US-Israel war on Iran
Jordan Strikes Drug, Arms Smugglers in Syria Border Region
Jordan’s military has carried out targeted strikes against drug and weapons smuggling networks operating along its northern border with Syria, escalating a campaign that reflects growing regional impatience with the narcotics trade that flourished during Syria’s long war.
According to Jordan’s state news agency, Petra, the strikes on Wednesday hit sites described as “launch points” used by trafficking groups to move arms and drugs into Jordanian territory.
The military said the operation neutralized several traffickers and destroyed factories and workshops linked to organized smuggling networks. The attacks were conducted on the basis of what Petra described as “precise intelligence” and in coordination with regional partners, though no countries were named.
Jordan’s armed forces issued a blunt warning alongside the announcement, saying they would continue to confront threats “with force at the appropriate time and place,” signaling that the operation was not an isolated action but part of a sustained security doctrine along the Syrian frontier.
On the Syrian side, state broadcaster Al-Ikhbariah reported that Jordanian air strikes hit locations in the southern and eastern countryside of Suwayda province, a sparsely governed border region long associated with smuggling routes.
A resident of the area told AFP that the bombardment was “extremely intense,” targeting farms and corridors used to move illicit goods. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said jets and helicopters were involved and that damage was visible at an abandoned military barracks once used by the former Assad regime.
There were no immediate reports of casualties, and authorities in Damascus offered no official response.
Independent Syrian outlet Zaman Al Wasl reported that at least one farm believed to be used as a drug storage site was struck. The outlet noted that Jordan has carried out similar operations in the past, underscoring Amman’s growing willingness to act unilaterally when cross-border trafficking is perceived as a direct national security threat.
At the center of the conflict is captagon, an addictive amphetamine-type stimulant that became synonymous with Syria’s war economy. Before the removal of President Bashar al-Assad in December 2024, captagon production had evolved into the regime’s most lucrative export, generating billions of dollars for Assad, his inner circle, and allied militias, according to analysts.
Although Damascus consistently denied involvement, the drug flooded markets across the Middle East, particularly in Gulf states, prompting record seizures and diplomatic pressure on Syria and Lebanon.
Jordan, positioned directly along key trafficking routes, has increasingly framed the drug trade as a form of asymmetric warfare—one that fuels criminal networks, destabilizes border communities, and undermines state authority. The latest strikes suggest that, even after Assad’s fall, Amman sees little evidence that the smuggling infrastructure has disappeared.
Instead, Jordan’s message appears clear: as long as trafficking networks survive in Syria’s borderlands, the battle against captagon and arms smuggling will not stop at the frontier.
US-Israel war on Iran
Top Iranian Spy Chief Eliminated as War Targets Inner Circle
US-Israeli Strikes Kill IRGC Intelligence Chief in Latest Escalation. Another senior figure down. The war is moving deeper into Iran’s power structure.
TEHRAN — U.S. and Israeli strikes have killed the intelligence chief of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), Iranian authorities said Monday, marking a further escalation in the conflict now entering its sixth week.
The IRGC said Major General Majid Khademi, head of its intelligence organization, was killed in an early-morning strike. In a statement posted on its official channels, the Guards described the attack as a “criminal” operation carried out by U.S. and Israeli forces.
Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz later confirmed the killing and said Israel would continue targeting senior Iranian figures, vowing to pursue leaders “one by one.”
Khademi was a senior figure within the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, overseeing intelligence operations tied to internal security and regional activities. His death follows a series of strikes targeting high-ranking officials since the war began on February 28.
Among those killed in earlier attacks was Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei, along with several senior military commanders.
The latest strike comes as fighting between Iran, the United States, and Israel continues across multiple fronts, including missile exchanges and airstrikes targeting military and infrastructure sites.
Iran has responded to the campaign with missile and drone attacks against Israel and regional targets, raising concerns about further escalation.
There was no immediate comment from U.S. officials on the reported killing.
US-Israel war on Iran
Lebanon War Expands a Conflict Already Spinning Out of Control
One war just became two. Lebanon is now burning—and the region is stretching toward something bigger.
BEIRUT / TEL AVIV — What began as a war centered on Iran has now spilled decisively into Lebanon, opening a second front that is rapidly reshaping the trajectory of the wider conflict.
As fighting enters its sixth week, Hezbollah’s intervention has transformed the war from a contained confrontation into a multi-theater crisis—one that is stretching military resources, deepening humanitarian costs, and complicating any path to de-escalation.
