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Iran-US Ceasefire on the Brink: War Likely to Resume as Talks Collapse

A fragile ceasefire between the United States and Iran is teetering on the edge of collapse, with Iran's military openly warning that a resumption of hostilities is probable and Washington showing no sign of retreating from its maximalist demands. Nearly four weeks after the two sides reached a shaky truce brokered by Pakistan, diplomacy has stalled, the Strait of Hormuz remains functionally blocked, and both powers are simultaneously negotiating and preparing for renewed combat. A War That May Not Stay Frozen Iran's military headquarters issued its starkest assessment yet on Saturday. As stated by Al Jazeera's correspondent reporting from Tehran, the Iranian military said the resumption of war is "likely as evidence shows the US is not committed" to any agreement or treaty. A senior officer at the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Command echoed that view, telling BBC Persian that renewed conflict is "probable" and that Iran's armed forces are "fully pr...
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Hostile Words, Proxy Wars: Turkish And Israeli Media Trade Blows As Iran Clouds The Horizon

With  Iran's shadow falling across the Middle East and the spectre of a wider regional war growing harder to dismiss, the press organs closest to the ruling establishments in Ankara and Tel Aviv have opened a fresh front of their own — one fought in column inches and social media screeds rather than missiles, though the language deployed by both sides is scarcely less incendiary. The immediate trigger was the interception of the Sumud Freedom Flotilla in Greek waters on Friday. Israeli naval forces boarded vessels carrying roughly 180 pro-Palestinian activists — among them at least 20 Turkish citizens — before the convoy could reach Gaza. The episode ignited a torrent of commentary that laid bare just how deep, and how personal, the estrangement between the two former regional allies has become. In Turkey's pro-government Yeni Şafak, columnist İsmail Kılıçarslan dispensed entirely with diplomatic restraint. Writing hours after the flotilla's detention, he described Israel a...

Israel Watching Syria Rearm — and Waiting for Washington's Green Light

Syria is quietly rebuilding the very military infrastructure that Israel destroyed when the Assad regime collapsed — and the Israeli Air Force knows it. According to a major disclosure published Friday by The Jerusalem Post, Israeli military sources have confirmed that Damascus is gradually reconstituting its radar networks and air-defense systems, less than eighteen months after Israel reduced them to rubble. The warning, buried near the end of a sweeping operational report, carries a pointed strategic implication: Israel stands ready to strike again, and the main constraint is not capability — it is a green light from Washington. The disclosure came wrapped in a broader set of statistics the Israel Defense Forces released about the scale of its air campaign since October 7, 2023. The Israeli Air Force dropped 135,000 bombs across multiple fronts over the course of the conflict, The Jerusalem Post reported, citing IDF figures. Of those, 23,860 strikes were called in directly by ground...

Senior Iranian Cleric Declares Nuclear Talks Over

Tehran's Friday Prayer leader has declared the era of nuclear negotiations closed, vowed revenge for Iran's martyrs, and announced plans for a new legal framework over the strategically vital Strait of Hormuz — signaling a hardening of Iran's clerical establishment against any diplomatic compromise with Washington. The sermon, delivered at Tehran University by Hojatoleslam Mohammad Javad Haj Ali Akbari, carried the full weight of Iran's theocratic power structure. As Tehran's Friday Prayer leader, Haj Ali Akbari occupies one of the most politically significant clerical posts in the Islamic Republic — a position appointed directly by the Supreme Leader, making Friday sermons a closely watched barometer of official state policy. According to Mehr News Agency (MNA), Iran's state-affiliated news outlet, the cleric framed the current moment as "a decisive historic juncture that will shape the fate of the world's oppressed." The Cleric and the State Appa...

Despite the Looming Threat of War, Pakistan Continues to Facilitate Negotiations Between Iran and the US

With the United States and Iran teetering between war and peace, Pakistan has emerged as a critical diplomatic intermediary in one of the world's most dangerous standoffs, playing a central role in keeping alive what fragile channels of communication remain between Washington and Tehran. According to Dawn's editorial published on May 2, 2026, a ceasefire brokered largely through Pakistan's efforts continues to hold, even as negotiations remain deadlocked and both sides have signaled readiness to resume hostilities. Iranian and US blockades of the Strait of Hormuz persist simultaneously, sending fresh inflationary shockwaves across Europe, Asia, and global commodity markets. Pakistan's Pivotal Role On Friday, Iranian authorities transmitted a new set of diplomatic proposals to the United States through Pakistan, according to media reports cited by Dawn. US President Donald Trump indicated dissatisfaction with the latest offer — a response mirroring his earlier rejection ...

