Commandos could be put on the ground to extract nuclear material, US officials tell New York Times; senior Israeli official reportedly says fighting would last ‘days to weeks.’
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Saturday, May 16, 2026
As Iran talks stall, Israel and US prepping to renew war as soon as next week – report
Commandos could be put on the ground to extract nuclear material, US officials tell New York Times; senior Israeli official reportedly says fighting would last ‘days to weeks.’
Atomic Stalemate: Iran Rejects U.S. Demands to Ship Out Nuclear Materials
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi has officially admitted that negotiations over the country's enriched uranium stockpile have reached a total impasse.
Israel set for first-ever F-35 external fuel tank upgrade in force buildup push
New capability would reduce reliance on aerial refueling and improve operational flexibility in long-range missions. But it remains unclear if it would affect aircraft's stealth capabilities.
US announces 45-day extension of Israel-Lebanon ceasefire
State Department announces a 45-day extension of the Israel-Lebanon ceasefire to allow for further talks. Hezbollah continues to violate the ceasefire by firing on northern Israel.
U.S. Shuts Down Lebanon’s Withdrawal Demand as Israel Carves a Permanent 10km ‘Kill Zone’
Lebanon's request for a full ceasefire and Israeli pullout has been flatly rejected by the White House and sources say the rebuke was sharp.
The message delivered to Lebanese representatives was unambiguous: the US has already been working to limit Israeli strikes on Beirut, and it will continue doing so. But any Israeli withdrawal from Lebanese territory is fully conditional on Hezbollah's disarmament. An agreement that sidesteps that issue, American officials said, would only "create the conditions for the next war." Israel and the US did agree to extend the current ceasefire in its existing form to allow negotiations to continue, but on their terms, not Beirut's.
The diplomatic exchange reflects a military reality that is already being physically constructed in southern Lebanon. Israel has established what it calls a "Yellow Line" security zone extending up to 10 kilometers north of the border, giving it control over a line of anti-tank fire and the ability to deploy heavy armor and artillery inside Lebanese territory. Five Israeli maneuvering divisions are currently deployed in Lebanon, the same number that were inside Gaza at the height of that conflict. A source briefed on the matter told NPR that Israel has no intention of withdrawing from the buffer zone for the coming months and potentially years, unless it sees tangible progress on Hezbollah's disarmament. (Ed note: The US got that one right.) (Read More)
IDF destroys Hezbollah terror infrastructure in southern Lebanon
Egypt, Uganda agree to expand Nile water cooperation
El-Sisi said Egypt faces severe water scarcity, with annual per capita water availability falling below 500 cubic meters.
Friday, May 15, 2026
Trump says ‘decimation’ of Iran’s army ‘to be continued’ after he and China’s Xi discuss Hormuz
US President Donald Trump counted “the military decimation of Iran” among his administration’s accomplishments in a social media post on Thursday, adding, “to be continued!” The phrase, included in a lengthy Truth Social post, suggested he may resume the war against Iran after he returns from his trip to China on Friday. A ceasefire took effect in the US-Israeli war with the Islamic Republic in early April, though American-Iranian talks have yet to lead to an agreement. “I am not going to be much more patient,” Trump said in an interview aired on Thursday night on Fox News’ “Hannity” program. “They should make a deal.”
Iran’s FM Araghchi: Tehran has ‘no trust’ in US, will only negotiate if it’s serious
Tehran has “no trust” in the US and is interested in negotiating with Washington only if it is serious, Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi says, as talks on ending the war remain on hold. All vessels can pass through the Strait of Hormuz except those at war with Tehran, Araghchi tells reporters in New Delhi during a visit to attend the BRICS foreign ministers’ meeting, adding that vessels wanting to transit should coordinate with its navy. The situation around the key conduit is “very complicated,” he says.
WATCH: 'All of Israel is ours': Smotrich calls to annex West Bank in Jerusalem Day speech
"The time has come for us to finally erase the lines that distinguish between Areas A, B, and C, the entire Land of Israel is ours," Smotrich said at the Religious Zionist Merkaz HaRav Yeshiva.
IDF striking near Tyre after repeated launches towards Israel
Chief of Staff on eastern border: Prepare for surprise attack
IDF Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir visits General Staff exercise simulating widescale terrorist assault, says military must maintain constant readiness for surprise attacks on Israel’s borders.
CENTCOM: Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis have been cut off from Iran’s weapons support
Before a US Senate committee, Admiral Brad Cooper, head of CENTCOM, stated that the Iranian threat had been "significantly reduced." Iran’s ability to threaten its neighbors and U.S. interests in the region has been “considerably reduced,” CENTCOM Commander Admiral Brad Cooper told a Senate committee on Tuesday.
Egypt Under Pressure: Sisi Struggles to Balance Economic Ruin with Regional War
Thursday, May 14, 2026
Report: US military considering switching name of Iran war to ‘Operation Sledgehammer’ if ceasefire collapses
Operation Sledgehammer: The Pentagon Prepares for a Total Collapse of the Ceasefire
The Pentagon is reportedly planning to rename its military campaign against Iran to "Operation Sledgehammer" in a move that could allow President Trump to bypass legal limits on war powers.
