading worldwide, sending companies and countries scrambling to contain the fallout.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said while there had been no dialog or negotiation with the US, various messages had been exchanged through intermediaries.

"Messages being conveyed through our friendly countries and us responding by stating our positions or issuing the necessary warnings is not called negotiation or dialog," Araghchi said in a state television interview on Wednesday.

Trump, speaking later on Wednesday at an event in Washington, said Iranian leaders "are negotiating, by the way, and they want to make a deal ⁠so badly, but they're afraid to say it because they will be killed by their own people. They're also afraid they'll be killed by us."

Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi addresses a special session of the Conference on Disarmament at the United Nations, aside of U.S.-Iran talks in Geneva, Switzerland, February 17, 2026.
Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi addresses a special session of the Conference on Disarmament at the United Nations, aside of U.S.-Iran talks in Geneva, Switzerland, February 17, 2026. (credit: Pierre Albouy/Reuters)

Trump has not identified who the US is negotiating with in Iran, with many high-ranking officials among the thousands of people who were killed across the Middle East since the US and Israel attacked Iran on February 28. Iran has since launched strikes against Israel, US bases and Gulf states.

Iran's deceased supreme commander, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was killed on the first day of the conflict by an Israeli strike and was replaced by his son Mojtaba, who has been wounded in strikes and has not been seen in any photograph or video clip since his appointment.

Israel took Iran's foreign minister Araghchi and parliamentary speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf off its hit-list after Pakistan requested Washington not to target them, a Pakistani source with knowledge of the discussion told Reuters on Thursday.

"The Israelis had their ... coordinates and wanted to take them out, we told the US if they are also eliminated, then there is no one else to talk to, hence the US asked the Israelis to back off," the source said.

An Iranian embassy official in Islamabad said talks in Islamabad were still on the table and Pakistan was the preferred destination for Tehran, although nothing had been finalized.

Impacts of conflict spread far, wide 

The fallout from the conflict, which has caused the worst energy shock in history, has spread far beyond the region.

With the Strait of Hormuz, a conduit for a fifth of the world's oil and liquefied natural gas, effectively closed, businesses from airlines to supermarkets and used-car dealers are grappling with challenges including rising costs, weakening demand and disrupted supply chains. Some governments are weighing support measures last used during the COVID pandemic.

Farmers and fishers are struggling to source diesel for their tractors, and tens of millions more people will face acute hunger if the war continues into June, the World Food Programme estimates.

Sultan Al Jaber, the CEO of Abu Dhabi state oil company ADNOC, described Iran's restriction of passage through the Strait of Hormuz as "economic terrorism."

"When Iran holds Hormuz hostage, every nation pays the ransom, at the gas pump, at the grocery store, at the pharmacy," Al Jaber said in a speech in the US on Wednesday. "No country can be allowed to destabilize the global economy in this way. Not now. Not ever."

A 15-point US proposal to end the conflict, sent through Pakistan to Iran, calls for reopening the strait, removing Iran's stocks of highly enriched uranium, curbing its ballistic missile program and cutting off funding for regional allies, according to three Israeli cabinet sources familiar with the plan.

The White House declined to disclose specifics of its proposal.

A senior Israeli defense official said Israel was skeptical Iran would agree to the terms, and that Israel was concerned US negotiators might make concessions. Israel also wants any agreement to preserve its option to conduct pre-emptive strikes, a second source said.

Additionally, Iran has told intermediaries that Lebanon must be included in any ceasefire agreement with ​the US and Israel, six regional sources familiar with Iran's position said.

Stock rally fades, oil prices resume rise

Hopes of a resolution to the conflict that had boosted global stock markets the previous session faded on Thursday, with oil prices resuming their surge.

"Optimism regarding a ceasefire has faded," said Tsuyoshi Ueno, senior economist at NLI Research Institute.

With stock markets weak, gas prices high, and his approval ratings at an all-time low, Trump has strong incentives to find a solution before the conflict escalates further beyond his control, and ahead of the November mid-term elections for Congress.

A Reuters/Ipsos poll conducted March 20-23 found 61% of Americans disapproved of US military strikes in Iran, while 35% approved.

Exchanges of missiles and drones across the Gulf continued on Thursday.

The Israeli military said it had completed a wide-scale wave of strikes targeting infrastructure in several areas across Iran, after another wave of attacks on Wednesday. It later said it identified missiles launched from Iran towards Israel.

Admiral Brad Cooper, the Central Command chief leading US forces in the Middle East, said the US had hit over 10,000 targets inside Iran and was on track to limit Iran's ability to project power outside its borders.

Cooper said in a video briefing on Wednesday that 92% of Iran’s largest naval vessels had been destroyed and that its drone and missile launch rates were down by more than 90%. The US and Israel have damaged or destroyed two-thirds of Iran’s missile, drone and naval production facilities and shipyards, Cooper said.