The escalation was swift. Within days of U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran, Hezbollah launched rockets and drones into northern Israel, framing the move as solidarity with Tehran. Israel responded with sustained airstrikes across Lebanon, followed by ground incursions into the south.
Since then, the conflict has intensified into a grinding exchange.
Israeli forces have targeted Hezbollah’s infrastructure, command centers, and weapons depots across Beirut’s southern suburbs, Tyre, and Nabatieh, while expanding operations along the border. Hezbollah, in turn, has deployed rockets, drones, and anti-armor strikes, aiming to impose costs and divert Israeli focus from the Iran theater.
The human toll is rising sharply. More than 1,000 people have been killed in Lebanon, according to local authorities, with hundreds of thousands displaced in a country already strained by economic crisis. In northern Israel, communities have again been pushed into a cycle of sirens and sheltering, reviving memories of previous wars.
At the strategic level, the second front introduces a dangerous paradox.
Hezbollah entered the fight weakened from earlier confrontations, yet still capable of sustaining prolonged pressure through its arsenal of rockets and drones. Israel, while maintaining air superiority, now faces a more complex battlefield—one that divides attention between Iran and Lebanon while raising the risk of overextension.
For Lebanon, the consequences are existential. The government has attempted to distance itself from Hezbollah’s actions, even moving to restrict its military activities, but its ability to assert control remains limited. The result is a familiar but increasingly fragile reality: a state pulled into war by forces it does not fully command.
Regionally, the implications are widening. The Lebanon front risks drawing in additional actors, from Syria to other non-state groups, while reinforcing the interconnected nature of the conflict. What happens in southern Lebanon now directly affects calculations in Tehran, Washington, and Tel Aviv.
The broader outcome is becoming clearer.
This is no longer a single war with multiple incidents. It is an interconnected conflict system—where escalation in one theater fuels escalation in another, and where local battles carry global consequences.
And as the second front intensifies, one conclusion is hard to ignore: the longer the war expands, the harder it becomes to contain.
Top stories
Fire Over Ahvaz, Sirens in Haifa—A War Expanding Without Limits
Week six—and the war is widening, not ending. Cities targeted, infrastructure threatened. Where does this stop?
TEL AVIV / TEHRAN — The war between Iran, the United States and Israel has entered its sixth week with no sign of de-escalation, as airstrikes deepen inside Iranian territory and missile fire continues to reach Israeli towns, underscoring a conflict expanding in both scope and risk.
Iranian state media reported that U.S. and Israeli strikes targeted Qassem Soleimani International Airport in Ahvaz, a key facility in the southwestern province of Khuzestan. Local officials described the strike as part of a sustained campaign against strategic infrastructure. Additional attacks were reported near Isfahan, where Iranian sources said at least five people were killed, while explosions in Karaj—near Tehran—highlighted the growing proximity of strikes to the capital.
The U.S. military, through United States Central Command, released footage showing the interception and destruction of Iranian drones it said were targeting American personnel across the region.
Iran responded with missile launches toward Israel. Air defense systems intercepted projectiles over Haifa, according to Israeli authorities, though debris fell in multiple locations. Sirens sounded across northern and southern Israel, reflecting the continued reach of Iran’s retaliatory capabilities despite weeks of sustained bombardment.
Israeli Defense Minister Yisrael Katz signaled a further escalation, warning that Israel would intensify strikes on Iranian leadership, military assets and critical infrastructure if attacks persist. His remarks point to a strategy that increasingly blends battlefield pressure with targeted decapitation of command structures.
At the same time, Donald Trump renewed threats to expand the conflict’s scope, warning that U.S. forces could strike Iranian power plants and bridges if Tehran does not reopen the Strait of Hormuz. The warning marks a potential shift toward targeting infrastructure with civilian impact—raising the stakes of an already volatile conflict.
Since the war began on February 28, both sides have broadened their targeting frameworks. U.S. and Israeli operations have focused on degrading Iran’s missile systems, industrial base and command networks. Iran, in turn, has pursued a strategy of distributed retaliation, using missiles and drones to strike Israel and regional actors while maintaining pressure on global energy routes.
The result is a war without a clear off-ramp.
The continued closure of the Strait of Hormuz remains a central flashpoint, amplifying economic risks and increasing the likelihood of wider international involvement. Meanwhile, the geographic spread of strikes—from Ahvaz to Haifa—signals a shift toward deeper, more sustained confrontation.