Signs are mounting that the United States is preparing for a return to active combat with Iran as ceasefire negotiations appear on the verge of total collapse. A report on Tuesday indicated that the Defense Department is considering rebranding its regional military effort from "Operation Epic Fury" to "Operation Sledgehammer." This change reflects a growing expectation within the Pentagon that the current pause in major combat operations will not last.
The proposed name change carries significant legal weight under the 1973 War Powers Resolution. This law requires the president to notify Congress within 48 hours of starting combat, starting a 60-day clock for either withdrawal or congressional approval. Because "Operation Epic Fury" was paused at the 40-day mark, a new operation name could legally "reset" the clock, allowing the administration to continue the war without immediate legislative interference.
President Trump has become increasingly aggressive in his public comments regarding the ceasefire. On Truth Social, he labeled Iran’s recent proposals as "TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE!" and told reporters the current diplomatic efforts are on "massive life support." Trump officially rejected the latest offer from Tehran, calling it a "garbage" deal that failed to meet American security requirements. (Read More)
Bolton's Blunt Warning: Iran Talks Are "A Waste of Oxygen" - And the Plutonium Nobody Is Talking About
...While US negotiators have laser-focused on Iran's uranium enrichment program, the 440 kilograms enriched to 60% purity, the centrifuge cascades at Natanz and Fordow, Bolton and a growing chorus of nonproliferation expertsRussiawarn that a second, potentially larger nuclear threat is sitting untouched in a n-built power plant on Iran's southern coast. Russia's state nuclear company Rosatom, which built and has operated the Bushehr reactor for 15 years, has confirmed that 210 tons of spent nuclear fuel are now stored at the site. Cross-referencing that figure with IAEA reactor performance logs, nuclear experts calculate the spent fuel contains enough plutonium to manufacture more than 200 nuclear weapons. That is not a typo. Two hundred bombs. From a civilian power plant. Sitting in a spent fuel pond with, until recently, inspectors visiting only once every 90 days.
...The process of chemically stripping plutonium from spent fuel is not as technically forbidding as it sounds. A 1977 US government assessment found that a facility roughly the size of a basketball court, using technology little more advanced than dairy production, could accomplish the separation. Bolton's position is that all of it is theater. Iran made its strategic decision about nuclear weapons 47 years ago, he argues, and has never wavered, not in its words to diplomats, and certainly not in its actions. After Israel launched a major strike on Iran's nuclear facilities last year, Bolton told CNN: "There was never a chance, let me say that again, never a chance that Iran was going to agree to any kind of deal that we would find acceptable. Diplomacy had no chance, given Iran's objectives." (Read More)
No Strings Attached: Israel Rejects Any U.S.-Iran Nuclear Deal That Limits Action
Energy Minister Eli Cohen has declared that Israel is not bound by any potential U.S.-Iran agreement and will act with full force to neutralize Tehran's nuclear ambitions.
Iranian FM threatens UAE, claims Tehran knew of Netanyahu’s visit to Abu Dhabi
Threatening the UAE, Iran says it knew of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s ostensible visit to Abu Dhabi at the height of the now-suspended US-Israeli campaign against Tehran.
“Netanyahu has now publicly revealed what Iran’s security services long ago conveyed to our leadership,” writes Abbas Araghchi on X, without explaining why Iran didn’t go public weeks ago with the intelligence he claims it had.
“Enmity with the Great People of Iran is a foolish gamble,” continues Araghchi. “Collusion with Israel in doing so: unforgivable.” “Those colluding with Israel to sow division will be held to account.” (Source)
The Battle for Beirut: Hezbollah Plots a Violent Takeover of the Lebanese Capital
Desperate and facing financial collapse, Hezbollah has developed a detailed plan to seize control of Beirut and silence internal critics of the war with Israel.
Board of Peace envoy: Hamas tightening its grip on Gaza, taxing those with nothing left
The Board of Peace’s Gaza envoy said Wednesday that Hamas is consolidating its power in the Strip, while dragging its feet in agreeing to a US-backed framework for handing over its weapons that has led to the stalling of plans to rebuild the war-damaged enclave. “Hamas is consolidating its grip on the population. It is taxing people in the street who have nothing left to give,” Nickolay Mladenov said during a briefing with foreign reporters in Jerusalem. Mladenov held the rare media engagement as the Board of Peace struggles to determine how best to proceed after Hamas again bucked its disarmament proposal at the start of May.
Sources: Saudi Arabia struck Iran-backed militias in Iraq
Sources confirmed to the Reuters news agency on Wednesday that Saudi Arabia and Kuwait launched direct military strikes into Iraq to neutralize Tehran-backed Shiite proxies. The operations, which were conducted alongside the broader conflict involving US and Israeli actions against Iran, targeted the sophisticated drone and missile infrastructure used by militias to terrorize Gulf states. The Reuters report said that Saudi Air Force fighter jets struck militia targets near the Kingdom’s northern border, specifically focusing on sites used to launch projectiles at Saudi energy facilities. These strikes reportedly intensified around the time of the April 7 ceasefire, demonstrating Riyadh's resolve to eliminate threats emanating from its neighbor.