The Pentagon is meanwhile planning to send thousands of airborne troops to the Gulf to give Trump more options to order a ground assault, sources have told Reuters, adding to two contingents of Marines already on their way. The first Marine unit, aboard a huge amphibious assault ship, could arrive around the end of the month.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Wednesday warned: The "world is staring down the barrel of a wider war" in the region.

"It is time to stop climbing the escalation ladder – and start climbing the diplomatic ladder," he said at the UN headquarters in New York.


Reuters

Source: https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/iran-news/article-891241

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‘Extensive’ Israeli airstrikes target Iranian military industries - JNS Staff

  

​ by JNS Staff

The sites produced arms for Tehran’s regional proxies, including Hamas and Hezbollah.


Two Israeli Air Force F-15 "Baz" fighter jets during operational activity. Credit: Israel Defense Forces.
Two Israeli Air Force F-15 “Baz” fighter jets during operational activity. Credit: Israel Defense Forces.

 

The Israel Defense Forces on Wednesday conducted a wave of “extensive strikes” targeting regime infrastructure across Iran, including in Tehran, Isfahan and other industrial hubs.

In a wave of attacks in the area of the capital, the military hit regime sites for the production of “aerial and naval combat equipment,” according to a statement.

The sites were also said to have produced arms for Tehran’s regional proxies, including Palestinian Hamas, Lebanese Hezbollah and other terrorist groups.

At the same time, the regime’s aerial-defense array, including an anti-aircraft system, were attacked, the IDF said.

“The IDF will continue to intensify damage to the regime’s military industries in order to deny production capabilities built up over years,” it vowed.

The military on Wednesday night shared footage showing the damage caused to regime sites during the almost four weeks of fighting, including in recent Israeli Air Force strikes on the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ headquarters, a large base of its Basij paramilitary volunteer force, a ballistic missile plant and Iran’s aerial-defense industrial complex.

Meanwhile, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters on Wednesday that the U.S. military’s “Operation Epic Fury” against Iran was ahead of the four-to-six-week timeline Washington had set for the war.

“Twenty-five days in, the greatest military the world has ever known is ahead of schedule and performing exceptionally,” she said. “We are very close to meeting the core objectives of ‘Operation Epic Fury,’ and this military mission continues unabated.”

U.S. President Donald Trump told a National Republican Congressional Committee fundraising event on Wednesday that “we’re winning so big—nobody’s ever seen anything like we’re doing in the Middle East with Iran.

“They want to make a deal so badly, but they’re afraid to say it, because they figure they’ll be killed by their own people. They’re also afraid they’ll be killed by us,” Trump told attendees.

“There’s never been a head of a country that wanted that job less than being the head of Iran,” he said.

Washington and Jerusalem launched “Operation Epic Fury/Roaring Lion” against the Islamic Republic on Feb. 28 with the goal of neutralizing the threats posed by Tehran’s nuclear and ballistic missile programs, as well as toppling the regime that calls for the destruction of America and Israel.

Trump on Tuesday described the targeted killing of so many of Iran’s leaders, including Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, as de facto “regime change” that could enable more productive negotiations.

“Now we have a new group,” he said. “Let’s see how they turn out.”

Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf, who is reportedly leading ongoing diplomatic talks with the U.S., has praised Hamas’s Oct. 7, 2023, massacre of some 1,200 people as a “victory” and recently threatened to make the Persian Gulf “run with the blood of invaders” if Washington targeted regime assets on islands there.


JNS Staff

Source: https://www.jns.org/news/israel-news/extensive-israeli-airstrikes-target-iranian-military-industries

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Israel said to have hit key Iran–Russia supply route in Caspian Sea strike - JNS Staff

 

 

​ by JNS Staff

The route links Russian and Iranian ports and allows the countries to swap weapons, drones, ammunition, oil and foodstuffs.

 

Russian corvette Stoikiy is towed into Simon's Town harbor, near Cape Town, South Africa, Jan. 9, 2026. Photo by Rodger Bosch/AFP via Getty Images.
Russian corvette Stoikiy is towed into Simon’s Town harbor, near Cape Town, South Africa, Jan. 9, 2026. Photo by Rodger Bosch/AFP via Getty Images.
RODGER BOSCH/AFP via Getty Images

 

An Israeli strike on Iranian naval infrastructure at the Bandar-e Anzali port on the Caspian Sea one week ago targeted a Russian-Iranian smuggling route, The Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday.

The supply route links Russian and Iranian ports and allows the countries to swap weapons, drones, ammunition, oil and foodstuffs, according to the report.

“The route has become especially important for transferring Iran’s Shahed drones—now made in both countries—which Russia has used to bombard Ukrainian cities and Tehran has used to strike airports, energy facilities and U.S. bases across the Persian Gulf,” the Journal said.

