Zero Hedge

New Bill Opens Door For Killer AI Weapons

New Bill Opens Door For Killer AI Weapons

Authored by Jon Fleetwood,

A newly introduced U.S. Senate bill would allow the military to deploy autonomous lethal artificial intelligence systems by granting the Secretary of Defense the authority to override its own restrictions.

Senate Bill S.4113—the “AI Guardrails Act of 2026,” introduced March 17, 2026 by U.S. Senator Elissa Slotkin (D-MI)—is being presented as a framework to limit how the Department of Defense uses AI.

But the actual text includes a built-in waiver mechanism that enables those same systems to be approved and used under national security justifications.

This means a Pentagon-approved AI system could independently identify and engage targets, making life-and-death decisions without real-time human input.

There is no language in that waiver clause limiting where the system can be used, whether targets are foreign or domestic.

The bill has been read twice in the Senate and referred to the Senate Armed Services Committee, where it now awaits further consideration.

The waiver raises questions about how often “extraordinary circumstances” will be invoked, who ultimately decides when autonomous lethal force is justified, and what meaningful limits—if any—remain once that authority is exercised.

Waiver Authority Built Into the Core Restriction

The bill prohibits the use of AI for:

  • Launching or detonating nuclear weapons

  • Domestic monitoring or targeting without legal basis

  • Using lethal force through autonomous weapon systems without human oversight

Immediately following that restriction, the bill states:

The Secretary of Defense “may waive the prohibitions… for up to one year” and renew that waiver if “extraordinary circumstances affecting the national security of the United States require the waiver”

How It Works

The decision to authorize autonomous lethal systems is placed with the Secretary of Defense.

  • Waivers last up to one year

  • Waivers can be renewed

  • Congress is notified after issuance

  • Notifications may include classified components

The bill requires certification that the system’s error rate does not exceed that of human operators performing comparable functions.

Operational Scope

The waiver applies to:

  • Development

  • Field deployment

  • System modifications

It also covers changes to:

  • Mission sets

  • Target sets

  • Operational environments

  • Algorithmic behavior

Each of those changes can trigger continued or expanded authorization under the same waiver structure.

Sponsor Background

The bill was introduced by Sen. Elissa Slotkin, whose background includes:

  • CIA analyst

  • Department of Defense official

  • Acting Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs

Her professional history is directly tied to the national security institutions governed by the bill.

Campaign Finance Alignment

Slotkin’s donor base includes multiple sectors tied to AI development, autonomous systems, and the broader defense-tech pipeline enabled by this bill.

According to OpenSecrets data, top contributors include:

  • Alphabet Inc ($96,669) and Amazon ($53,771)—major AI developers and federal cloud contractors

  • General Motors ($57,081) and Ford ($54,020)—advancing autonomous and robotics systems applicable to military use

  • University of Michigan, Michigan State, Harvard, Stanford—key hubs for federally funded AI and defense-related research

  • Kirkland & Ellis ($52,360) and WilmerHale ($81,463)—heavily involved in structuring large-scale federal and defense contracts

The bill authorizes deployment of autonomous AI systems under a renewable waiver controlled by the Pentagon.

The companies and institutions funding Slotkin are directly tied to building the AI, infrastructure, and legal frameworks required to support that expansion.

The legislation opens the door, and her donor base sits inside the ecosystem that stands to operate and profit within it.

Bottom Line

The legislation places a restriction on autonomous lethal AI systems while granting the Secretary of Defense—currently Pete Hegseth—the authority to waive that restriction under “national security” conditions.

That waiver:

  • Is controlled by a single Pentagon official

  • Can be renewed indefinitely

  • Applies to real-world deployment, targeting, and system evolution

  • Contains no language limiting where such systems may be used

Congress is notified after the fact, not required to approve.

The authority to deploy autonomous lethal AI systems sits inside the same section that claims to restrict them.

Tyler Durden Thu, 04/02/2026 - 07:20

New Bill Opens Door For Killer AI Weapons

New Bill Opens Door For Killer AI Weapons

Authored by Jon Fleetwood,

A newly introduced U.S. Senate bill would allow the military to deploy autonomous lethal artificial intelligence systems by granting the Secretary of Defense the authority to override its own restrictions.

Senate Bill S.4113—the “AI Guardrails Act of 2026,” introduced March 17, 2026 by U.S. Senator Elissa Slotkin (D-MI)—is being presented as a framework to limit how the Department of Defense uses AI.

But the actual text includes a built-in waiver mechanism that enables those same systems to be approved and used under national security justifications.

This means a Pentagon-approved AI system could independently identify and engage targets, making life-and-death decisions without real-time human input.

There is no language in that waiver clause limiting where the system can be used, whether targets are foreign or domestic.

The bill has been read twice in the Senate and referred to the Senate Armed Services Committee, where it now awaits further consideration.

The waiver raises questions about how often “extraordinary circumstances” will be invoked, who ultimately decides when autonomous lethal force is justified, and what meaningful limits—if any—remain once that authority is exercised.

Waiver Authority Built Into the Core Restriction

The bill prohibits the use of AI for:

  • Launching or detonating nuclear weapons

  • Domestic monitoring or targeting without legal basis

  • Using lethal force through autonomous weapon systems without human oversight

Immediately following that restriction, the bill states:

The Secretary of Defense “may waive the prohibitions… for up to one year” and renew that waiver if “extraordinary circumstances affecting the national security of the United States require the waiver”

How It Works

The decision to authorize autonomous lethal systems is placed with the Secretary of Defense.

  • Waivers last up to one year

  • Waivers can be renewed

  • Congress is notified after issuance

  • Notifications may include classified components

The bill requires certification that the system’s error rate does not exceed that of human operators performing comparable functions.

Operational Scope

The waiver applies to:

  • Development

  • Field deployment

  • System modifications

It also covers changes to:

  • Mission sets

  • Target sets

  • Operational environments

  • Algorithmic behavior

Each of those changes can trigger continued or expanded authorization under the same waiver structure.

Sponsor Background

The bill was introduced by Sen. Elissa Slotkin, whose background includes:

  • CIA analyst

  • Department of Defense official

  • Acting Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs

Her professional history is directly tied to the national security institutions governed by the bill.

Campaign Finance Alignment

Slotkin’s donor base includes multiple sectors tied to AI development, autonomous systems, and the broader defense-tech pipeline enabled by this bill.

According to OpenSecrets data, top contributors include:

  • Alphabet Inc ($96,669) and Amazon ($53,771)—major AI developers and federal cloud contractors

  • General Motors ($57,081) and Ford ($54,020)—advancing autonomous and robotics systems applicable to military use

  • University of Michigan, Michigan State, Harvard, Stanford—key hubs for federally funded AI and defense-related research

  • Kirkland & Ellis ($52,360) and WilmerHale ($81,463)—heavily involved in structuring large-scale federal and defense contracts

The bill authorizes deployment of autonomous AI systems under a renewable waiver controlled by the Pentagon.

The companies and institutions funding Slotkin are directly tied to building the AI, infrastructure, and legal frameworks required to support that expansion.

The legislation opens the door, and her donor base sits inside the ecosystem that stands to operate and profit within it.

Bottom Line

The legislation places a restriction on autonomous lethal AI systems while granting the Secretary of Defense—currently Pete Hegseth—the authority to waive that restriction under “national security” conditions.

That waiver:

  • Is controlled by a single Pentagon official

  • Can be renewed indefinitely

  • Applies to real-world deployment, targeting, and system evolution

  • Contains no language limiting where such systems may be used

Congress is notified after the fact, not required to approve.

The authority to deploy autonomous lethal AI systems sits inside the same section that claims to restrict them.

Tyler Durden Thu, 04/02/2026 - 07:20

New Warning Sign: 1 In 4 Workers Have Cut 401k Contribution Rate

New Warning Sign: 1 In 4 Workers Have Cut 401k Contribution Rate

Another light on America's economic dashboard is blinking red, as money-pinched workers are cutting their 401k contribution rates. The news follows our earlier report on hardship withdrawals from the cornerstone retirement savings accounts hitting a record high. Critically, these numbers don't reflect what workers are doing right now -- amid war-driven gas price-hikes and worries about the economy. 

According to new data from Dayforce's State of Retirement Savings 2026 report, in 2025, Americans trimmed their contribution rates to 401k and similar plans from 9.2% to 8.9%. While the decline was relatively modest, it was a widespread phenomenon, with more than one in four workers reducing their contributions. Employees earning between $50,000 and $150,000 were most likely to have eased back. The participation rate slipped from 78.6% in 2024 to 77.5%. The decreases come despite wider use of automatic enrollment in retirement plans, and increasingly-common auto-escalation features that ratchet up contributions each year.  

Want an even better-proportioned one for yourself -- the mug, that is? Get yours at the ZeroHedge Store today and support our work

"When you are struggling day to day, it's hard to focus on your long-term goals," Matt Bahl, vice president at the Financial Health Network, told CBS News. "We're really seeing the crunch for those middle-income earners — it speaks to the affordability crisis."