Six weeks in, the trajectory is clear: diplomacy is absent, escalation is accelerating, and the conflict is moving toward a broader and more dangerous phase.
US-Israel war on Iran
Iran Warns Region Will “Burn” as Trump Threatens Infrastructure Strikes
A deadline. A warning. And a region on edge. What happens Tuesday could reshape the war.
TEHRAN / WASHINGTON — The war rhetoric between Iran and the United States escalated sharply on Sunday, with Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf warning that the entire Middle East could “burn” if tensions continue to spiral, just as Donald Trump set a firm deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
In a public message directed at Trump, Ghalibaf accused Washington of pushing the region toward catastrophe, saying the U.S. president’s “reckless moves” risk dragging both countries—and their allies—into a broader and more destructive conflict. He also criticized Trump for aligning closely with Benjamin Netanyahu, arguing that the current trajectory would destabilize the entire region.
“The whole region is going to burn,” Ghalibaf wrote, framing Iran’s position as a defensive response to external pressure and calling instead for recognition of Iranian rights and an end to escalation.
The warning came as Trump raised the stakes with a new ultimatum. In an interview, he said Iran has until Tuesday evening to reopen the Strait of Hormuz—a critical global energy chokepoint—or face direct U.S. strikes on key infrastructure.
“If they don’t do something by Tuesday evening, they won’t have any power plants and they won’t have any bridges standing,” Trump said, signaling a potential shift toward targeting assets with significant civilian impact.
He later reinforced the message in a brief social media post: “Tuesday, 8:00 P.M. Eastern Time!”
The exchange highlights a rapidly narrowing window for de-escalation.
At issue is the Strait of Hormuz, through which a substantial portion of the world’s oil and gas flows. Iran’s effective closure of the route since late February has triggered sharp increases in energy prices and intensified global concern over supply disruptions.
The confrontation now reflects more than a military standoff—it is a strategic test of resolve on both sides.
Iran appears to be leveraging the blockade as a pressure tool, while the United States is signaling willingness to escalate beyond military targets into economic and infrastructure warfare. That shift raises the risk of a wider regional conflict, especially as allied states and non-state actors remain on high alert.
The immediate question is whether either side steps back before the deadline.
The broader concern is what happens if neither does.
US-Israel war on Iran
Deadlines, Drones, and Denial: A War Expanding Faster Than Strategy
Ultimatums are getting louder. Strategy is getting quieter. This war is drifting into something bigger.
WASHINGTON / GULF — Six weeks into the war between the United States, Israel, and Iran, the conflict is no longer defined by a single battlefield. It is now a layered crisis—military, economic, and psychological—spreading faster than any coherent strategy to contain it.
At the center of the latest escalation is a familiar pattern: deadlines without resolution. President Donald Trump has issued repeated ultimatums demanding Iran reopen the Strait of Hormuz, warning of strikes on critical infrastructure if compliance does not follow. Tehran has rejected the pressure, framing the blockade as leverage rather than retreat.
The result is a standoff that is no longer just geopolitical—it is economic. With energy flows disrupted, the war is feeding directly into global price shocks, from fuel to food, turning distant military decisions into immediate pressure on households worldwide.
At the same time, the battlefield itself is becoming harder to interpret. Iranian claims of downing additional U.S. aircraft—beyond the confirmed F-15E incident—remain contested, highlighting a growing “fog of war” where information is weaponized alongside missiles.
More consequential, however, is the shift in targeting.
Recent strikes have moved beyond traditional military objectives to include bridges, industrial facilities, and research centers—sites that blur the line between civilian and strategic infrastructure. Critics warn this trend risks normalizing a broader definition of acceptable targets, one that could deepen humanitarian costs and complicate any future diplomatic settlement.
Inside policy circles, the biggest concern is not escalation alone—but direction.
There is no clear end state. Analysts increasingly argue that prolonged pressure may not weaken Iran’s strategic posture but instead harden it, potentially accelerating nuclear ambitions rather than deterring them. At the same time, domestic skepticism in the United States is growing, with lawmakers questioning both the objectives and the absence of a defined exit strategy.
The paradox is becoming unavoidable.
The war is expanding in scope—geographically, economically, and politically—while strategic clarity is shrinking. Military operations continue to intensify, yet diplomacy remains fragmented and reactive.
Even as global attention briefly shifts to moments of progress elsewhere—such as renewed space exploration—those contrasts only sharpen the reality on the ground: a conflict moving forward without a roadmap.