“The most important goal of this strike was to limit Russian smuggling and show the Iranians that they don’t have sea defenses in the Caspian,” Eliezer Marum, a former commander of the Israeli Navy, told the paper.

In a statement on March 19, the Israel Defense Forces listed the targets of the strike as Ianian Navy vessels, a port command center and infrastructure for vessel repair and maintenance.

Israel struck Iranian Navy ships and facilities at the Caspian Sea port of Bandar Anzali on March 18, 2026. Credit: IDF.
Israel struck Iranian Navy ships and facilities at the Caspian Sea port of Bandar Anzali on March 18, 2026. Credit: IDF.

As wheat is also supplied through the Caspian route, the attack put pressure on Iran’s food supply, the Journal said, noting the attack came the same day an attack took place in Iran’s section of the South Pars Field in the Persian Gulf. Israel has not taken credit for that attack, which hit natural gas facilities used by Iran for domestic power generation and fertilizer.

Analysts said that while the Caspian Sea attack was significant, it would only disrupt Iran-Russia trade temporarily.

Russia’s Foreign Ministry condemned the attack, saying it affected Russian economic interests.

“This largest Caspian harbor is an important trade and logistics center, which is proactively used to support Russian-Iranian trade, including in foods,” said Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova.

Russia and Iran have drawn closer since the start of the Ukraine war in Feb. 2023, when Russia opened its large-scale offensive. (Ukraine first identified Iranian-made Shahed-136 drones in Russian attacks still earlier, in the fall of 2022, during a period of lower-intensity conflict between the countries.)

On Jan. 17, 2025, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian of Iran signed a Treaty on Comprehensive Strategic Partnership.

The treaty covered “all areas, including defense, the fight against terrorism, the energy sector, finances, transport, industries, agriculture, culture, science and technology,” Russia’s TASS News Agency reported at the time.


JNS Staff

Source: https://www.jns.org/israel-reportedly-hit-key-iran-russia-smuggling-hub-in-caspian-sea-strike

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COGAT discovers motor oil hidden inside UN's humanitarian aid to Gaza in smuggling - Jerusalem Post Staff

 

 

​ by Jerusalem Post Staff

"This is a serious violation of the mechanisms for receiving aid, and that Hamas continues to try to exploit the aid mechanism for terrorist activity and incitement," COGAT warned in a letter.

 

Empty UNRWA and World Food Program trucks head to the Kerem Shalom crossing to collect limited humanitarian aid and fuel, in Khan Yunis, southern Gaza Strip, July 24, 2025
Empty UNRWA and World Food Program trucks head to the Kerem Shalom crossing to collect limited humanitarian aid and fuel, in Khan Yunis, southern Gaza Strip, July 24, 2025
(photo credit: ABED RAHIM KHATIB/FLASH90) 

Motor oil was found inside humanitarian aid in a smuggling attempt uncovered in the Keren Shalom crossing, the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) announced on Wednesday.

The motor oil was found inside humanitarian aid transported by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), with COGAT's chief, Major-General Yoram Halevi, ordering the suspension of all UNDP aid entering Gaza until a full investigation is completed and the organization presents its findings.

"COGAT emphasizes that this is a serious violation of the mechanisms for receiving aid, and that Hamas continues to try to exploit the aid mechanism for terrorist activity and incitement," said a letter sent to the UNDP by Halevi.

"Any such deviation will lead to immediate measures being taken against the organization responsible for the shipment, until the incident is fully investigated," Halevi warned.

IDF warns responsibility for contents of Gaza aid lies with organizations coordinating them

In the same statement, the IDF warned the organizations coordinating aid shipments to Gaza that the responsibility for the contents of the shipments lies with them. "Any case in which aid shipments are used for smuggling purposes will lead to immediate enforcement measures being taken," the military added.

An Egyptian flag waving on a watch-tower by the Egypt side of the Israel Egypt border close to the southern part of the Gaza Strip, near Kerem Shalom crossing, February 2, 2026.
An Egyptian flag waving on a watch-tower by the Egypt side of the Israel Egypt border close to the southern part of the Gaza Strip, near Kerem Shalom crossing, February 2, 2026. (credit: REUTERS/AMIR COHEN)

"The IDF, in cooperation with all security agencies, will continue to take zero tolerance towards attempts to exploit the humanitarian aid mechanism, and will take strict measures against any party involved," the statement concluded.

IDF reopens Rafah crossing for pedestrians for first time since begining of Iran war

The announcement comes 10 days after the IDF authorized the opening of the Rafah crossing for pedestrians, which had been closed for the first two weeks of Operation Roaring Lion.

The decision followed a security assessment and a review of the conditions required to resume activity at the crossing while maintaining restrictions due to ongoing threats in the area.