Dayforce cautioned that employers' concern about the trend should go beyond future retirement security, and include their workers' present-day financial stress. "[It] can influence engagement, productivity, and retention," said the company, which offers a cloud-based "Global Human Capital Management" platform. As 2025 ended, roughly half of Americans in an Allianz Life survey said they had more financial stress than they did a year ago.   

via Dayforce's "The State of Retirement Savings 2026"

Reinforcing that picture of growing financial stress, loan use increased more than 20% since 2022. The Dayforce study didn't cover hardship withdrawals, but Vanguard's How America Saves 2025 study found that hardship withdrawal activity "increased to a new high" of 6% in 2025, up from 4.8% in 2024 and about 2% before the pandemic. In part, that trend was facilitated by a regulatory change -- in 2018, Congress nixed a requirement that participants first take a 401(k) loan before they could take a hardship withdrawal. 

Men's 2025 savings rate topped women's -- 9.6% to 8.2% -- though that gap was wider a few years ago. Asians had the top savings rate (10.4%), with whites close behind (10.1%), followed by blacks (6.0%) and then Latinos (4.7%). Conversely, 28.7% of blacks and Latinos collectively had an active loan from their retirement accounts, compared to 15.9% of whites. No loan data was given for Asians.  

Watch for all these indicators to keep trending down: Cost-of-living effects of the US-Israeli war on Iran are poised to grow stronger as the global oil shockwave steadily moves closer to America's shores.  

Tyler Durden Thu, 04/02/2026 - 06:55

New Warning Sign: 1 In 4 Workers Have Cut 401k Contribution Rate

New Warning Sign: 1 In 4 Workers Have Cut 401k Contribution Rate

Another light on America's economic dashboard is blinking red, as money-pinched workers are cutting their 401k contribution rates. The news follows our earlier report on hardship withdrawals from the cornerstone retirement savings accounts hitting a record high. Critically, these numbers don't reflect what workers are doing right now -- amid war-driven gas price-hikes and worries about the economy. 

According to new data from Dayforce's State of Retirement Savings 2026 report, in 2025, Americans trimmed their contribution rates to 401k and similar plans from 9.2% to 8.9%. While the decline was relatively modest, it was a widespread phenomenon, with more than one in four workers reducing their contributions. Employees earning between $50,000 and $150,000 were most likely to have eased back. The participation rate slipped from 78.6% in 2024 to 77.5%. The decreases come despite wider use of automatic enrollment in retirement plans, and increasingly-common auto-escalation features that ratchet up contributions each year.  

Want an even better-proportioned one for yourself -- the mug, that is? Get yours at the ZeroHedge Store today and support our work

"When you are struggling day to day, it's hard to focus on your long-term goals," Matt Bahl, vice president at the Financial Health Network, told CBS News. "We're really seeing the crunch for those middle-income earners — it speaks to the affordability crisis."

Dayforce cautioned that employers' concern about the trend should go beyond future retirement security, and include their workers' present-day financial stress. "[It] can influence engagement, productivity, and retention," said the company, which offers a cloud-based "Global Human Capital Management" platform. As 2025 ended, roughly half of Americans in an Allianz Life survey said they had more financial stress than they did a year ago.   

via Dayforce's "The State of Retirement Savings 2026"

Reinforcing that picture of growing financial stress, loan use increased more than 20% since 2022. The Dayforce study didn't cover hardship withdrawals, but Vanguard's How America Saves 2025 study found that hardship withdrawal activity "increased to a new high" of 6% in 2025, up from 4.8% in 2024 and about 2% before the pandemic. In part, that trend was facilitated by a regulatory change -- in 2018, Congress nixed a requirement that participants first take a 401(k) loan before they could take a hardship withdrawal. 

Men's 2025 savings rate topped women's -- 9.6% to 8.2% -- though that gap was wider a few years ago. Asians had the top savings rate (10.4%), with whites close behind (10.1%), followed by blacks (6.0%) and then Latinos (4.7%). Conversely, 28.7% of blacks and Latinos collectively had an active loan from their retirement accounts, compared to 15.9% of whites. No loan data was given for Asians.  

Watch for all these indicators to keep trending down: Cost-of-living effects of the US-Israeli war on Iran are poised to grow stronger as the global oil shockwave steadily moves closer to America's shores.  

Tyler Durden Thu, 04/02/2026 - 06:55

France Approves Record Number Of Asylum Applications In 2025, Up 12% YoY

France Approves Record Number Of Asylum Applications In 2025, Up 12% YoY

Via Remix News,

The latest data released by the National Court of Asylum reveals a historic statistical milestone: asylum grants in France have reached an unprecedented peak.

In 2025, a record 78,782 individuals were granted asylum, marking a 12 percent increase over the previous year. The recognition rate has also climbed to an all-time high of 52.1 percent – or 47.1 percent when excluding unaccompanied minors.

The initial stage of the asylum process is managed by the French Office for the Protection of Refugees and Stateless Persons (OFPRA). If a claim is denied, applicants may appeal to the National Court of Asylum. While various forms of protection exist, the ultimate goal for many is the status of “refugee,” as it opens rights similar to those of the French in most areas, including social welfare, education, and housing.

The asylum system remains highly accessible, despite President Emmanuel Macron saying year after year that France needs to reduce immigration, just as he did in 2023.

“Are we flooded with immigration? No. You cannot say that. But the current situation is not sustainable, and we need to reduce immigration significantly, starting with illegal immigration. We have a duty to deliver,” the French president said at the time.

Polling shows the vast majority of French want a reduction in immigration, and even a majority of women want zero immigration, both legal and illegal.

France already has the largest Muslim population in Europe, leading to serious cultural, societal, and even security problems. Unlike policies debated or implemented in nations like Italy or Denmark, which seek to reduce the ability for individuals to apply for asylum, France has very generous laws, including allowing those already present on French soil to apply for asylum directly. This creates a significant challenge for the state, as even when applications are denied, authorities have an extremely difficult time removing people. Macron, for instance, stated his goal was a 100 percent deportation rate. France’s actual deportation rate has remained in the teens since then, averaging around 15 percent.

In fact, France has gone from record to record in terms of overall immigration every single year. Last year, Remix News reported that a record 6 million foreigners live in France, after a record 400,000 migrants arrived in the country in 2024. Earlier this year, Remix News reported that a record number of first-time residency permits were issued in 2025.

Nevertheless, despite soaring public pressure, more asylum applications are being approved than ever. Even during the peak of the 2015 migration crisis, France did not grant asylum at these levels. Wars continue to be a major factor. For the second consecutive year, Ukrainians represent the largest group of asylum seekers, followed closely by nationals from the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Afghanistan.

Beyond geopolitics, the increasingly broad jurisprudence of the National Court of Asylum plays a pivotal role.

In 2025, the court recognized automatic refugee status for all people from the Gaza Strip, then from the West Bank.

In other words, Palestinians have almost virtually unlimited access to French territory.

The court also recognized an automatic right to women from Iran and Somalia, which are deemed unfriendly states for women.

Similar protections were extended to homosexual individuals from Egypt, Guatemala, and, as of late 2024, Sri Lanka.

Once again, this liberal attitude towards asylum is not backed by the French public, with polling showing that 61 percent of the French want the right of asylum restricted in the country.

According to the BVoltaire publication, there is an “urgent call to reform. Proponents argue that France must consider renegotiating international conventions and amending the Constitution, asserting that both the efficiency of the State and the preservation of French identity are currently at risk.”

Read more here...

Tyler Durden Thu, 04/02/2026 - 03:30

Ayatollah Breaks Silence, In Written Message Praises Hezbollah & Shia Leaders Of Iraq

Ayatollah Breaks Silence, In Written Message Praises Hezbollah & Shia Leaders Of Iraq

The new, younger Ayatollah Khamenei - who may have been wounded in the early days of US-Israeli strikes, hasn't been seen in any public way, not even on TV, throughout the war. There have not so much as been any official recent images of him circulated.

But Mojtaba Khamenei has apparently been issuing some limited written statements, mainly encouraging foreign proxies in their joining the war against US and Israeli forces in the region. State media has indicated he's not making public appearances given the ongoing relentless bombing campaign and the Islamic Republic's wartime footing.

via PressTV

After a long period of relative silence, a message from Khamenei was publicized on Monday. In the message attributed to him, he "expressed his appreciation to the supreme religious authority (in Iraq) and the people of Iraq for their clear stance against aggression against Iran and their support for our country," Iran’s ISNA news agency said, referring to the Iraq-based Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani. Sistani is based in Iraq and has long been a highly revered Shia cleric in the region.

The 56-year old Khamenei has on Wednesday apparently broken his silence again, this time praising Hezbollah for joining the war against Israel. Hezbollah has been launching hundreds of rockets on northern and central Israel, amid an emerging ground campaign in southern Lebanon, also as Israel bombs Beirut from the air.