The report further indicated that the retaliation was not limited to the air. Iraqi military assessments suggest that rockets were launched from Kuwaiti territory on at least two occasions. One such operation in April successfully decimated a southern Iraqi facility belonging to the Kataib Hezbollah militia. The strike reportedly killed several terrorists and destroyed a vital hub for Iranian-led communications and drone sorties.
While it remains unclear if the rockets were fired by Kuwaiti forces or the US military stationed there, the actions follow months of escalating frustration. Kuwait summoned Iraq’s representative three times during the conflict to protest cross-border aggression, including the violent storming of the Kuwaiti consulate in Basra. The report comes a day after Reuters revealed that Saudi Arabia carried out a series of unpublicized military strikes against Iran during the height of the recent regional conflict.
According to Western and Iranian officials, the Saudi Air Force targeted Iranian territory in late March, marking the first time the Kingdom has engaged in direct military action on the soil of its chief regional adversary. The strikes were described as "tit-for-tat" retaliation following a series of Iranian-led drone and missile barrages that targeted Saudi civilian infrastructure, airports, and oil facilities. The report on the Saudi strikes came one day after The Wall Street Journal reported that the United Arab Emirates had also launched strikes against Iran during the current conflict. (Source)
Lockheed Martin Triples Missile Production as New Munitions Center Breaks Ground
Lockheed Martin recently broke ground on a new Munitions Acceleration Center in Camden, Arkansas. The mission: Give American workers the tools to build the world’s most advanced missile systems at a volume the world hasn’t seen. Built on a 2.2-million-square-foot campus spanning more than 2,400 acres, this new facility will integrate advanced manufacturing, robotics, and digital twin technologies to drive higher output with greater precision and reliability.
Wednesday, May 13, 2026
Analysis: Oil spill near Iran's Kharg Island still ongoing but may be shrinking
Satellite imagery analyzed by a Japanese company indicates that a likely oil spill spotted off Iran's Kharg Island may still be ongoing, though it appears to be shrinking. The island, located deep inside the Persian Gulf, hosts one of the world's largest oil export hubs. It handles ninety percent of Iran's crude oil exports. The Associated Press reported that, according to expert analysis of satellite imagery provided by the European Space Agency, the oil slick has been spreading off Kharg Island as of Friday. An estimated 80,000 barrels of oil was spilled.
Japanese data analysis firm Ridge-i analyzed satellite imagery taken from May 2 through May 12 using AI. The suspected spill appears in the images as a red formation. The analysis shows that as of last Wednesday, a massive oil spill had occurred off the western and southern coasts of the island. The slick appears to have drifted more than 30 kilometers to the south by Monday.
Satellite images taken on Monday and Tuesday also show what appears to be a fresh slick off the island's eastern coast. This suggests the oil spill may possibly be ongoing, although the overall scale is shrinking. The cause of the spill, which is currently unknown, may have been either an attack or a malfunction of an oil storage facility.
With the situation in Iran remaining tense, efforts to recover the oil are expected to be difficult, raising concerns over the impact on the environment. Ridge-i executive Hatakeyama Waku said oil spills are known to cause serious harm to ecosystems in the immediate vicinity. He added his company will continue to monitor the slick, which he believes is an important mission. (Source)
4.6 magnitude Earthquake jolts Tehran; no casualties, damage reported
Iran Rocked by Overnight Earthquakes
Iran retains access to majority of missile launch sites, US intelligence shows - report
The United States believes Iran has regained access to a majority of its missile sites, according to a New York Times report on Tuesday. The NYT cited senior US officials, who warned that Iran's active missile sites include 30 along the Strait of Hormuz, posing a threat to US naval ships in the area. According to the report, Iran can still use the missile stockpiles in non-operational sites by launching them with mobile launchers, with the country maintaining roughly 70% of its mobile launcher inventory.
Work equipment shortages squeeze Iranian livelihoods
Iranian Terror Commander Makes Surprise Visit to Baghdad
Qassem warns Israel: We will turn the battlefield into hell
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
Trump says Iran ceasefire ‘on life support’ after Tehran submitted ‘garbage’ proposal
He also claimed that Iranian negotiators had also “guaranteed that they wouldn’t obtain] nuclear weapons for a very long period of time,” only to leave that out of Tehran’s official proposal as well. The fact that Trump indicated he would have accepted such a guarantee, even though it was not indefinite, appears to be out of step with his longstanding insistence that he intends to ensure Iran can never obtain a nuclear weapon. Asked whether he still thinks he can make a deal with the current regime, Trump responded in the affirmative, while adding that it is comprised of moderates who desperately want to reach an agreement and “lunatics” who want to keep fighting. (Read More)






