Officials said the crossing would operate under the same mechanism used before its closure, subject to updated security directives. Entry and exit for Gaza residents will be coordinated with Egypt, require prior Israeli security approval, and take place under the supervision of the European Union mission.


Jerusalem Post Staff

Source: https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/defense-news/article-891201

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'Big freaking deal': Trump axes Biden censorship machine in 'unprecedented' consent - Greg Piper

  

​ by Greg Piper

10-year agreement binds surgeon general, CDC, DHS's Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. Feds agree not to stop Louisiana, Missouri and individual plaintiffs from seeking attorney's fees as "prevailing parties."

 

Nearly two years after the Supreme Court killed free speech, in the telling of future National Institutes of Health Director Jay Bhattacharya, by letting the Biden administration resume pressuring tech platforms to censor disfavored narratives on COVID-19, elections and Hunter Biden, the Trump administration has made the plaintiffs' wildest dreams come true.

U.S. District Judge Terry Doughty, who imposed the sweeping preliminary injunction on the feds before the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals narrowed it and SCOTUS lifted it for lack of legal standing, approved a consent decree Wednesday that he'll oversee for the next 10 years, constraining the current and next two administrations.

Lawyers for state plaintiffs Louisiana and Missouri and individual plaintiffs asked Doughty to approve their proposal Monday after reaching agreement with the feds. One notable coup: The plaintiffs can recover attorney's fees and the defendants "agree not to contest that Plaintiffs are prevailing parties" for the purpose of seeking attorney's fees.

The resolution came more than a year into the Trump administration's return to power, which started with President Trump's day-one executive order to "immediately stop all government censorship and bring back free speech to America," from which Doughty quotes at length in the order's introduction.

Louisiana Attorney General Ben Aguiñaga told Just the News this was the first consent decree involving First Amendment social media issues. He called it a "big freaking deal" that the federal government signed on, which required "a lot of institutional buy-in."

"Because this is new ground for everyone involved," with no "modern case law" to guide discussions on a resolution, the agreement was "the product of extensive deliberation" between and among the parties, Aguiñaga said, calling it "cutting edge."

"NCLA has been determined to secure the best agreement possible in defense of civil liberties," a spokesperson for the New Civil Liberties Alliance, representing two individuals, told Just the News in explaining the timeline.

Missouri Attorney General Catherine Hanaway's office did not answer a query.

Feds can still complain about 'wrong' posts

Doughty had approved further legal discovery in the case just days after Trump won the 2024 election, to help the states and censored doctors including Bhattacharya and Martin Kulldorff trace their legal injuries to federal actions by uncovering information the feds "uniquely ... control" regarding the "extent and nature" of  censorship pressure.

Kulldorff and Bhattacharya, both targeted for "take down" by then-NIH Director Francis Collins for cowriting the anti-lockdown Great Barrington Declaration, are no longer plaintiffs given their roles in the Trump administration. Dr. Aaron Kheriaty, activist Jill Hines and Gateway Pundit publisher Jim Hoft are the remaining individual plaintiffs.

Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr., perhaps the highest-profile target of federal censorship as a member of the "Disinformation Dozen" who also brought his own censorship lawsuit, in December appointed Kulldorff chief science officer in the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation.

The consent decree restricts the U.S. surgeon general, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Department of Homeland Security's Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, which has ceased nonessential operations amid the DHS shutdown. 

The covered social media companies are Facebook, Instagram, X, LinkedIn and YouTube. The restrictions apply only to the social media accounts of the individual plaintiffs and Louisiana and Missouri "government officials or agencies of these states acting solely in their official capacities."

Defendants "shall take no actions, formal or informal, directly or indirectly ... to threaten Social-Media Companies with some form of punishment (i.e., an adverse legal, regulatory, or economic government sanction) unless they remove, delete, suppress, or reduce, including through altering their algorithms, posted social-media content containing protected free speech," the order reads.

The defendants also may not "unilaterally direct or veto social media content moderation decisions of Social Media Companies," Doughty said. The order includes an exception for threats "authorized by the Constitution, statute, judicial order, or regulation."

They remain free to provide the covered social media companies "with information that the companies are free to use as they wish," the decree says. It does not "extend to statements by government officials that posts on Social Media Companies' platforms are inaccurate, wrong, or contrary to the Administration's views," absent a "threat of punishment."

The consent decree doesn't affect the non-party Federal Communications Commission, which doesn't regulate social media but whose Chair Brendan Carr has repeatedly jawboned broadcasters in the name of enforcing statutory public interest obligations on the public airwaves and stopping "news distortion."

The FCC policy on news distortion dates to the 1970s and was last updated by Democrat President Joe Biden's FCC, but seven former chairs and commissioners are petitioning the FCC to rescind it.