In the new words carried by Iranian state media, he praised Hezbollah for its "perseverance, steadfastness and patience" against "the most ruthless enemies of the Islamic world."

Meanwhile, the CIA and Mossad are said to be trying to uncover Mojtaba Khamenei's whereabouts and status. His 86-year old father did not appear to have been in hiding at all when he was slain by airstrike on the very first day of Operation Epic Fury.

The most likely explanation could be that the younger Khamenei is directing the war from a much more secure and hidden setting, for example a deep underground bunker - or in a remote part of the country. 

Iran's Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, via AFP

But some analysts have questioned why he wouldn't make a video address, even if pre-recorded, offering to the world proof that he is a alive and is running the country and war. As for the most visible day-to-day leader, this is parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf.

Tyler Durden Thu, 04/02/2026 - 02:45

Indians Are Online Bragging About Scamming Europe's Education System

Indians Are Online Bragging About Scamming Europe's Education System

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

Europe is literally paying Indians hundreds of euros a month to “study” while its own students can’t afford rent and are drowning in debt.

In a now-viral video, an Indian student in Europe boasts about the arrangement. He explains how the EU provides him with 1400 euros every single month that covers rent, travel, and meals, with zero student debt, while he still saves 600 euros every single month

He walks through what he calls “elite scholarship secrets,” noting that a simple bachelor’s degree, a valid passport, and basic English proficiency suffice — adding that “IELTS is not always mandatory” and a certificate from some random school abroad will do.

The poster highlighted the post with clear frustration: “literally bragging about scamming the system with a degree that’s worth less than a high school diploma in the west… total subversion of our education system and you are the one footing the bill. Peak comedy.”

In follow-ups, the same account pointed out that the individual admits “you don’t need to be a topper to get 1400 euro a month… a 75% gpa from a third world uni — literally a mediocre 6.5/10 here… you don’t even need a real English test.”

This reflects a broader pattern visible online where some Indians treat European scholarships and student visas as an easy backdoor. 

Other posts have referenced credential issues in India, including claims that one can simply buy degrees and credentials in India and use them to secure educational places in Europe with a visa.

The same dynamic has played out for years in the UK. Former universities minister Jo Johnson previously slammed the high drop-out rates among Indian and Bangladeshi students — the highest among international cohorts — with concerns that “one in four” drop out to take up jobs while remaining on student visas.

He called for stricter rules requiring overseas students to prove they can support themselves for the full duration of their course to prevent abuse.

More recently, UK Indo-Pacific Minister Seema Malhotra flagged a surge in student asylum claims as clear “visa abuse.” She stated: “We’ve seen visa abuse in the case of legal routes, where people have gone legally and then sought to overstay when their visas weren’t extended.”

Official figures showed around 16,000 international students applied for asylum last year after completing courses, with another 14,800 in the first half of 2025. 

Indian student numbers to the UK have already fallen amid tighter controls.

Reform leader Nigel Farage has repeatedly called out the absurdity of the student visa route, including how it has allowed foreign students to bring large numbers of dependents.

In one exchange, he put it plainly: “If you come to university in Britain, you can’t just bring your Mum with you.” 

He highlighted the previous policy that saw 460,000 study visas issued in 2023 along with 144,000 dependents, describing it as “absolutely batty” and noting that universities had become “drunk on foreign money.” 

Farage argued this setup does little to benefit British students and contributes heavily to net migration figures.

Farage has repeatedly argued that the economic case for mass migration has collapsed, pointing out how it drags down GDP per capita and leaves average Britons poorer despite headline growth figures.

This fits a wider picture. A report from the Centre for Migration Control revealed that 1.6 million migrants in the UK are unemployed or economically inactive, costing taxpayers £8.5 billion a year — a figure that does not even include asylum accommodation or foreign student subsidies.

The analysis described the situation as “the very definition of a Ponzi scheme.” 

Europe and the UK have spent years importing large numbers of students under the banner of “excellence” and economic benefit. Instead, taxpayers subsidize stipends and visas while native young people struggle with debt and housing costs. 

When the arrivals treat the system as a joke — openly bragging about minimal effort for maximum payout — and even bring extended family on the back of student visas, the subversion becomes impossible to ignore.

The response must be straightforward: close the loopholes, enforce real standards, deport those gaming the rules, and put citizens first. Continuing the current approach only accelerates the burden on working people and erodes trust in institutions.

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Tyler Durden Thu, 04/02/2026 - 02:00

Why The Shield Of The Americas Matters Now: Noem's Latin American Visit Signals A New Security Doctrine

Why The Shield Of The Americas Matters Now: Noem's Latin American Visit Signals A New Security Doctrine

Authored by Duggan Flanakin via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The rapid evolution of U.S. national security strategy in the Western Hemisphere has taken a decisive turn with the launch of the Shield of the Americas—a multinational initiative that is already reshaping diplomatic, military, and law enforcement cooperation across the region.

Soldiers stand guard during a visit of special envoy of the U.S. Shield of the Americas Program Kristi Noem outside the Carondelet Palace in Quito, Ecuador, on March 25, 2026. Rodrigo Buendia/AFP via Getty Images

The importance of this initiative has come into sharper focus in recent weeks, following former Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem’s reassignment as special envoy and her engagements with Ecuadorian leadership, as well as meetings with leaders across Latin America.

Far from a symbolic gesture, the Shield of the Americas represents a strategic recalibration grounded in urgent realities: transnational crime, migration pressures at their origin, and in the process, intensifying geopolitical ’soft power' competition.

But at its core, the Shield of the Americas is a coordinated security coalition designed to combat drug cartels, disrupt trafficking networks, and address illegal migration through joint intelligence and military cooperation. Its formation in March 2026 brought together more than a dozen nations from Latin America and the Caribbean, signaling a renewed emphasis on hemispheric alignment, at a time when these threats have become transnational to an unprecedented degree.

The timing is not coincidental. The United States continues to face unprecedented challenges tied to fentanyl and synthetic opioid trafficking—much of it linked to cartel networks operating across borders. These organizations are no longer localized criminal enterprises; they are sophisticated, multi-billion-dollar operations with global reach.

The Shield’s emphasis on intelligence sharing and coordinated enforcement acknowledges a simple truth: no single country can address this threat alone.

This is where Noem’s visit becomes especially significant.

Ecuador, her final stop, has emerged as a frontline state in the fight against narcotrafficking, with its geographic position making it a key transit hub for drugs moving from South America to North American and European markets. Recent joint U.S.-Ecuador operations underscore both the urgency of the challenge and the necessity of partnership.

In turn, the Shield provides the institutional framework to scale such cooperation—transforming ad hoc engagements into sustained, strategic collaboration.

Critically, the initiative also reflects a broader geopolitical imperative. The Western Hemisphere is increasingly contested terrain, with China expanding its economic and political influence through infrastructure investments, telecommunications, and resource extraction. The Shield of the Americas explicitly seeks to counter this influence by strengthening alliances and reinforcing U.S. leadership in the region.

In this sense, the initiative is not only about security—it is about shaping the future alignment of the Americas in a rapidly evolving global order.

Skeptics have raised concerns about the militarized aspects of the Shield, noting that its emphasis on coordinated military action represents a departure from more traditional approaches centered on law enforcement. Yet this critique overlooks the scale and sophistication of the threat landscape.

Cartels today operate with capabilities that rival those of insurgent groups, leveraging advanced technology, financial networks, and paramilitary tactics. Addressing such threats requires a commensurate response.

Moreover, the Shield is not solely a military construct. It is a platform for comprehensive engagement—encompassing intelligence sharing, economic cooperation, and governance initiatives. By aligning participating countries around shared objectives, it creates the conditions for more effective, coordinated action across multiple domains.

Noem’s role as special envoy is central to this effort. Her mandate is not merely diplomatic; it is operational, tasked with translating high-level agreements into actionable partnerships on the ground. Her track record has her primed for success. And this week, her engagement with Ecuadorian leadership exemplified this approach, reinforcing bilateral ties while advancing the broader objectives of the coalition.

Ultimately, the importance of the Shield of the Americas lies in its recognition of interconnected realities. Drug trafficking fuels migration; migration strains border systems; geopolitical competition exploits instability. Addressing these challenges in isolation is no longer viable.

The Shield offers a model rooted in collective action, shared responsibility, and strategic alignment. In doing so, it marks a significant evolution in U.S. foreign policy toward the region, one that acknowledges both the risks and the opportunities of a more integrated hemispheric approach.

As Noem’s visit demonstrates, the success of this initiative will depend not on rhetoric, but on execution.

If the Shield can translate its ambitious vision into tangible results—disrupting cartels, strengthening partnerships, and stabilizing key regions—it may well prove to be one of the most consequential security initiatives in the Americas in decades.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times or ZeroHedge.

