Friday, March 6, 2026

Gulf food strategy tested as Iran war snarls shipping routes


Gulf food strategy tested as Iran war snarls shipping routes


 Wealthy Gulf states are facing their biggest food security challenge since the 2008 global food crisis, as the Iran conflict threatens ports and disrupts shipping through the Strait Of Hormuz
The war is testing strategies adopted after ​2008, when soaring food prices prompted Gulf nations to shift toward import-dependent policies reliant on pouring cash into agricultural investments abroad.

That strategy did away with prior expensive programmes that sought to ‌raise domestic production of strategic grains but ran up against the region's brutal climate and lack of water. Saudi Arabia, for example, began to scale back a domestic wheat-growing programme in 2008 to become almost exclusively reliant on imports.
Now with global shipping disrupted and airspace closed in many countries in a region that is 80%-90% dependent on food imports, price surges and scarcity of some goods are expected.
"With over 70% of GCC foodstuffs being imported through the Strait of Hormuz, Gulf states face shortages if the war persists," said Neil ​Quilliam, associate fellow at think tank Chatham House.
"While GCC countries have taken steps to diversify suppliers and ensure sufficient stores to withstand disruption, this can only last several months. At this point, price increases ​and longer lead times will start to hit the markets."

HORMUZ CHOKE POINT

Analysts warn that even temporary blockages in Hormuz that force rerouting from major ports to smaller ones will ⁠create strains.
Most major Gulf ports, including Dubai's Jebel Ali and primary ports in Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar and the Saudi Gulf coast, are located where most incoming traffic would have to pass through the Hormuz waterway.
Iranian attacks struck ​many of those lifelines including Jebel Ali, the region's largest container port, this week, suspending operations for hours.
"The biggest immediate effect will be due to the blockade of Jebel Ali, serving about 50 million people," Ishan Bhanu, lead agricultural ​commodities analyst at Kpler, said about the Dubai port that also serves as a re-export hub to the region and beyond.
UAE ports outside the strait have limited capacity. Khorfakkan can handle 5 million twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs) and Fujairah less than 1 million and would be hard-placed to make up for capacity lost at Jebel Ali or Abu Dhabi’s Khalifa Port.
"Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain and Iraq effectively become landlocked and will depend on overland routes through Saudi Arabia," Bhanu added, warning of costly congestion.

'CRAZY' PRICE SPIKE ON BANANAS, OTHER ​PERISHABLES

Those bottlenecks are yet to show and the UAE has said its strategic reserves of vital goods cover four to six months of needs. It urged residents to report unjustified price increases through a dedicated hotline.
Supermarket staff ​told Reuters shelves remain largely stocked, though suppliers are taking longer to replenish certain products. Dubai this week temporarily relaxed truck-movement restrictions to maintain the flow of goods.
The start of Iran's strikes on the Gulf on Saturday prompted many to hoard and ‌caused a ⁠temporary dip that further fueled panic, a dry run for what could come.
"It is worth noting that perception risk matters and even if stocks are sufficient now, public runs on supermarkets can spook the public," Quilliam said.

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Thursday, March 5, 2026

Dozens of IRGC officers reportedly flee Lebanon over fears they could be targeted



Dozens of IRGC officers reportedly flee Lebanon over fears they could be targeted


Times of Israel is liveblogging Friday



Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps announces a wave of missile launches on the commercial hub of Tel Aviv, according to Iran’s state news agency IRNA.

“Missiles headed toward Tel Aviv,” IRNA says, reporting an IRGC statement on “a combined missile and drone attack… targeting locations in the heart of Tel Aviv.”

Despite the IRGC statement, there are no immediate warnings from the Israel Defense Forces of an incoming missile attack.

Qatar says it thwarted drone attack on US airbase

Qatar’s defense ministry says that a drone attack on Al Udeid airbase, the biggest US base in the Middle East, has been thwarted.

Iran has been launching drones and missiles toward US bases in the region after Israeli and US strikes on the Islamic Republic since Saturday killed its top leaders.

Dozens of IRGC officers said to flee Lebanon over fears they could be targeted

Dozens of officers in Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps have fled Lebanon in the past two days over fears they could be targeted by Israel, according to Axios.

Citing senior Israeli defense officials and a third source with knowledge of the matter, the news site says most of the officers are from the Quds Force — the overseas branch of the IRGC — and serve as military advisers to Hezbollah, with significant sway over the Iran-backed Lebanese terror organization’s operations.

“We expect the IRGC exodus from Lebanon to continue over the next several days,” one of the Israeli defense officials is quoted as saying.

The report adds that a small group of Iranian officers are expected to remain in Lebanon to main the Quds Force’s presence and liaise with Hezbollah

IDF launches ‘broad wave’ of Tehran strikes on ‘Iranian terror regime infrastructure’

In an overnight statement, the military announces that it has launched a “broad wave” of strikes in Tehran on “infrastructure of the Iranian terror regime.”

Iranian state TV reports explosions in several parts of the city.

Rocket alerts repeatedly sound in northern towns

Several rocket alerts have sounded in northern towns in the last few minutes, indicating incessant cross-border fire overnight.

From 2:14 a.m. to 2:39 a.m. seven separate alarms sounded in towns near the Lebanon border, including Kiryat Shmona, Metulla and Misgav Am.

There are no immediate reports of impacts or injuries.

Meanwhile, the IDF appears to be pressing a wave of strikes in Beirut’s southern suburbs, with several explosions heard over the last two hours.