Carr threatened broadcasters' license renewals most recently for spreading "fake news" about the Iran war, and previously ABC's for late-night host Jimmy Kimmel's false claim that conservative activist Charlie Kirk's killer was part of the MAGA movement.

'The deep state just got checked'

The consent decree prompted cheers and told-you-sos from original and current litigants and observers including former Senate pharmaceutical corruption investigator Paul Thacker, who noted one of the government's private partners in mass-flagging of alleged misinformation, Renee DiResta, falsely claimed SCOTUS had "tossed" the case.

"Missouri struck first – and Missouri won big," Missouri GOP Sen. Eric Schmitt, who initially brought the case as AG, wrote on X. "This is the first real, operational restraint on the federal censorship machine. ... The deep state just got checked."

"George Orwell wrote 1984 as a warning against tyranny," not as "a how-to guide by the federal government," Louisiana AG Liz Murrill said. "Yet our case uncovered over 20,000 pages of documents highlighting an extensive censorship campaign stemming directly from the President of the United States and his administration."

She thanked Trump and his administration for ending "one of the darkest moments in the history of the First Amendment," when "[s]hadow bans, throttling, and blocking information such as the Hunter Biden laptop were a common occurrence."

Representing Kheriaty and Hines, NCLA called the settlement "unprecedented," following legal discovery that "uncovered a vast operation emanating from the highest levels of government" directing social media to censor a wide variety of viewpoints at odds with the feds.

"People are bound to make false statements now and then when they speak their minds, a freedom the First Amendment guarantees," the civil liberties group said. "Federal officials may police the line between lawful and unlawful speech, but they have no role in deciding if speech is true or false," President Mark Chenoweth said.

NCLA emphasized it still has ongoing First Amendment lawsuits against the State Department on behalf of conservative publishers and several White House and federal officials on behalf of a censored Facebook group for vaccine-injured people.

The consent decree does a victory lap for Doughty's original reading of the case. The SCOTUS majority, "in contrast to the lower courts, did not reach the merits of the case, as it explicitly acknowledged," it says.

The justices simply found the plaintiffs hadn't shown "their harm is traceable to (caused by) the Federal Government" and never "explicitly address[ed] the question whether Plaintiffs failed to allege standing adequate to maintain the lawsuit," the decree says. 


Greg Piper

Source: https://justthenews.com/nation/free-speech/big-freaking-deal-trump-axes-biden-censorship-machine-unprecedented-consent

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U.S. intercepted Ukraine government messages discussing plot to route money to Biden re-election - John Solomon and Jerry Dunleavy

 

​ by John Solomon and Jerry Dunleavy

Newly-unclassified documents show that in 2022 Ukrainian officials discussed diverting hundreds of millions of U.S. tax dollars -- earmarked for clean energy -- back to Biden's ill-fated 2024 campaign. There is no evidence the intercepted allegations were investigated during the Biden administration.

 

U.S. intelligence intercepted Ukrainian government communications discussing a plot to route hundreds of millions of American tax dollars earmarked for clean energy in the war-torn country and move them to the United States to enrich then-President Joe Biden’s 2024 re-election campaign and the Democratic National Committee, according to a declassified intelligence report summarizing the intercepts that was obtained by Just the News.

Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard recently learned of the intercepts and has asked the U.S. Agency for International Development officials to scour for records to see if the plot actually was carried out and whether a criminal referral should be made to the FBI.

Gabbard's team has not found substantive evidence the intercepted allegations were thoroughly investigated during the Biden administration, and the communications are not believed to be tied to Russian disinformation efforts, officials said.

USAID involved in routing the money, memo alleges

The declassified report is a summary of raw intercepts from U.S. spy agencies in late 2022 concerning the alleged plot, and officials who have reviewed the files said there seemed to be a lack of curiosity to investigate such an explosive allegation of foreign interference in a U.S. election.

“The Ukrainian Government and unspecified U.S. Government personnel, through USAID in Kyiv, reportedly developed a plan that would provide hundreds of millions of US taxpayer dollars to fund an infrastructure project for Ukraine that would be used as a cover to send approximately 90% of funds allocated to the DNC to fund Joe Biden’s reelection campaign,” the declassified summary of the intercepts stated.

“They were confident the project would be funded initially, even though at some time in the future the project would be disapproved as unnecessary.  At this time, the money would already be allocated and impossible to return or use for a different purpose,” the report added.

The intercepts mentioned two American subcontractors as possible recipients of the money that would eventually be moved to Democratic coffers, officials said. The names are included in still classified raw spy data but were redacted from the declassified report obtained by Just the News.

“The plan included details of how subcontractors would be funded through U.S. companies so that how the funds were spent and allocated would be difficult to track,” the declassified summary stated. “Additionally, contracts would be executed that would be difficult to verify. In this manner, most of the U.S. funding would be diverted to Joe Biden’s election campaign without the ability to track where exactly the funds came from.”