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/01/2026 - 23:25

China Tests World's Heaviest 7-Ton Cargo Drone With 1,850-Mile Range For Recon Ops

China Tests World's Heaviest 7-Ton Cargo Drone With 1,850-Mile Range For Recon Ops

Authored by Aamir Khollam via Interesting Engineering,

China has pushed further into heavy unmanned aviation with the first flight of the Changying-8 (CY-8), which it claims is the world’s heaviest cargo drone.

China's Changying-8 (CY-8) cargo drone.

The aircraft combines high payload capacity with short-runway performance, targeting logistics operations across remote, high-altitude, and island regions.

The newly tested Changying-8 (CY-8) blends high payload capacity with short runway performance, signaling a push toward flexible, all-terrain aerial supply systems.

The aircraft completed its first test flight on Tuesday in Zhengzhou, located in central China’s Henan province.

It lifted off after a short ground run of 280 meters and stayed airborne for about 30 minutes.

According to state broadcaster CCTV, engineers used the flight to verify key onboard systems, including avionics, propulsion, and intelligent flight controls.

Built for heavy payloads

The CY-8 stands out for its size and carrying capability. It reaches a maximum take-off weight of 7 tonnes. The drone itself weighs 3.5 tonnes and can carry an equal load.

Its airframe stretches 17 meters long with a wingspan of 25 meters. Engineers designed a fully enclosed cargo bay with a volume of 18 cubic meters.

The aircraft includes both front and rear access doors, allowing faster turnaround during loading and unloading operations.

CCTV described the platform as an “unmanned aerial heavy truck.” The drone relies on twin turboprop engines and supports short take-off and landing operations.

This design allows it to operate on basic runways with limited infrastructure.

“This cargo drone is highly adaptable to its environment, uses twin turboprop engines, and has the ability to take off and land on simple runways in high-altitude areas, as well as perform short take-offs and landings,” said Cai Hangqing, chairman of Beijing Northern Changying UAV Technology, as reported by SCMP.

Developers built the CY-8 to support both civilian and military roles. The drone can switch payload configurations quickly, making it suitable for a wide range of missions.

CCTV reported that operators can deploy it for emergency communications, weather modification, and electronic reconnaissance.

It can also support logistics, disaster relief, and supply delivery in difficult terrain.

The drone’s design focuses heavily on high-altitude performance.

It can operate in regions such as the Tibetan Plateau, where elevations range between 4,000 and 5,000 meters.

Engineers also optimized it for island operations, enabling use on short and simple airstrips.

The CY-8 requires less than 500 meters for take-off and landing.

It also offers a range of more than 1,850 miles, extending its operational reach across remote or strategically sensitive areas.

Expanding global competition

China’s latest drone arrives as competition intensifies in the heavy cargo UAV segment.

Beijing continues to invest in uncrewed systems capable of operating in extreme environments.

Other Chinese projects are already in progress. Air White Whale is developing the W5000, a larger 10-tonne-class cargo drone.

A scaled prototype recently completed its maiden flight.

China has also tested a heavy-lift unmanned helicopter, the Boying T1400. That platform targets operations from mountainous regions to maritime zones.

The United States is advancing similar systems.

California-based Sabrewing developed the RH-1-A Rhaegal cargo drone, which completed its first hover flight in 2022.

A larger variant is expected to reach a maximum take-off weight of 6.25 tonnes.

Unlike the CY-8, Sabrewing’s design uses vertical take-off and landing. This removes the need for runways and enables operations in confined spaces.

The company has already secured collaborative orders from the US Air Force.

China plans to continue flight testing of the CY-8. The developer aims to move toward full-scale production before the end of the year.

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/01/2026 - 23:00

Senators Plan Taiwan Trip Ahead Of Trump's Summit With Xi Jinping

Senators Plan Taiwan Trip Ahead Of Trump's Summit With Xi Jinping

Authored by Jacob Burg via The Epoch Times,

Four U.S. senators from both sides of the aisle are planning to visit Taiwan, Japan, and South Korea within the coming days to strengthen U.S. alliances that they see as critical to challenging China’s sphere of influence.

Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), who serves as the ranking Democrat member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, announced the trip on March 28.

Sens. John Curtis (R-Utah), Thom Tillis (R-N.C.), and Jacky Rosen (D-Nev.) will join her on a trip to Taipei, Taiwan; Tokyo; and Seoul, South Korea, ahead of U.S. President Donald Trump’s May summit with Chinese leader Xi Jinping in Beijing.

The trip could cause friction with Chinese leadership, which opposes other countries having relations with Taiwan and sees such activities as a challenge to Beijing’s claim of sovereignty over the independent island.

While Taiwan is backed by the United States for its democracy, Trump’s recent floating of potential arms sales to Taiwan in discussions with Xi has highlighted implications about the future of U.S. policy toward the island.

“This bipartisan delegation demonstrates Congress’s commitment to these alliances and partnerships is unwavering and will endure well beyond any one administration,” Shaheen said in a statement.

The U.S. lawmakers are planning to meet with both political leaders and defense officials during their trip as a display of reassurance to the United States’s Asian allies.

“Our alliance with Taiwan is one of the most strategically and morally significant partnerships America has in the Indo-Pacific,” Curtis said in a statement.

Taiwan’s economic relationship with the United States has been a key concern for the Trump administration, as Washington relies on the island for computer chip production.

Taiwan’s semiconductor production drove a trade imbalance of nearly $127 billion during the first 11 months of 2025. In February, the Trump administration reached a deal with the island that removed 99 percent of its trade barriers with the United States.

A bipartisan group of U.S. lawmakers during a visit to Taiwan last year called for the United States to partner more closely with the self-governing island.

That trip resulted in conversations that were “optimistic and forward-looking,” Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.) said at the time. Coons visited Taipei last April with Sens. Pete Ricketts (R-Neb.) and Ted Budd (R-N.C.).

There were also discussions about potential military action against Taiwan by China.

“Of course, there is the possibility that Xi Jinping would decide that this is the right time for the Chinese Communist Party to take aggressive action,” Coons said.

“I think it’s exactly the wrong thing for them to do. I think they would find a forceful and united response.”

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/01/2026 - 22:10

Activist Mayor Of Boise Forced To Take Down Pride Flag Flown For A Decade

Activist Mayor Of Boise Forced To Take Down Pride Flag Flown For A Decade

Conservative states across the US have taken action in recent months to begin the arduous process of removing the stain of the woke movement from America's streets and public buildings.  For the last decade, the far-left ideological crusade has left its mark everywhere while using "marginalized" identity groups as a moral shield. 

Though they claim to be acting as a civil rights movement, the reality is that "Pride" and LGBT activist groups are entirely political.  The pride flag is a political, ideological and some would argue religious symbol of cultural dominance planted across the country as a means to claim ownership.

The State of Idaho is no longer tolerating this insurgency. On Tuesday, Mayor Lauren McLean was forced to remove the Progress Pride flag from display in Downtown Boise after Governor Brad Little signed HB 561.  The bill, brought by Rep. Ted Hill, R-Eagle, limits local governments to flying only the American flag, state flags, official military flags, recognized tribal flags, and the official flag of an Idaho university or college. 

The response from Democrats has been dramatic, to say the least, with a somber proclamation of "Transgender Day" to mourn the loss of the pride flag.  Idaho also recently passed one of the strictest laws in the nation against transgenders using incorrect bathrooms and public facilities.    

Initial laws passed by the state in 2025 required that only "official flags" be flown on public land and government buildings.  However, McLean and city officials attempted to bypass the law by making the pride flag an "official" flag of Boise.  Governor Little closed the loophole and instituted fines of $2000 per day for those cities that refuse to cooperate.

Leftist officials held a bizarre ceremony for the removal of the pride flag, which once again shines a light on the cult-like nature of the woke movement. 

Similar reactions have taken place in cities across the US where pride flag have been forced on the populace by city officials and were then removed by the state government.

Boise, Idaho, has flown a Pride flag outside City Hall for more than a decade, primarily during "Pride Month" in June and related events.  However, in the last four years under Democrat Mayor Lauren McClean, the flag has stayed flying year-round, often displayed alongside other flags like the U.S., Idaho, City of Boise, and POW/MIA flags.

The presence of radical left symbolism in the middle of one of the reddest states in the US is a reminder that there are progressive controlled cities and leftist activists everywhere.  They are not relegated to blue states, and unlike conservatives, they are highly aggressive in their efforts to claim territory and maintain power.

This is often expressed in the concept of "visibility", which leftists mention often.  It's the idea that the "rights" of activist groups are not being respected unless they are allowed to shove their political symbols in the faces of everyone on a regular basis. 

It's not enough that the public tolerates these groups.  The public must be forced to see them at all times, until people accept their activist ideology as sacrosanct.  The best possible path forward for Americans is to do the opposite and erase woke visibility as much as possible.  Civil rights are not a free license to impose fringe ideological views on the rest of the population.

