Two months after the United States and Israel launched joint strikes on Iran on February 28, the front pages of Iranian newspapers on Monday converge on a single, uneasy truth: the war has not ended, but nobody wants it to resume. The widely-read daily Hamshahri captured the prevailing mood with a phrase that has become the editorial shorthand of the moment — "gunpowder diplomacy, a fragile balance between deterrence and war." Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi is in St. Petersburg for talks with Vladimir Putin, peace negotiations with Washington are stalled, the Strait of Hormuz remains a chokepoint reshaping the global economy, and the Iranian rial has collapsed to 1.32 million per dollar. Beneath the official messaging of defiance and unity, Iran's newspapers reveal a country navigating acute economic pain, leadership questions, and a diplomatic standoff in which every move is calculated in terms of pressure, leverage, and the risk of miscalculation. Diplomacy In Motion: ...
IMPORTANT [WITH THE LATEST DEVELOPMENTS]: Mali Junta in Crisis as Defence Minister Killed and Northern City Falls to Rebels
Mali's military rulers were plunged into their gravest security crisis in years on Sunday after a weekend of coordinated nationwide attacks by jihadist fighters and Tuareg separatists killed the country's defence minister and reportedly handed a strategic northern city to rebels. Defence Minister Sadio Camara, a senior member of the ruling junta and seen by many as a potential future leader, was killed Saturday by a car bomb planted outside his home in Kati, a military stronghold roughly 15 kilometres north of the capital Bamako. His second wife and two of his grandchildren also died in the blast, according to relatives. The attack is believed to have been carried out by the al-Qaeda-linked Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims (JNIM). The offensive, which began at dawn Saturday, was synchronised between JNIM and the Tuareg-dominated Azawad Liberation Front (FLA). Targets included the Kati base, Bamako's international airport, and towns across central and northern Mali...