Sunday, May 31, 2026

‘We’ve returned stronger than ever’: Netanyahu hails capture of Beaufort Castle in Lebanon, vows ‘dramatic shift’ in policy on Hezbollah


‘We’ve returned stronger than ever’: Netanyahu hails capture of Beaufort Castle in Lebanon, vows ‘dramatic shift’ in policy on Hezbollah


Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu celebrates the IDF’s recent capture of Lebanon’s historic Beaufort Castle and the surrounding strategic ridge, calling it “a dramatic shift” in Israeli policy as forces push deeper into southern Lebanon amid an expanding ground offensive against Hezbollah.

“The capture of Beaufort is a dramatic stage and a dramatic shift in the policy we are leading,” Netanyahu says in a video message released by his office, adding, “Now my directive is to deepen and expand our hold on areas that had been under Hezbollah’s control.”

The prime minister releases the statement as Hezbollah pounds northern Israel with relentless rocket and drone fire from Lebanon.

Netanyahu recalls that the landmark site “became a symbol of deep division within our society” after Israeli troops captured the castle in one of the first battles of the First Lebanon War in 1982. Israel held the position throughout its 18-year occupation of southern Lebanon, withdrawing in 2000 after years of grinding conflict that cost hundreds of Israeli lives.

“Today, we have returned to Beaufort differently. We have returned united, determined, and stronger than ever,” Netanyahu says. “We have broken through the barrier of fear. We are taking the initiative. We are operating on all fronts — in Syria, Gaza, and Lebanon. We have established security zones beyond our borders in order to protect our communities.”

Netanyahu adds that Israel has eliminated 8,000 Hezbollah terrorists since the Iran-backed group began attacking Israel following the Hamas-led invasion and massacre in October 2023 that sparked the war in Gaza. Three thousand of those operatives were killed since the start of Israel’s war against Iran last June, and seven hundred were killed since last month, Netanyahu says.

“It will take time, but we will complete the mission,” he says.

Thirteen Israelis have been killed since a ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon was announced in mid-April, with the most recent fatality a soldier killed by a Hezbollah drone last night.




France has requested an emergency meeting of the United Nations Security Council after Israeli forces seized the medieval Beaufort castle in Lebanon, the French foreign minister says.

“I have requested an emergency meeting of the United Nations Security Council because, while we recognize Israel’s right, like that of all countries, to self-defense… nothing can justify the continuation of Israeli military operations in Lebanon and its ever-deeper occupation of Lebanese territory,” Jean-Noel Barrot says on the BFMTV channel.



Inside the Ebola Epicenter:


Inside the Ebola Epicenter, the Virus Rages With Little to Stop It



In the cramped, dilapidated Ebola ward, a 5-year-old boy languished on a bare mattress, a tissue stuffed into his nose to stanch the incessant bleeding. His father stood over him, eyes clouded with worry.

A few beds away lay the body of Christiane Bahati, 21, who had died seven hours earlier but had not yet been taken away. Her shoes were still tucked under the bed, her wailing relatives gathered outside the ward doors.

The body, covered by a thin sheet, was highly contagious. Yet hardly anyone in the ward was protected. Relatives came and went, carrying food and water to ailing patients because the hospital had none to give them. A few wore rubber gloves or pulled a scarf across their mouths. Most had nothing at all.

In the next ward lay the hospital’s laboratory technician, also sick. Seven other hospital workers had already died from suspected Ebola. Few of the staff members had ever been trained to fight the disease, and the most rudimentary equipment was in dangerously short supply: tests, protective suits, goggles, masks, even drinking water.

Outside, the sound of hammering broke the hushed silence. Aid workers from Doctors Without Borders were racing to erect isolation tents and disinfection stations.

Dr. Alex Bogole, a Congolese doctor in the hospital’s intensive care ward, was furious.

The virus had been spreading for months, virtually unimpeded, “and this is the best we can do?” he said, the frustration pouring through his protective gear.

This is the epicenter of the Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and the front line is completely overwhelmed.

The Congolese Health Ministry declared the outbreak on May 15, and it has already ballooned into the third largest on record. Two weeks later, the international response is being outpaced by the virus, and there is almost nothing to slow it down. Aid groups warnthat without urgent intervention, this could be the world’s deadliest Ebola outbreak ever.


Dr. Bogole was never trained for this and was angry at everyone — at the Congolese government for failing to detect the outbreak until perhaps six weeks after it began, and at the world, which has barely mobilized help here in Mongbwalu, a remote gold mining town of about 150,000 where the outbreak is believed to have started.