SPECIAL PODCAST EPISODE: Spring Flowers & Sniper Fire. The Bloody Battle for May Day in the Eastern Mediterranean

To most of the world, May 1st is a gentle celebration of spring or a well-deserved day off for workers. But if you scratch the surface of the Eastern Mediterranean, you won’t just find parades and barbecues—you’ll find sniper fire, tear gas, and a century-long battle for the soul of the modern state. Welcome to a gripping Deep Dive into the hidden history of May Day. In this fascinating episode, we explore how a simple demand for an eight-hour workday transformed into a bloody, geopolitical battleground across Greece, Turkey, Cyprus, Israel, and Palestine. Join our hosts as they unpack the profound paradox of May 1st. You’ll discover how ancient Greek flower festivals violently collided with tragic Nazi executions in 1944. You'll uncover the chilling deep-state conspiracy behind Turkey’s 1977 Taksim Square massacre, where half a million workers ran for their lives. We’ll also reveal a forgotten moment of incredible unity in Cyprus, where Greek and Turkish miners stood shoulder-to-s...

Bloody May Day in Taksim: A Turkish Century of Workers, Bans, and Bullets

If Greek Protomagia carries the wreath alongside the wound, Turkish May Day carries almost no wreath at all. From its first cautious appearance in the late Ottoman Empire to the locked-down Taksim Square of the 2020s, 1 May in Turkey has been overwhelmingly a political date — alternately celebrated, banned, rebranded, drenched in blood, and, in the end, fenced off. The thread that runs through it is a single square: Taksim, the public space the state and the workers' movement have spent half a century fighting over. Ottoman Beginnings The labour movement under Ottoman rule grew up unevenly across an empire that was barely industrial. The first strike at the Tophane shipyard in 1872, the secret "Amele-i Osmani Cemiyeti" (Union of Ottoman Workers) founded in 1894, and a wave of strikes after the 1908 restoration of the constitution all preceded any May Day rally. The Young Turk government answered in 1909 with a Strike Law designed to choke off the new workers' organisa...

May Day in Palestine: A Workers' Movement Between Ottomans, the Mandate, and the Nakba

Palestine's May Day cannot be told as one continuous national holiday. It runs through four distinct political orders — late Ottoman, British Mandate, post-1948 Israel and Jordan, and the post-1967 occupation — and at the centre of all four sits the same difficulty: a Palestinian Arab labour movement that grew up alongside, and in opposition to, a rival Zionist labour movement that controlled most of the formal economy. Where the Greek and Turkish stories turn on a single square, the Palestinian story turns on a port, a railway, and a country that no longer exists. Late Ottoman Roots Under Ottoman rule, Palestine had little of what could be called a working class in the modern sense — a few hundred seasonal agricultural labourers, artisans in soap factories, mills, and pottery workshops in the towns. The 1909 Ottoman Associations Law, passed after the constitutional restoration of 1908, allowed artisans and workers to form cooperative associations to protect their interests and rai...

Athens on May Day: Flowers, Workers, and the Shadow of 1944

Every 1 May, Greece pauses for Protomagia — a holiday that braids three distinct strands into a single day. It is at once an ancient spring festival, a modern labour holiday, and, in Athens above all, the anniversary of one of the darkest reprisals of the Nazi occupation. The result is a date charged with both joy and mourning, a national habit of going outdoors that runs alongside an unhealed historical wound. An Ancient Welcome To Spring The  folk layer is the oldest. Protomagia descends from the Anthesteria, the Athenian festival of flowers dedicated to Demeter and Persephone — Persephone's annual return from the underworld marking the rebirth of nature. The month's name itself comes from the goddess Maia, whose name carries the sense of "mother" and "midwife." The most enduring custom is the wreath: families gather wildflowers in the countryside and weave them into round stefania that are hung on the front door, where they remain until they are burned in...

May Day in Colonial Cyprus: Mines, Strikes, and a Movement Under the Crown

In Cyprus the wreath and the picnic of Protomagia look much like they do across the Greek world, but the political layer arrived later and on harsher terms. Through the first half of the twentieth century, the island was first a British protectorate (1878) and then a Crown colony (1925); May Day on Cypriot soil grew up not as a recognised public holiday but as something organised in the teeth of a colonial administration that read "workers' rally" as "communist agitation." The story is one of mines, dockyards, and an underground that kept resurfacing. First Stirrings Under The Crown The earliest organised labour on the island took shape among the most exploited workforces: copper and asbestos miners in the Troodos, quarrymen and dockhands in Larnaca and Limassol. Small unions and clandestine circles formed in the 1910s and 1920s. By 1925 — the year Cyprus became a formal Crown colony — unauthorised demonstrations in Nicosia were already demanding an eight-hour d...