They came, they talked, and they left — only to return within a day. That, in a single sentence, is the rhythm of Pakistan's week as the self-styled mediator in the US-Iran conflict. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi shuttled in and out of the capital twice over the weekend, while American envoys, said to be holed up in the Serena Hotel, ultimately never boarded the plane from Washington. The ceasefire holds — extended indefinitely by President Donald Trump — but, as journalist Arifa Noor writes in Dawn, "the stalemate continues, though those in the know insist there is slow and steady progress behind the scenes." The diplomatic backdrop is genuinely historic. The Islamabad Talks of April 11–12 represented the first direct, high-level engagement between the United States and Iran since the 1979 Islamic Revolution — 21 hours of negotiations brokered by Pakistan. They ended without a deal: US Vice President JD Vance said Tehran "chose not to accept our terms,...
In what analysts are calling a watershed moment for Russian influence in the Sahel, Mali's military junta suffered a devastating blow over the weekend of April 25–27, 2026, as coordinated attacks by Tuareg separatists and Al-Qaeda-linked jihadists overran key towns and forced Russia's Africa Corps paramilitaries into a humiliating retreat from Kidal, the symbolic northern stronghold they had seized just two and a half years ago. According to the Le Monde, the assault, launched on April 25 by the Azawad Liberation Front (ALF) and the jihadist group Jama'at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM), struck simultaneously across multiple locations — including Bamako's military district of Kati, the airport at Sévaré, and Gao — marking the largest rebel offensive in Mali since 2012. By Sunday, the pro-independence flag flew over Kidal's fort, the same spot where Wagner mercenaries had triumphantly raised their skull-and-crossbones banner in November 2023. Moscow's local p...