Mali is taking stock after one of the boldest insurgent operations against the country in more than a decade, with al-Qaeda–linked jihadists and Tuareg separatists claiming joint responsibility for coordinated dawn attacks that struck Bamako and at least four other cities on Saturday. The army said overnight it had repelled the assault and killed "several hundred" attackers, with sweep operations under way in Bamako, Kati and elsewhere. The whereabouts of junta leader Gen. Assimi Goïta remained unknown into Sunday, and his government had yet to appear publicly in any sustained way. The strikes began shortly before 6 a.m. Saturday with explosions and sustained gunfire near the main military base at Kati, where Goïta lives. Witnesses said a vehicle bomb destroyed most of the home of Defence Minister Gen. Sadio Camara; his entourage said he was unhurt. Gunfire also erupted around Bamako's Modibo Keïta International Airport, forcing flight cancellations and the closure of Air...
Iran's front pages on Sunday presented the dramatic collapse of the latest round of Pakistan-brokered diplomacy. President Donald Trump, who had unilaterally extended the ceasefire with Iran just days earlier, abruptly canceled the planned trip by US envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner to Islamabad at the last minute, hours after Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi had already departed Pakistan. Tabnak reported Trump's remarks that he told his team, "We have all the cards. They can call us anytime they want" — a statement Iranian commentators widely read as an attempt to project leverage while talks stall. According to Tasnim News Agency, the semi-official outlet close to the IRGC emphasized that there were "no negotiations with the Americans on the agenda" during Araghchi's Islamabad visit, characterizing the trip as consultations with Pakistani mediators on Iran's own terms rather than any concession to direct US-Iranian talks. Araghchi hims...