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/01/2026 - 21:45

Sharia Law In Texas? Rep Exposes Muslim-Only Enclaves Operating Next To Police HQs

Sharia Law In Texas? Rep Exposes Muslim-Only Enclaves Operating Next To Police HQs

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

Texas Congressman Keith Self has dropped a bombshell on the growing reality of Sharia-adherent communities taking root inside the United States. Far from some future hypothetical, these enclaves are here, now, and operating openly in his own district.

Self laid it out plainly: “Sharia is alive, well, and operating in Plano, Texas. Right now, as I speak, there is an existing Sharia-adherent enclave run by the East Plano Islamic Center in my congressional district. It’s been functioning for 12 years right in our midst. This is not a hypothetical or future threat. It is here, now and operational.”

He continued: “It is a parallel society, a de facto Sharia enclave operating in defiance of full assimilation into American law situated immediately adjacent to the very law enforcement facilities meant to protect our communities.”

The congressman highlighted a disturbing pattern: “Alarmingly, as a matter of fact, a pattern of Islamic centers being built next to police training facilities is emerging. There’s also one in Irving, Texas. Intimidation, is clearly the intent.”

Mass immigration without any expectation of assimilation has created no-go zones and parallel legal systems on U.S. soil. While open-borders globalists in Washington and blue-city mayors bend over backward to accommodate every cultural demand, everyday Americans are left watching their neighborhoods transform into something unrecognizable.

This Texas development fits the same pattern of demographic replacement and cultural takeover we’ve already highlighted recently in New York City. 

Overflowing mosques force hundreds of Muslim men to spill onto public sidewalks and streets for Friday prayers — blocking roads and turning working-class neighborhoods into scenes straight out of an Islamic nation. 

Back in February, a mass Ramadan prayer took over Times Square, complete with chants of “Allahu Akbar” echoing through one of America’s most iconic landmarks while thousands laid out prayer mats in the middle of the street. 

The message is crystal clear: what starts as “diversity” and “religious freedom” quickly becomes dominance. Public spaces get repurposed, local laws get ignored, and law enforcement finds itself staring down facilities deliberately built to send a message. 

Plano and Irving are not anomalies — they are the logical extension of years of unchecked migration and elite refusal to demand loyalty to American values.

Congressman Self’s exposure comes at a critical moment. With Trump in the White House and America First policies gaining ground, there is finally political will to confront these threats head-on. Mass deportations, strict assimilation requirements, and an end to sanctuary policies aren’t just good ideas — they are national security necessities. Parallel societies have no place in a sovereign republic.

The alternative is the slow erosion of the rule of law, one enclave at a time, until the country is unrecognizable. Texans — and Americans everywhere — are right to demand action before Sharia-adherent zones spread any further. This isn’t about faith; it’s about sovereignty. One nation, one set of laws. Anything less is surrender.

Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch. Follow us on X @ModernityNews.

* * * Stock up 

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/01/2026 - 21:20

Madness At The Grocery Store

Madness At The Grocery Store

Authored by Jeffrey Tucker via The Epoch Times,

Sometimes it is just a mood. Sometimes it’s the store or the product. Regardless, I can hardly go to the grocery store these days without a sense of shock at how much I’m spending even while buying as little as possible.

Money-saving tactics—choosing cheaper venues, substituting products, just eating less—don’t seem to work anymore.

Grocery days used to be happy. Smiles all around. The bounty was all around us. We met people and had quick and charming conversations, even talking about recipes with strangers and making short introductions in line.

The bad mood from shopping started years ago—a year after COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns began, when prices started responding to the flood of newly printed money funding stimulus payments. The checkout line was filled with grumpy people wearing masks. People stopped talking with one another except to register shock. You left feeling like you had been pillaged.

Time healed that wound even though prices kept rising and predictably so. We all started making changes. Less eating out. No more restaurant cocktails, which had oddly doubled in price, because menu items are hard to change. We stopped shopping at the fancy stores and found the grittier venues. We joined wholesale shopper’s clubs and bought in bulk to save money.

This worked for a while to keep the bills down and the budget in check. There are so many money-saving tricks you can use, such as giving up products you never should have bought anyway and buying things such as vinegar and baking soda instead of branded junk. It’s shocking, once you look around the house, how profligate we’ve been during boom times.

All seemed like it was going to be OK after the inauguration in 2025, when price increases stopped and inflation fell dramatically. The prices of 2019 would never come back, of course. The dollar had lost some 30 percent of its valuation in a mere five years. Dealing with that psychologically wasn’t easy, but at least good times were coming. We could make up in income and salary what we’ve lost in purchasing power.

Those times seem to be at an end. Our money-saving tricks are not working anymore. Every once in a while, we like to sample what it was like in the old days and go out to dinner. The bill comes and the shock hits hard. It seems like we are paying twice what we did before all this chaos hit. What were we thinking getting those appetizers anyway, when we could have spent the same amount for 5 pounds of chicken at the store?

I had to check my sense against the empirical data. Sure enough, Truflation, which tracks price increases in real time, reveals that right now goods inflation is running close to 4 percent. Services and resources are on the rise too, having changed course from last year at this time.

Then I decided to check what industry was saying. Over three months, inflation for groceries is up by 2 percent. This is in addition to a 40 percent rise since 2019.

Maybe 2 percent increases since January don’t sound terrible. However, remember that to compare it to the way we usually measure inflation, we have to annualize that number. We also have to compound it because past prices are added to new ones.

The end result of what industry is currently reporting right now is an astounding 8.2 percent inflation rate in grocery prices alone. That’s more in keeping with what I saw. I would swear that I noticed the difference from just two weeks ago. It’s enough to make one’s heart race and wonder about the future.

Who is to blame? When I hear that businesses are gouging people, we should generally dismiss such claims. Of course businesses want to charge more, while the consumer wants to pay less. The price is the point of agreement between supply and demand. That’s just basic economics, something not well understood by media reporters and political activists.

There are a number of factors at work here. The driving force right now is higher gas prices adding dramatically to transportation costs. Groceries are particularly affected by this. Growers are anticipating a very difficult season. Petrol is hard to come by in Australia and Latin America now, and some nations are already rationing. Fertilizer prices have soared to the point at which farmers cannot afford it.

Futures markets understand this. Speculations about future prices are discounted to the present.

That’s a major factor, but also there is no more room left in pricing metrics to forestall price increases at the consumer end. Tariffs forced distributors onto the edge of profitability in any case. There is also renewed devaluation of the dollar taking place, as the inflation of the past five years had not entirely been squeezed through the tube.

It all adds up and hits everyone very hard. This is certainly a time for pulling back in every possible way. It is also a time to get a freezer for your home, even if it is a small one. Meat is certain to be rising in price at a dramatic rate in the coming months, even if the war somehow comes to an end, which does not seem likely for a long time. Even small apartments can viably store 50 pounds of meat in the freezer.

I cannot help but feel awful for restaurants. During the good times, people got used to eating out several times per week, even nightly. That is no longer viable except for the very rich. If you can get away with $50 per person you are very lucky. Twice that is more common. Many chains are shutting down, and many more will in the coming months.

When I was a kid, eating out in my family hardly ever happened. There were restaurants, of course, but far fewer. That was during the last great wave, and eating out was first to go. Home cooking was the norm for my generation, at the tail end of the baby boomers. I can easily adapt. It’s much harder for younger people who have never been taught cooking skills and never needed to economize. This is changing by necessity.

I’ve warned many times over several years of a second wave of inflation to match the trajectory of the 1970s. It seems to be unfolding now but with a perfect storm of factors: continued monetary devaluation, tariffs, exploding energy prices, supply chain breakages, and war. One steps back in amazement that the powers that be would have taken such risks with the American (and world) standard of living, but here we are.

Most people in what we once called the middle class have already pulled back dramatically. Homes are out of the question. People who can have dropped medical insurance by necessity and decided to embrace the risks. Travel plans have been canceled not only because of rising prices, but also because of uncertain wait times at airports, plus gas prices. With a new round of pummeling from grocery prices, we are now forced to take that final step into a seriously degraded standard of living, while increases in wages and salaries are out of the question right now.

There are fixes to all these problems, but politicians seem to have other priorities.

What is the outlook for the future? Only a year ago, I was optimistic. These days, not so much. My memories are returning of the values that shaped my grandmother’s life: saving pie pans, canning vegetables, and clipping coupons whenever possible. She was a great and happy woman shaped by the Great Depression, words we hoped would never apply to the times of our lives. And yet here we are.

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/01/2026 - 20:30

Dubai Crackdown Hits Iran's Economic Lifeline, Squeezes IRGC Networks

Dubai Crackdown Hits Iran's Economic Lifeline, Squeezes IRGC Networks

By Negar Mojtahedi of Iran International

The arrest of dozens of IRGC-linked money changers in the United Arab Emirates is one of the most serious blows yet to Tehran’s sanctions-evasion network, laying bare how heavily the Islamic Republic has depended on Dubai as an economic lifeline.

Sources familiar with the matter told Iran International that UAE authorities detained dozens of money changers tied to financial entities linked to Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, shut down associated companies and closed their offices. The crackdown follows days of mounting regional tensions and comes after other measures targeting Iranian nationals, including visa revocations and tighter travel restrictions through Dubai.