“They hold meetings and meetings,” he said, struggling to contain his disdain. “What is the purpose of these meetings? People are dying, people are getting infected, people are in danger. It’s very slow.”

I arrived here with Arlette Bashizi, a photographer for The New York Times, after taking a bumpy, three-hour journey from the regional capital, Bunia, on what has become the Ebola highway, a rutted dirt road that began spreading the disease long before anyone detected it.

Giant trucks, curling through lush hills, leave blinding clouds of dust. Edgy-looking Congolese soldiers guard checkpoints that are often little more than string. Gold miners and people fleeing rebel conflict stream in and out of Mongbwalu, providing an excellent vector for the spread of the virus.

Through April and into early May, doctors in Mongbwalu found themselves fighting a mysterious disease that was taking dozens of lives in the town. It turned out to be Bundibugyo, a virus that causes Ebola. There is no approved vaccine or treatment.

As of Thursday, at least 1,077 suspected cases and 246 suspected deaths had been recorded in this outbreak, according to the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. More than 400 of those cases are in Mongbwalu, a town in the heart of gold country and surrounded by rebel-held territory here in Ituri Province, in northeastern Congo.


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Are “Energy Lockdowns” Coming?

Are “Energy Lockdowns” Coming to America?


When I first heard the term “energy lockdown” I was surprised and uneasy. I wasn’t quite sure what such a thing would entail but I didn’t have to go very far back into my memory banks to remember another “lockdown” for our own good.

I won’t continuously cover this topic, but it’s important enough for me to step outside my no-more-news bubble to warn you of what may be coming.

The war in the Middle East, particularly the impassable Strait of Hormuz, is threatening global fuel shortages, as tankers are unable to safely transit with their cargo.  To make matters worse, yesterday, Valero’s Port Arthur refinery blew up, sending dark smoke toward the sky and causing the surrounding area to be under a shelter-in-place order.

Here’s what we should know about this refinery.

The Port Arthur Platform was built in 1936 and acquired in 1973. In the heart of the major industrial zone of Port Arthur, Texas, the refinery employs more than 600 people. As one of TotalEnergies’ six refining and petrochemicals platforms worldwide, the Port Arthur Refinery has a daily processing capacity of 238,000 barrels per day and is our largest facility in the United States. The refinery can process heavy crude oil as well as lighter domestic crudes. It also has a dedicated unit to produce low-sulfur fuels, which reduce greenhouse gas emissions. (source)

According to the media and statements from the plant, this was an unfortunate accident that occurred when “an “unforeseeable release of process fluid in Complex 2” led to an ignition event and multiple process unit upsets.”

So, clearly, that event had absolutely nothing to do with the oil crisis and was just a terrible coincidence. It was certainly not the result of a terror attack on that extremely vital plant.


First things first, you may be wondering what the heck an energy lockdown is? Well, lucky for you, we already have some examples which we will get to in a moment.

Whenever I think about the government mandating something, I get flashbacks to the last time that happened. It sparked extreme vitriol and crushed our economy in a way we still haven’t bounced back from. Later, at a Congressional hearing, we would learn from Anthony Fauci, the mastermind behind it all, that they were just making stuff up, and that mandates like “six feet apart” and “masking materials” had no basis in science.

Again, the lockdowns could start in Asia.

While nobody has imposed full work-from-home mandates, such measures are actively being considered.

Pakistan has closed schools for two weeks (we’ve heard ‘two weeks’ before) and is allowing office workers to work from home. Sri Lanka declared Wednesdays to be a public holiday to help make its fuel supplies go further.

Here are some of the draconian measures being considered in Pakistan, where Sindh Local Government Minister Nasir Hussain Shah is leading the charge.

  • Smart lockdowns, first introduced in Pakistan during the CV pandemic, are targeted restrictions aimed at controlling movement and limiting gatherings in specific areas.
  • Under this system, authorities can impose restrictions on individual neighbourhoods, streets, or communities, rather than enforcing a city-wide shutdown.
  • In areas under a smart lockdown, no more than four people are allowed to gather at a time, and only one person per household may leave their home after explaining their reason to law enforcement.
  • Public events, social gatherings, and celebrations are prohibited, while neighbourhoods, and targeted zones may be sealed.

Rationing and restrictions are already being enforced in many countries.