The army earlier ordered an evacuation warning for the area, a stronghold of the Hezbollah terror group, and announced that it had begun a wave of strikes against Hezbollah infrastructure there.

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Rare magnitude 4.9 earthquake rattles rural Louisiana, marking strongest in state’s history


Rare magnitude 4.9 earthquake rattles rural Louisiana, marking strongest in state’s history


 Residents across parts of Louisiana were rattled by a 4.9 earthquake on March 5, marking it the strongest earthquake ever in the state’s history.

The U.S. Geological Survey said that the earthquake struck at 5:30 a.m. CT about 36 miles southeast of Shreveport, Louisiana at a depth of 3.1 miles.

With more than 1,100 reports of shaking so far, the USGS says residents as far north as Shreveport, along with some in southern Arkansas and western Texas, have felt the tremors.

It’s unknown at this time if any damage, injuries or deaths have been reported.

The Red River Parish Sheriff's Office highlighted the strength in a Facebook video reiterating the record as the "largest recorded earthquake on Louisiana soil." 

Officials said, in recent years, the area has experienced several small earthquakes. While most have been minor, events like this serve as a reminder that earthquakes can occur unexpectedly at any time.

VIDEO: Amir Tsarfati – Iran War Breaking News


VIDEO: Amir Tsarfati – Iran War Breaking News
(video begins at 4:22 after ads)


Amir Tsarfati gives a pertinent war update.

The Fog of War Just Went Digital: Can The Images In Your Feed Be Trusted?


The Fog of War Just Went Digital: Can The Images In Your Feed Be Trusted?
PNW STAFF



In just five days, a surge of manipulated war imagery has flooded platforms like X, Facebook, and Telegram. Here are five of the most significant examples circulating right now:

1. The "Destroyed" U.S. Radar System in Qatar

One of the most viral images claimed to show an American radar installation in Qatar obliterated by an Iranian drone strike. The post was amplified by the official account of the Tehran Times and quickly approached one million views.

The side-by-side satellite comparison looked authoritative. Clean. Clinical.

But analysis by the Financial Times found glaring signs of AI manipulation. Vehicles visible in a year-old "before" image remained frozen in identical positions in the supposed "after" shot. Shadows fell at the exact same angle. Parts of the building's structure appeared digitally altered while surrounding terrain remained untouched.

Historical satellite archives showed no structural change to the site in years.

The image was persuasive -- and false.

2. The "Inferno" at the U.S. Base Near Erbil

Another image spread rapidly claiming to show catastrophic damage to a U.S. base near Erbil, Iraq. The photo depicted an enormous fireball and thick black smoke engulfing structures.

It was dramatic enough to feel like a turning point in the conflict.

Yet when compared to verified, recent satellite imagery of the location, the layout did not match. Certain buildings were misaligned. Damage patterns contradicted known strike reports. Analysts flagged it as AI-enhanced -- likely built from an existing image but exaggerated digitally to intensify the destruction.

It wasn't just documentation.

It was dramatization.

3. The Colorized "Exclusive" Satellite Shot

A widely circulated image appeared to be a high-resolution color satellite photo attributed to Airbus and watermarked with MizarVision.

The vibrant colors made military positions appear stark and active. Terrain looked freshly disturbed. Equipment stood out sharply.

But the image does not appear on MizarVision's official channels, and the company has warned about accounts falsely distributing imagery under its name.

Experts believe the image may be an AI-upscaled and colorized version of an older black-and-white capture. That subtle addition of color matters. Black-and-white imagery often leaves ambiguity. Color injects clarity -- and emotional weight -- even when the clarity is artificial.

Perception shifts. Conclusions harden. And all of it may be synthetic.

4. The "Rubble" Image of Ayatollah Khamenei

Perhaps the most explosive image of the past five days claimed to show the body of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei being pulled from beneath collapsed debris.

Here is a great example of mixing truth with lies as Khameni was buried in the rubble after US/Israeli airstrikes.  However the viral images of his body being pulled out was Ai generated.

The image spread rapidly before any official confirmation. Digital irregularities -- inconsistent lighting, warped debris geometry, and unnatural hand proportions  No verified news organization has authenticated the scene but it spread like wildfire across the internet as many people had heard about him being killed in the rubble and were more susceptible to such images.

5. The Fabricated Missile Strike Montage

In the past several days, a composite "satellite overview" montage circulated widely claiming to show simultaneous missile impacts across multiple Middle Eastern sites in a single coordinated barrage.

The graphic stitched together multiple overhead images with glowing impact markers and smoke plumes rising from several bases at once. It was presented as real-time satellite confirmation of a sweeping offensive.

Analysts quickly noticed inconsistencies: identical smoke plumes cloned across different locations, mismatched resolutions between sections of the image, and lighting angles that could not have occurred simultaneously across distant geographies.

The montage was not a captured moment.

It was assembled -- engineered for maximum psychological effect.

And because it looked technical and data-driven, many viewers assumed it was credible.

The Pattern Is the Point

What makes these five cases alarming is not just that they exist -- it's how quickly they travel and how authoritative they appear.

Satellite imagery feels neutral. Mechanical. Scientific.

But the barrier to fabrication has collapsed. What once required state intelligence resources can now be produced with consumer-level AI tools.

And in modern information warfare, a convincing image can move markets, inflame public opinion, or pressure governments before the truth has time to catch up.

The war for territory may unfold overseas.

But the war for your perception is unfolding in your feed -- one synthetic image at a time.