The discovery of alleged 2022 efforts by Ukraine to help Biden’s 2024 campaign comes at a sensitive time for Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who has been working closely with President Donald Trump’s envoys to craft a peace plan to end the four-year war started by Russian aggression in 2022 during the Biden Administration.

Allegations of corruption in Ukraine a recurring theme

While winning praise from the Trump administration for making concessions, Zelenskyy’s administration has still been dogged by new allegations of corruption. Andriy Yermark, the now-former Head of the Office of the President of Ukraine and a longtime close Zelenskyy ally, resigned from his position in late November following searches of his home by two Ukrainian agencies — the National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine (NABU) and the Specialized Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Office (SAP).

“#NABU and #SAPO are conducting investigative actions (searches) at the head of the Office of the President of Ukraine. Investigative actions are sanctioned and are being carried out as part of the investigation,” NABU said in a late November statement on X, with SAPO issuing a similar statement the same day.

The two Ukrainian agencies had announced earlier in November that a “high-level criminal organization operating in [the] energy sector” had been “exposed” as part of “Operation Midas.”

Yermak said in late November that “the investigators have no obstacles” during their search of his home and that “from my side, there is full cooperation.”

“When all attention is focused on diplomacy and on defending ourselves in this war, we need internal strength. Internal strength is the foundation of our external unity and of our relations with the world,” Zelenskyy said in a national address announcing Yermak’s resignation late last year. “And for that internal strength to exist, there must be no reason to get distracted by anything other than defending Ukraine. I want no one to have any questions for Ukraine.”

The Ukrainian president added: “So today, these are the next internal decisions. First. There will be a reset of the Office of the President of Ukraine. The Head of the Office, Andriy Yermak, has submitted his resignation. I am grateful to Andriy for always representing Ukraine’s position on the negotiation track exactly as it should be represented. It has always been a patriotic position. But I want to eliminate any rumors and speculation.”

In addition, sources close to Zelenskyy have floated the idea of assisting the Trump DOJ in its investigation of earlier efforts by a Ukrainian oligarch named Mykola Zlochevsky to curry favor with the Biden family by hiring Hunter Biden as a board member and legal advisor at the Burisma Holdings energy company beginning in 2014, officials told Just the News. The assistance offered by Zelenskyy reportedly included arranging cooperation with certain Ukrainian witnesses who could assist U.S. authorities in resolving unanswered questions regarding the Biden family’s foreign corruption dealings.

President Joe Biden had long pledged that he would not pardon his son, Hunter, who was set to be sentenced for gun and tax convictions. But in December of 2024, the president did it anyway. Biden didn’t just pardon his son for his convictions on tax and gun charges, but for any “offenses against the United States which he has committed or may have committed or taken part in during the period from January 1, 2014, through December 1, 2024.”

Burisma became a hot-button issue when President Trump referenced it in a July 2019 call with Zelenskyy. The call spurred a whistleblower complaint by Eric Ciaramella (also involving Alexander and Eugene Vindman) which sparked Democratic-led impeachment proceedings in the House in 2019. Trump was acquitted by the Senate in early 2020.

Trump and his Republican allies claimed Joe Biden improperly used his position as vice president to successfully pressure Ukraine to fire Ukrainian prosecutor Viktor Shokin to protect his son from an investigation into Burisma. Democrats denied this and argued the focus on Burisma was part of an effort to dirty up then-candidate Biden.

Hunter Biden said in 2019 that he spoke with his father about his position on the Burisma board just once, saying his father told him, “I hope you know what you are doing.” Hunter Biden says he replied, “I do.”

Joe Biden’s son was asked if he would have been asked to be on the Burisma board if his last name was Biden. "Probably not, in retrospect," he said. "But that's — you know — I don't think that there's a lot of things that would have happened in my life if my last name wasn't Biden."

Hunter Biden, Devon Archer and Burisma: An arrangement worth millions of dollars

Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wisc., released a joint report in 2020, with much of its focus on then-Vice President Biden’s role in helping guide the Obama administration’s Ukraine policy while Hunter Biden held a lucrative position on the board of Burisma.

“On April 16, 2014, Vice President Biden met with his son’s business partner, Devon Archer, at the White House. Five days later, Vice President Biden visited Ukraine, and he soon after was described in the press as the ‘public face of the administration’s handling of Ukraine.’ The day after his visit, on April 22, Archer joined the board of Burisma,” Grassley and Johnson wrote. “Six days later, on April 28, British officials seized $23 million from the London bank accounts of Burisma’s owner, Mykola Zlochevsky. Fourteen days later, on May 12, Hunter Biden joined the board of Burisma, and over the course of the next several years, Hunter Biden and Devon Archer were paid millions of dollars from a corrupt Ukrainian oligarch for their participation on the board.”