The longer this imbalance holds, the greater the risk that the war stops being a campaign—and becomes a condition.
Analysis
How the UAE Became the Frontline of a War It Tried to Avoid
US-Israel war on Iran
Oil Shock Deepens as Iran War Disrupts Global Supply
Energy Shockwave—War Sends Oil Surging and Global Economy to the Edge.
The world’s oil market is no longer reacting to the war—it is being reshaped by it.
Since strikes began on February 28, the conflict between the United States, Israel, and Iran has triggered what analysts describe as the most severe supply disruption in modern oil market history. At the center of the shock is the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow maritime corridor that normally carries roughly one-fifth of global oil supply.
The impact has been immediate and global.
Shipping traffic through the strait has slowed dramatically, as attacks on vessels, soaring insurance costs, and security risks forced operators to halt or reroute shipments. While Gulf producers have attempted to redirect exports through alternative pipelines, those routes can replace only a fraction of the lost volume—leaving a daily shortfall estimated in the tens of millions of barrels.
Prices have surged accordingly.
Brent crude, which traded around $70 per barrel before the war, has climbed above $100 and at times pushed toward $120, with sharp daily swings driven by military developments and political statements. In extreme trading moments, regional crude benchmarks have spiked even higher, reflecting the uncertainty surrounding supply.
For consumers, the effects are already visible.
Fuel prices have risen sharply across major economies, with gasoline costs climbing by as much as 30 percent in some markets. Higher diesel and jet fuel prices are feeding into transportation and logistics costs, raising the price of goods and tightening household budgets.
The disruption extends beyond oil.
Liquefied natural gas exports from the Gulf have been interrupted, sending prices in Europe and Asia sharply higher. Petrochemical and fertilizer markets are also under strain, creating ripple effects across agriculture and manufacturing sectors worldwide.
The broader economic consequences are beginning to take shape.
Rising energy costs are fueling inflation just as central banks were attempting to stabilize prices. Economies heavily dependent on energy imports—particularly in Asia—face the risk of shortages, rationing, and slower growth. Financial markets have responded with volatility, while energy companies have seen gains tied to higher prices.
For policymakers, the options are limited.
Strategic reserves can provide temporary relief, and increased production outside the Gulf offers some buffer. But neither can fully compensate for prolonged disruption in one of the world’s most critical energy corridors.
The outlook now hinges on the trajectory of the war.
A partial reopening of the Strait of Hormuz could ease prices later this year, though recovery would likely be gradual. A prolonged conflict—or further escalation affecting additional chokepoints—could push prices significantly higher, raising the risk of a broader global slowdown.
Strategic Reflection
The energy shock reveals a deeper shift.
For decades, the global economy operated on the assumption that key energy routes, however vulnerable, would remain open. That assumption no longer holds.
The war has transformed energy flows into strategic leverage—tools of pressure rather than passive channels of trade.
And in doing so, it has exposed a central vulnerability of the global system:
A single chokepoint, once disrupted, can ripple through every economy—faster than diplomacy can contain it.
Top stories
UAE Plant Shuts After Intercepted Missiles Rain Down
Gulf Energy Hit Indirectly as UAE Halts Borouge After Air Defense Interceptions.
Operations at a major petrochemical facility in the United Arab Emirates were suspended Sunday after falling debris from intercepted missiles and drones sparked fires at the site, authorities said.
Officials in Abu Dhabi confirmed that multiple fires broke out at the Borouge petrochemicals plant following what they described as “successful interceptions” by air defense systems responding to incoming threats.
Emergency teams were deployed to contain the fires, and no injuries were reported.
The UAE’s defense ministry said its air defenses were actively engaging missile and drone attacks launched from Iran, as the regional conflict enters its sixth week and continues to expand beyond direct military targets.
Authorities said operations at the Borouge facility have been halted while damage assessments are carried out. The plant is a key part of the UAE’s petrochemical sector, producing materials used across global manufacturing supply chains.
The incident highlights a growing pattern across the Gulf, where infrastructure has been affected not only by direct strikes but also by debris from intercepted projectiles.
Across the region, governments have reported similar incidents involving damage to energy facilities and industrial sites as air defense systems respond to incoming attacks.
The latest developments come amid heightened tensions tied to the ongoing U.S.-Israel war with Iran, which has disrupted shipping routes, increased pressure on energy markets and drawn Gulf states further into the conflict.
Officials have not indicated how long operations at the Borouge plant will remain suspended.
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