For years, Dubai has served as Iran’s main offshore financial artery, where oil proceeds, petrochemical revenues and rial conversions were turned into dollars, dirhams and euros beyond the reach of the country’s battered domestic banking system.

“This is going to be a real problem for Tehran because Dubai was an economic lung for the Iranian regime,” Jason Brodsky of United Against Nuclear Iran told Iran International.

“That is economic pressure and diplomatic isolation in a way that the UAE is able to employ against the Iranian regime, and it will have a very considerable impact.”

"Most critical hub"

According to Miad Maleki, a former senior US Treasury sanctions strategist and now a senior fellow at FDD, the UAE is not just one sanctions-evasion hub among many.

“The UAE is the single most critical jurisdiction in the Iranian regime’s sanctions-evasion architecture,” Maleki said.

Dubai’s exchange houses have long given the IRGC and the Quds Force access to the hard currency needed to finance proxy groups including Hezbollah, Hamas, the Houthis and militias in Iraq.

The detention of trusted IRGC-linked money changers threatens networks that took years to build.

“These trust-based sarraf (money changer) relationships, bank accounts and corporate structures are not quickly replaceable,” Maleki said.

He added that even exchange houses untouched by the crackdown were now likely to think twice before processing Iran-linked transactions, sharply raising both the cost and the risk of doing business with the Guards.

The pressure comes as Iran’s domestic economy is already under severe strain: Foreign reserves, once estimated at around $120 billion in 2018, had fallen below $9 billion by 2020, leaving Iran increasingly reliant on offshore currency channels.

Dubai as ‘washing machine’

Mohammad Machine-Chian, a senior economic journalist at Iran International, said the UAE remains Iran’s most important economic conduit after China. “The UAE is Iran’s most critical economic lifeline after China,” he said.

He said Dubai’s free zones host hundreds of Iranian-linked shell companies used to mask oil and petrochemical sales, launder proceeds and channel hard currency back to Tehran.

Bilateral trade has hovered between $16 billion and $28 billion in recent years, with Iranian non-oil exports alone reaching roughly $6 billion to $7 billion annually, according to Machine-Chian.

A sustained crackdown could cost Tehran tens of billions of dollars in revenue streams while severing what he described as Iran’s “USD cash lifeline.”

Dubai has also functioned as a transit point for illicit Iranian funds moving onward to North America, including transfers routed to the United States and Canada through correspondent banking and hawala networks.

As Maleki put it, “Dubai is the washing machine: Iranian oil proceeds and rial conversions go in, sanitized dirham and dollar transactions come out.”

From diplomacy to backlash

Beyond the financial damage, analysts say the crackdown reflects a broader political rupture between Tehran and the Persian Gulf states. Brodsky said Iran’s attacks on neighboring countries had transformed the strategic environment in the region.

“The relationship between Iran and the GCC countries is not going to go back to the way it was before Operation Epic Fury,” he said.

Where Persian Gulf states had once pushed for diplomacy, Iran’s retaliation has instead driven them closer to Washington and Israel.

For years, Tehran sought to encircle Israel in what it called a “ring of fire” through regional proxies. 

Now, Brodsky said, the Islamic Republic has reversed that dynamic.

“They wanted to encircle Israel in a ring of fire,” he said. “Now they are basically encircling themselves in a ring of fire because they’ve been angering their neighbors with all of their attacks.”

He said that reversal could carry long-term consequences, including deeper Persian Gulf-Israel security coordination and new openings for the Abraham Accords.

“The missile threat and drone threat have become paramount in this conflict,” Brodsky said. “That could drive these countries even closer to the US and Israel.”

'Collapse within weeks'

The UAE crackdown comes as signs of mounting economic distress are mounting inside Iran. Sources previously told Iran International that President Masoud Pezeshkian had warned senior officials that without a ceasefire, the economy could face collapse within weeks.

Across major cities, ATMs have been running short of cash, banking services have faced intermittent disruptions and government workers have reported months of delayed salary payments. 

With inflation in essential goods already above 100 percent before the war, the loss of Dubai’s financial channels could deepen the regime’s crisis. 

For Tehran, the arrests in the UAE are more than a financial disruption. They may signal that one of Iran’s most dependable external pressure valves is starting to close.

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/01/2026 - 19:40

Dubai Crackdown Hits Iran's Economic Lifeline, Squeezes IRGC Networks

Dubai Crackdown Hits Iran's Economic Lifeline, Squeezes IRGC Networks

By Negar Mojtahedi of Iran International

The arrest of dozens of IRGC-linked money changers in the United Arab Emirates is one of the most serious blows yet to Tehran’s sanctions-evasion network, laying bare how heavily the Islamic Republic has depended on Dubai as an economic lifeline.

Sources familiar with the matter told Iran International that UAE authorities detained dozens of money changers tied to financial entities linked to Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, shut down associated companies and closed their offices. The crackdown follows days of mounting regional tensions and comes after other measures targeting Iranian nationals, including visa revocations and tighter travel restrictions through Dubai.

For years, Dubai has served as Iran’s main offshore financial artery, where oil proceeds, petrochemical revenues and rial conversions were turned into dollars, dirhams and euros beyond the reach of the country’s battered domestic banking system.

“This is going to be a real problem for Tehran because Dubai was an economic lung for the Iranian regime,” Jason Brodsky of United Against Nuclear Iran told Iran International.

“That is economic pressure and diplomatic isolation in a way that the UAE is able to employ against the Iranian regime, and it will have a very considerable impact.”

"Most critical hub"

According to Miad Maleki, a former senior US Treasury sanctions strategist and now a senior fellow at FDD, the UAE is not just one sanctions-evasion hub among many.

“The UAE is the single most critical jurisdiction in the Iranian regime’s sanctions-evasion architecture,” Maleki said.

Dubai’s exchange houses have long given the IRGC and the Quds Force access to the hard currency needed to finance proxy groups including Hezbollah, Hamas, the Houthis and militias in Iraq.

The detention of trusted IRGC-linked money changers threatens networks that took years to build.

“These trust-based sarraf (money changer) relationships, bank accounts and corporate structures are not quickly replaceable,” Maleki said.

He added that even exchange houses untouched by the crackdown were now likely to think twice before processing Iran-linked transactions, sharply raising both the cost and the risk of doing business with the Guards.

The pressure comes as Iran’s domestic economy is already under severe strain: Foreign reserves, once estimated at around $120 billion in 2018, had fallen below $9 billion by 2020, leaving Iran increasingly reliant on offshore currency channels.

Dubai as ‘washing machine’

Mohammad Machine-Chian, a senior economic journalist at Iran International, said the UAE remains Iran’s most important economic conduit after China. “The UAE is Iran’s most critical economic lifeline after China,” he said.

He said Dubai’s free zones host hundreds of Iranian-linked shell companies used to mask oil and petrochemical sales, launder proceeds and channel hard currency back to Tehran.

Bilateral trade has hovered between $16 billion and $28 billion in recent years, with Iranian non-oil exports alone reaching roughly $6 billion to $7 billion annually, according to Machine-Chian.

A sustained crackdown could cost Tehran tens of billions of dollars in revenue streams while severing what he described as Iran’s “USD cash lifeline.”

Dubai has also functioned as a transit point for illicit Iranian funds moving onward to North America, including transfers routed to the United States and Canada through correspondent banking and hawala networks.

As Maleki put it, “Dubai is the washing machine: Iranian oil proceeds and rial conversions go in, sanitized dirham and dollar transactions come out.”

From diplomacy to backlash

Beyond the financial damage, analysts say the crackdown reflects a broader political rupture between Tehran and the Persian Gulf states. Brodsky said Iran’s attacks on neighboring countries had transformed the strategic environment in the region.

“The relationship between Iran and the GCC countries is not going to go back to the way it was before Operation Epic Fury,” he said.

Where Persian Gulf states had once pushed for diplomacy, Iran’s retaliation has instead driven them closer to Washington and Israel.

For years, Tehran sought to encircle Israel in what it called a “ring of fire” through regional proxies. 

Now, Brodsky said, the Islamic Republic has reversed that dynamic.

“They wanted to encircle Israel in a ring of fire,” he said. “Now they are basically encircling themselves in a ring of fire because they’ve been angering their neighbors with all of their attacks.”

He said that reversal could carry long-term consequences, including deeper Persian Gulf-Israel security coordination and new openings for the Abraham Accords.

“The missile threat and drone threat have become paramount in this conflict,” Brodsky said. “That could drive these countries even closer to the US and Israel.”

'Collapse within weeks'

The UAE crackdown comes as signs of mounting economic distress are mounting inside Iran. Sources previously told Iran International that President Masoud Pezeshkian had warned senior officials that without a ceasefire, the economy could face collapse within weeks.

Across major cities, ATMs have been running short of cash, banking services have faced intermittent disruptions and government workers have reported months of delayed salary payments. 