In his 2021 memoir, Hunter Biden defended Zlochevsky, claiming the Ukrainian “was concerned with protecting his company from Vladimir Putin’s advances” and “wanted to lure more U.S. and European investors” — claiming that was why he was hired. Hunter Biden called the Burisma work “inspiring” and “consequential” while also admitting that “the pay was good” and that “there’s no question my last name was a coveted credential.”

Grassley in 2023 released an FBI-generated record — known as an FD-1023 — dated June 2020 and detailing allegations made by an FBI confidential human source (CHS) about Joe Biden, Hunter Biden, and Zlochevsky.

The CHS — later revealed to be Alexander Smirnov — said Zlochevsky brought Hunter Biden onto the Burisma board to “protect us through his dad, from all kinds of problems.” Regarding the Shokin investigation’s possible impact on Burisma’s ambitions in North America, Zlochevsky reportedly said, “Don't worry Hunter will take care of all of those issues through his dad.”

Grassley recounted that “Zlochevsky reportedly stated that he had to pay $5 million to Hunter Biden and $5 million to Joe Biden, an arrangement he described as ‘poluchili,’ which is Russian crime slang for being ‘forced or coerced to pay,’ according to the document.”

The Biden DOJ charged Smirnov in February 2024 with making a false statement to federal agents and with creating a false and fictitious record. Smirnov pleaded guilty to four felony counts in December 2024, “including creating a false and fictitious record and three counts of tax evasion.”

The Trump DOJ in April 2025 told a federal judge that “the United States intends to review the government’s theory of the case underlying Defendant’s criminal conviction.” 


John Solomon and Jerry Dunleavy

Source: https://justthenews.com/government/security/nsa-intercepted-ukraine-government-messages-discussing-effort-route-money-2024

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Retired General Mike Flynn reaches $1.25M settlement with feds over Russia collusion - John Solomon


​ by John Solomon

Flynn sued the DOJ for $50 million in 2023 for malicious and politicized prosecution.

 

Retired General Mike Flynn on Wednesday settled his lawsuit accusing the federal government of malicious prosecution during the now-discredited Russia collusion case and will receive $1.25 million in compensation.

Flynn, who was forced to resign as President Donald Trump's first national security advisor after a stellar career as a three-star general, overseeing the Defense Intelligence Agency, told Just the News he felt vindicated by the settlement after enduring what he called "the Russian Hoax FBI lawfare against me."

"Nothing can fully compensate for the hell that my family and I have endured over these many years—the relentless attacks, the destruction of reputations, the financial ruin, and the profound personal toll inflicted upon us all," he said. "No amount of money or formal resolution can erase the pain caused by a prosecution that should never have been brought."

"This ordeal stemmed from partisan government officials in a coordinated effort to pursue an innocent man as part of a broader campaign to undermine President Trump and his administration. It was a relentless, partisan pursuit that weaponized federal law enforcement in a brazen and unjust manner," he said.

Flynn sued the DOJ for $50 million in 2023 for malicious and politicized prosecution by Special Prosecutor Robert Muel

Flynn thanked the Trump DOJ for entering into a settlement.

"Yet this settlement goes far in demonstrating that the current Department of Justice—under the leadership of President Trump, Attorney General Bondi, Deputy Attorney General Blanche, and other dedicated departmental leaders—is committed to bringing accountability for the bad acts of those partisan actors. It marks a meaningful step toward righting a profound wrong," he said.

"There should never again be such a brazen attempt to weaponize federal law enforcement against political opponents or innocent citizens. It is essential that we remain guardians of the rule of law. A huge part of that guardianship is accountability—holding those who abuse power to answer for their actions."

Flynn's lawyer, Jesse Binnall, said Flynn "is an American hero and he and his family should have never been put through this hell. That they had the courage to stand firm and fight back against the extremists in the Mueller investigation should be a testament to the strength of American character. 

"In this agreement, the Justice Department is doing more than simply cutting a check, they are admitting that General Flynn was seriously wronged," he added. 


John Solomon

Source: https://justthenews.com/accountability/russia-and-ukraine-scandals/retired-general-mike-flynn-reaches-125m-settlement-feds

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NY AG Letitia James referred again for criminal prosecution for alleged homeowner - Steven Richards and John Solomon

 

​ by Steven Richards and John Solomon

This marks the second time Trump housing official William Pulte has referred James for alleged falsification on her housing records.

 

The director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) has again referred New York Attorney General Letitia James to the U.S. Department of Justice for criminal prosecution, proffering allegations that New York’s top cop may have falsified information on her homeowner’s insurance application. 