  • Europe’s 50-liter limit: Countries like Slovenia have imposed a strict 50-liter daily cap on fuel for private citizens. Long queues at petrol stations have become the new checkpoints, with police monitoring purchases to prevent hoarding.
  • The four-day mandate: The Philippines, Sri Lanka, and Pakistan have introduced a mandatory four-day workweek for public sector employees. Designed to reduce commuting, the measure ensures fuel is reserved for emergency services.
  • National fuel rationing has been implemented in countries such as Slovenia, Hungary, Sri Lanka, and India, with private citizens limited to between 15 and 50 liters per day.
  • The aviation sector is experiencing massive disruptions, with airlines like United, Air New Zealand, and Lufthansa canceling or rerouting over 40,000 flights this month.
  • In parts of Asia, including the Philippines, Thailand, and Pakistan, governments have mandated work-from-home policies and limited public sector operations to reduce commuting and conserve energy.
  • Meanwhile, countries such as South Korea, Egypt, and Nigeria have imposed government-enforced price ceilings to prevent hyperinflation and keep essential fuel accessible.

It’s also being suggested that Australians work from home and drive more slowly.  The UK is considering lowering speed limits.

Just because this isn’t being publicly discussed in the US doesn’t mean that these things aren’t a possibility as the war that (almost) nobody wanted drags on.



China Could Wipe Out Every U.S. Base In Asia In The Opening Hours Of A War


China Could Wipe Out Every U.S. Base In Asia In The Opening Hours Of A War


Summary and Key Points: America’s network of major bases across Asia — its biggest bet for deterring China — now sits within range of Beijing’s vast missile, drone, and hypersonic arsenal, which dwarfs anything Iran fielded in the recent war.

-Key sites like Guam remain lightly hardened, and analysts, including Hudson’s “Concrete Sky” report, warn that shelters are too few.

-With a massive defense budget request on the table, the urgent question is whether Washington can harden its Pacific bases before China is ready to act.


One of America’s biggest defense investments, and one of the capabilities that the Pentagon believes is its greatest asset in any way with China, might actually be the US military’s greatest vulnerability. That’s a reference to the 30- 40 major named US military bases across Asia. Numerous smaller sites, logistics hubs, and shared facilities support these larger facilities. What’s more, these bases and support facilities house tens of thousands of active-duty military and War Department civilian personnel.


America has spent decades since the end of the Second World War building these key bases throughout the Indo-Pacific. Now, every one of them has gone from being force multipliers for the US military to major strategic liabilities.

That’s entirely because of China’s commitment to its anti-access/area-denial (A2/AD) strategy. This strategy insists upon denying the US military forward bases from where the Americans can launch attacks against Chinese forces that could either be attacking Taiwan or another US ally, like Japan or the Philippines.

Washington got a taste of how easily US military bases in a contested region can go from strategic assets to vulnerabilities in the recent Iran War. The US had established more than a dozen key US military facilities around the Islamic Republic of Iran. The moment hostilities started, though, the Iranians used their potent ballistic missile and drone capabilities to flatten those facilities.

Now, there is real concern in Washington that they will not be allowed to reconstitute the bases in any meaningful way. Due to political issues arising over the Iran War, there is even more worry about the local governments not welcoming the Americans back to their countries.

After all, the US bases in the Arab states made those Arab nations target priorities for Iranian missiles and drones.

Those attacks caused massive damage to the region’s economies.






Hezbollah launches around 30 rockets towards northern Israel


Hezbollah launches around 30 rockets towards northern Israel


Dozens of rockets were fired from Lebanon towards northern Israel on Saturday, including one that was launched toward the Meron area for the first time, and another that hit a commercial center in Kiryat Shmona.

Sirens warning of rocket fire were also activated in Nahariya for the first time in three weeks - and later sounded again in Kiryat Shmona and, for the first time in more than a month, in Karmiel as well.

Earlier, the IDF stated: "The IDF is preparing for the possibility of fire from Lebanon, specifically toward northern Israel, following the advancement of IDF operations in southern Lebanon, and in accordance with the situational assessment."

"The IDF emphasizes that, at this stage, the public should remain vigilant, act responsibly while continuing to adhere to the Home Front Command’s protective guidelines. As of now, there is no change in Home Front Command guidelines. Should there be any change, the IDF will update the public in an orderly manner."

The IDF Spokesperson stated shortly after the sirens that a rocket launched from Lebanon had been intercepted, while another exploded in an open area. Following the sirens in Nahariya and the surrounding area, several additional rockets were intercepted, while others exploded in open areas.

The rockets launched on Saturday evening toward Kiryat Shmona and Karmiel were intercepted. Earlier, at around 3:30 p.m., continuous sirens sounded in the Western Galilee for ten straight minutes due to concern of a UAV infiltration.

In total, since midnight Saturday, there have been more than 25 launches from Lebanon toward Israeli territory. All were intercepted or exploded in open areas, except for the rocket impact overnight in Kiryat Shmona and the UAV impact in a military area in Shomera, with no injuries reported.