With inflation in essential goods already above 100 percent before the war, the loss of Dubai’s financial channels could deepen the regime’s crisis. 

For Tehran, the arrests in the UAE are more than a financial disruption. They may signal that one of Iran’s most dependable external pressure valves is starting to close.

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/01/2026 - 19:40

Minnesota Judges Enabling Somali Fraud Epidemic With Slaps On Wrist

Minnesota Judges Enabling Somali Fraud Epidemic With Slaps On Wrist

The Feeding Our Future fraud is the largest pandemic-relief theft in American history - $250 million stolen, mostly by Somali immigrants who fabricated meal counts and pocketed federal child nutrition funds.

The prosecutions have dragged on for years.

Now that sentences are finally coming down, a troubling pattern is emerging: the punishments don’t seem to fit the crime.

U.S. District Judge Nancy Brasel — nominated to the bench in 2018 through a package deal between the first Trump administration and Minnesota's Senate Democrats — has been at the center of two recent sentencing decisions that have taxpayers seething. 

On March 29, she sentenced Abdul Abubakar Ali to one year and one day in prison. Ali ran a shell company called Youth Inventors Lab under Feeding Our Future's sponsorship, orchestrated $3 million in fraud, submitted fake invoices claiming more than one million meals served, and served none. Federal sentencing guidelines recommended 30 to 37 months. Prosecutors asked for two and a half years. Brasel gave him a sentence of just one year and a day. That extra day is not accidental — it's the legal threshold that makes Ali eligible for transition to a halfway house on good behavior.

One day later, Brasel sentenced Zamzam Jama to six months. Jama stole $5.6 million — nearly twice what Ali took — and was the first of six Jama family defendants associated with a Rochester restaurant to face sentencing; all were linked to the same fraud network. Prosecutors requested 16 months. Sentencing guidelines called for 10 to 16 months. Brasel issued a downward departure and handed Jama a sentence of just half a year. Jama must also pay $491,000 in restitution — a mere fraction of the $5.6 million she stole — and serve one year of probation.

When reports of widespread abuse went viral last year due to the investigations by independent journalist Nick Shirley, Gov. Tim Walz insisted on maintaining control of the investigation.

“This [was] on my watch,” the governor said at the time. “I am accountable for this, and more importantly, I am the one that will fix it.”

Unfortunately, federal judges in Minnesota are failing to give the fraudsters the sentences they deserve, and this will hardly serve as a deterrent to stop the fraud.

The contrast with how other jurisdictions handle similar fraud is actually quite jarring. Earlier this month, a North Carolina federal court sentenced four people in a $12.7 million Medicaid kickback scheme that exploited substance abuse patients. The ringleaders — who falsified records to deceive auditors — each received six years. Another defendant got two years, and another two and a half years. U.S. Attorney Ellis Boyle even mentioned the Minnesota fraud in response to these sentences.

"This is shocking Minnesota-Somali-style fraud right here in North Carolina. For too long, government has allowed grifters to steal taxpayer dollars with impunity. Here, these vultures exploited particularly susceptible drug abusers trying to recover their lives and dignity. Shameful abuse, no remorse. They better learn, and everyone should get the message. Cheaters. Never. Win." 

The math is simple and damning.

In North Carolina, fraud leaders who stole $12.7 million each were sentenced to six years.

In Minnesota, a fraudster who stole $5.6 million got six months, and another who ran a $3 million scheme got just over a year.

The deterrent value of the Minnesota sentences is approximately zero.

The question that hangs over all of this is whether the judiciary in Minnesota has become the final link in a chain of institutional permissiveness. Walz's administration looked the other way while $250 million vanished. Minnesota Democrats who depend on Somali-American voter turnout had every political incentive to keep the issue quiet. And now a federal judge is handing out sentences so light they barely register as consequences. The message sent to anyone considering the next fraud scheme is that Minnesota is still open for business.

* * *

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/01/2026 - 19:15

Expect Electricity Prices To Rise Further, Analysts Warn

Expect Electricity Prices To Rise Further, Analysts Warn

By Robert Walton of UtilityDive,

U.S. electricity prices have risen significantly in recent years, though “national trends mask stark differences” in state prices, according to an April 1 analysis by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and The Brattle Group.

Whether you take a “crisis” or “more nuanced view” of the increases - the analysis offers both - one thing is likely, according to the report: “Record levels of [investor-owned utility] rate increase requests & regulatory approvals suggest additional near-term price increases absent policy/market actions.”

There were $18 billion in rate increases proposed last year, according to the analysis, and about two-thirds of utility rate proposals were approved from 2021-2025.

IOU revenue increase requests in 2025 “exceeded any point since the mid-1980s, suggesting continued price increases in near term as regulators consider the requests,” the analysis said.

In the “crisis view” of electricity price drivers, national prices have surged since 2019 through 2025, up 33%. There are larger increases in California, the Northeast and parts of the Mid-Atlantic. A third of U.S. households spend more than 5% of their income on electricity, according the report.

The “nuanced” view notes that price increases have largely tracked inflation, and 29 states saw a decline in inflation-adjusted prices from 2019-2025. In most areas, electricity burdens are lower than they were in 2019.

Residential customers “have faced larger recent retail electricity price increases than have commercial and industrial customers,” the analysis said. 

From 2019 to 2025 the nominal price of a kilowatt-hour rose 33% for residential customers, 26% for commercial and 27% for industrial. All-sector average retail electricity prices increased 5.3% in 2025 compared to 2024, they said.

“Residential retail electricity price increases have been significant: broadly in line with some other household expenditures but higher than others,” researchers said. 

The average U.S. residential price of electricity, in nominal dollars, went from 13 cents/kWh in 2019 to 17.3 cents/kWh in 2025. Commercial customers saw prices increase from 10.7 cents/kWh to 13.4 cents/kWh. And industrial prices went from 6.8 cents/kWh to 8.6 cents/kWh.

The primary drivers of recent price increases include fuel and wholesale supply, distribution costs, the cost of new generation, transmission costs, storm recovery and capacity prices, the report said.

LBNL and Brattle’s analysis is a data update to 2025 work they did on factors driving electricity prices. 

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/01/2026 - 18:50

Pentagon Prepares A-10 Warthog Surge As Mideast Fleet Set To Double

Pentagon Prepares A-10 Warthog Surge As Mideast Fleet Set To Double

The Department of War is preparing to double its fleet of Fairchild Republic A-10 Thunderbolt IIs, better known in the aviation community as "Warthogs," in the Middle East in the very near term, The New York Times reported Wednesday.

The surge of additional Warthogs, as many as 18, on top of the roughly dozen A-10s already operating in the region, has already been used to sink Iranian boats in the Hormuz chokepoint and strike Iran-backed militias in Iraq, according to the NYT, citing DoW officials. The expanded fleet suggests a broader aviation campaign in and around Hormuz and could even play a critical role in supporting a potential seizure of Kharg Island, Iran's main oil hub in the northern Persian Gulf.

As of early 2026, the US Air Force had 162 A-10s remaining in its inventory. Air & Space Forces Magazine reported the service had 219 A-10s as of late 2024, then cut 57 aircraft in fiscal 2025, leaving 162 going into fiscal 2026.

The surge in A-10s suggests that as many as 30 could soon be operating in the Gulf region, representing about 18.5% of the USAF's fleet.

The A-10's most fearsome weapon is the 30mm GAU-8/A seven-barrel Gatling gun, which fires at an astonishing 3,900 rounds per minute. Typical A-10 armament also includes:

  • AGM-65 Maverick missiles

  • Laser- and GPS-guided bombs Mk-82 500-lb and Mk-84 2,000-lb bombs

  • Unguided and laser-guided 2.75-inch rockets

  • AIM-9 Sidewinder missiles

  • Chaff, flares, and jammer pods for self-protection

The NYT cited flight-tracking data indicating that US-based A-10s heading to the region have been stopping at Royal Air Force Lakenheath, a base in England, before continuing on to the Gulf region.

"The planes could be used to help U.S. ground forces seize territory near the Strait of Hormuz, the crucial waterway Iran has effectively closed, or Kharg Island, Iran's main oil hub in the northern Persian Gulf," the outlet said. 

Earlier this month, Zoltan Pozsar of Ex Uno Plures noted that the Trump administration is "methodically building a portfolio of assets" from Venezuela to the Panama Canal to Iran's oil flows and the Strait of Hormuz, a strategy aimed at reasserting American dominance, securing the empire for years to come, and tightening the screws on Beijing after last year's rare earths stunt.

"Iran and Kharg Island are next. Iran is a Chinese vassal and so Kharg Island is basically a Chinese asset. Iran and Kharg Island will soon be a U.S. asset. The same with the SoH - it will soon be a U.S. asset," Pozsar noted.

And this. 

The surge in A-10s suggests the US is preparing for a dirtier, more prolonged campaign centered on Hormuz, coastal targets, and possibly a seizure or raid of Kharg Island or others.  