The FHFA Director William Pulte, who oversees Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae, and the Federal Home Loan Banks, asked U.S. Attorneys in Florida and Illinois on Wednesday to “authenticate and investigate” the information, according to two letters reviewed by Just the News

Pulte cites a series of social media posts by attorney and President of The Article III Project, Mike Davis, who explained how he believes the evidence laid out in previously published court documents demonstrate that James misled her home insurer when applying for coverage.

You can read the referrals here:



James allegedly classified a home in Norfolk, Virginia as her principal residence 

This is the second time Pulte has turned over criminal referrals to the Justice Department targeting James for alleged wrongdoing related to her homeownership.

The New York Attorney General’s office did not respond to a request for comment from Just the News

Last April, Pulte sent a similar letter to Attorney General Pam Bondi and her deputy Todd Blanche alleging James “falsified bank documents and property records to acquire government-backed assistance and loans and more favorable loan terms.” Among the allegations, Pulte said James classified a home in Norfolk, Virginia as a principal residence even though, as a New York State officer, she was required to maintain residency in the state. 

Later that year, a federal grand jury in the Eastern District of Virginia indicted James, charging her with bank fraud and false statements to a financial institution. However, the charges were later dismissed after a judge ruled that the prosecutor, Lindsay Halligan, was not lawfully appointed, and the merits of the case were not reached. The grand jury declined to issue a new indictment after the disqualification, Just the News previously reported. 

In response to those earlier allegations, James accused President Trump and his administration of “weaponizing the justice system” and called the charges “baseless.” 

The new allegations from Pulte cite court exhibits attached to filings as part of this earlier legal action against James. 

The allegedly false representations made by James

In a letter to the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida, Jason Quinones, Pulte points to a court exhibit, an application for home insurance submitted to Ft. Lauderdale-based Universal Property Insurance, which appears to show that James claimed her Norfolk, Virginia home would be unoccupied for five months out of the year.

However, James’ niece reportedly told the grand jury that she was living rent-free in the home. The niece Nakia Thompson lived there for five years while she was wanted in North Carolina for failing to complete her probation, The New York Post reported.

“[It] appears Ms. James made false representations that her property would be unoccupied five months out of the year,” Pulte wrote. “According to the post, this was false. The house was, in fact, occupied year-round by her niece.” 

In a separate letter to the U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois, Pulte says that one court document shows that James appears to have claimed to Allstate, which is based in that state, that her Virginia home would only be occupied by one individual, when public reporting indicates her niece lived there with three children. 

“[It] appears Ms. James made representations that the house would be occupied by a single adult, with no children. Instead, according to the post, she knew the house was actually occupied by four people - three children and her niece,” Pulte wrote to U.S. Attorney Andrew Boutros. 

“As such, it appears Ms. James may have defrauded the Illinois-based insurance company. We kindly request you authenticate and investigate this matter, if you deem appropriate,” Pulte added.

James is one of the most prominent Trump nemeses to face potential federal investigation. She has sued him several times to oppose his policies as president and sued him in 2022 as a private citizen for a $464 million civil fraud judgment involving his company, alleging he inflated his assets. 

James joins Schiff, Swallwell in group whose anti-Trump lawfare and obstructionism may have backfired 

James is not the only Democratic politician and Trump-critic who has faced criminal referrals from Pulte. 

Last July, Pulte sent a criminal referral targeting Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., alleging the senator may have violated several statutes—including government wire fraud, mail fraud, bank fraud, and false statements to a financial institution—by claiming two homes, one in Maryland and the other in California, as primary residences. 

Just the News had previously reported that then-Congressman Schiff had repeatedly declared in mortgage and election filings that both of his homes were his "principal residence." But, according to the federally-backed lender Freddie Mac, Americans are only allowed to claim just one home as a primary residence, the one where they live for a majority of the year. 

Unlike James, Schiff was never charged with any violations. 

Last November, Pulte also referred California Democratic Rep. Eric Swalwell to the Justice Department for investigation over allegations of mortgage and tax fraud related to a Washington, D.C., home. The referral centers on allegations that Swalwell received several million dollars worth of loans and refinancing by declaring his primary residence as Washington, D.C., instead of California, and suggests the department probe whether the congressman committed mortgage fraud, state and local tax fraud, and insurance fraud, Just the News reported. 

Swalwell sued Pulte over the referral, accusing him of violating privacy laws and the First Amendment in order to refer him to the Justice Department, but later dropped the suit

As Swalwell runs for governor in California, a fellow Democratic candidate, billionaire Tom Steyer, has sought to use the allegations to challenge Swalwell’s candidacy. Steyer has argued that Swalwell doesn't live in the state he wants to run and petitioned the California Secretary of State to enforce that state's residency requirements in the gubernatorial race. 


Steven Richards and John Solomon

Source: https://justthenews.com/government/courts-law/545ny-ag-letitia-james-referred-again-criminal-prosecution-homeowner

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