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/01/2026 - 18:25

Watch Live: NASA's Artemis II Rocket On Way To Moon

Watch Live: NASA's Artemis II Rocket On Way To Moon

Watch Live (successful launch at 6:35 p.m. EST):

NASA's Artemis II mission is finally set to launch three Americans and one Canadian atop the Space Launch System rocket on a lunar mission not seen in more than 50 years. 

The Artemis II mission is scheduled for launch at 6:24 p.m. EST on Wednesday from Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

The crew of four, including NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman (commander), Victor Glover (pilot), and Christina Koch (mission specialist), along with Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen (mission specialist), will circumnavigate the moon in a 10-day flight aboard the new Orion spacecraft. 

Artemis II is a critical test of the Orion capsule and marks another step toward future lunar landings, which SpaceX is likely to support as early as 2028.

Three hours and 30 minutes after liftoff, if everything goes to plan, the Orion spacecraft and its service module will separate from the second stage of the rocket, perform a manual flight test high in Earth orbit, and prepare for a translunar injection, in other words, a trip to the moon, during which Orion's service module will fire its engines and catapult the four astronauts to 25,000 mph on a three-day journey into lunar orbit. 

Artemis II will enter the moon's gravitational field about four days into the mission and then begin its U-turn, enabling a flyby around the far side more than 12 hours later. If today's launch goes according to plan, that flyby of the moon will take place next Monday. 

"No one has ever seen this full crater on the far side of the moon, and so this would be really neat," Hansen said. "I'm excited to have a look at it. It's just enormous, super complex, and you could probably stare at it for hours."

The flyby will set the astronauts up on a "free-return trajectory" that will essentially slingshot them around the far side and back to Earth without burning additional fuel. 

By April 10, Artemis II is forecast to re-enter Earth's atmosphere, nine days and one hour after liftoff, and splash down off the coast of Southern California.

A successful mission sets NASA up for a crewed 2028 lunar surface mission. 

NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman has recently stated that his agency plans to build a nuclear reactor on the moon

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/01/2026 - 18:21

America's Half-Trillion-Dollar Sewage Problem

America's Half-Trillion-Dollar Sewage Problem

Authored by Autumn Spredemann via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Beneath city streets and suburban neighborhoods, a vast network of pipes and wastewater treatment systems is reaching the end of its life. This subterranean infrastructure is already suffering tens of thousands of failures per year, while exposing millions of Americans to contamination risks.

Utilities, plumbing experts, and environmentalists warn that the scope of the problem has expanded rapidly in recent years. As of 2024, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) estimated that $630 billion in wastewater infrastructure investment would be needed to repair and replace deteriorating systems. At the same time, extreme weather events and growing populations were putting additional strain on America’s aging pipes.

The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), in its 2025 report card, gave U.S. wastewater infrastructure a D-plus, which the group largely attributed to a lack of funding to meet the needs of communities with failing systems.

Meanwhile, average utility prices for wastewater consumers increased from $35 per month to nearly $65 per month between 2010 and 2020, ASCE researchers found. Even still, they said, rising utility prices aren’t “keeping pace with the growing costs for utilities to provide routine operation and maintenance.”

Paradoxically, as household water and sewer bills increased more than 24 percent between 2020 and 2025, wastewater infrastructure renewal and replacement rates for large-scale projects actually decreased over the past decade, from 3 percent to 2 percent, according to the ASCE analysis.

The scope of the problem becomes clearer when considering the sheer volume of sanitary sewer overflows. As of April 2025, the EPA estimated there were between 23,000 and 75,000 overflow incidents per year, and that didn’t include sewage that backed up into buildings or residential homes.

Some of the reasons for these spills included blockages, line breaks, design defects, and overloaded treatment systems.

A spokesperson for the EPA told The Epoch Times that the agency is “committed to accelerating investments in water infrastructure by stewarding federal funding appropriated by Congress.”

Recent funding highlights from 2025 include the Clean Water State Revolving Fund and Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act, which committed $13 billion for infrastructure improvements in communities across the nation, according to the EPA spokesperson.

A worker uses a vacuum truck to remove sewer water after a sewer main break in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., on Feb. 24, 2020. Much of the nation’s aging wastewater infrastructure is nearing the end of its lifespan, with thousands of spills each year exposing millions to contamination risks. Joe Raedle/Getty Images

When asked about the staggering volume of sewer overflows per year, the agency representative emphasized the value and importance of this network.

EPA estimates that our nation’s sewers are worth a total of more than $1 trillion,“ the representative said. ”The collection system of a single large municipality is an asset worth billions of dollars and that of a smaller city could cost many millions to replace.

Ongoing maintenance and rehabilitation can add value to the original investment by maintaining the system’s capacity and extending its life. The costs of rehabilitation and other measures to correct [sanitary sewer overflows] can vary widely by community size and sewer system type.”

The United States’ wastewater pipe network is a part of the national infrastructure that has been neglected for years and suffers “chronic underinvestment,” according to the Association of State Floodplain Managers.

The country has roughly 800,000 miles of sewer pipes, according to ASCE’s 2021 report card. For perspective, the National Highway System only covers an estimated 164,000 miles, according to the Department of Transportation.

Within that sprawling web, the average age of sewer pipes is around 45 years, ASCE’s 2021 report found. But in some American cities, sewer systems date back a century or more: in the city of St. Louis, for example, some sewer lines were built in Civil War days. And parts of Philadelphia’s working sewer system date back to 1800, Municipal Sewer and Water reported in 2025.

“Wastewater treatment systems are meant to act as a barrier to disease both for public health and environment,“ Laura Underwood, director of digital water solutions for Locus Technologies, told The Epoch Times. ”If you have overflows or failures, these events can release pathogens into waterways and increase the risk of gastrointestinal illnesses, skin infections, and contamination of recreational or drinking waters.”

A huge tank full of wastewater is seen at DC Water’s Blue Plains plant in Washington on Nov. 23, 2015. In its 2025 report card, the American Society of Civil Engineers gave U.S. wastewater infrastructure a D+, which the group largely attributed to funding gaps that don't meet the needs of expanding usage and failing systems. Nicholas Kamm/AFP via Getty Images Close to Home

Underwood has worked within the utility space as a compliance director for water and wastewater treatment operations. She didn’t sugarcoat the reality of what further delays in upgrades will cost Americans.

You will continue to see more frequent overflows and plant bypasses. These spills and untreated discharge events can lead to degraded waterways with increased contamination risks to the public and environment,” she said.

This isn’t some speculative future problem. In January, more than 250 million gallons of sewage entered the Potomac River near Washington. The event marked one of the worst incidents of its kind in U.S. history; President Donald Trump called it a “massive ecological disaster.”

In an account published on the American Rivers website,  a witness to the Potomac River disaster, Gary Belan, recalled arriving at the site of the sewage overflow and seeing “several massive pumps” diverting raw waste into the C&O canal area, which runs parallel with the river.

Belan said the area is a “popular spot to walk, bike, and access the river for fishing and boating.” He said he’s been taking his kids there since they were toddlers.

Pumps and pipes divert raw sewage into the C&O Canal and around a broken section of the Potomac Interceptor in Cabin John, Md., on Feb. 16, 2026. A section of the six-foot-wide sewage pipe collapsed on Jan. 19, causing more than 250 million gallons of raw sewage to be poured into the Potomac River.

“There is a literal river of sewage flowing open along the towpath that parallels the canal,” he wrote. “The estimated repair time is going to be 9 [to] 10 months, disrupting the communities nearby. This doesn’t include time for the environmental remediation.”

Some industry insiders say surface water contamination is far from the only hazard of aging sewer system failures.

The biggest challenge I see on the ground is aging pipes, specifically the catastrophic failure of cast iron and clay sewer laterals that connect individual properties to the main municipal line,” master plumber Steven Morgan told The Epoch Times. “These pipes were installed 50 [to] 80 years ago and are now collapsing, cracking, and being invaded by tree roots.”

Morgan is the head of technical training and development at 24hr Supply and deals with the ugly truth of America’s antiquated wastewater network regularly. He said a lot of people don’t understand how aging sewer infrastructure can cost them directly and dearly.

“Homeowners don’t realize they’re responsible for the section from their house to the street, and when it fails, they’re looking at $8,000 [to] $25,000 in emergency repairs,” he said.

Old rusty utility pipes sit on the ground where workers with East Bay Municipal Utility District are installing a new water pipe in Oakland, Calif., on April 22, 2021. Leaky pipes take on a whole new dimension when toxic sludge enters rivers and other water resources. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Morgan believes the real problem is that these failures create blockages and backups that force raw sewage into basements during heavy rains.

“Multiply that across an entire neighborhood with aging infrastructure, and you’ve got a public health crisis waiting to happen,” he said.

“The pipes aren’t just old, they’re fundamentally incompatible with modern water usage patterns and climate realities like increasingly intense storms.”

Direct contact with contaminated water spills in places such as basements, lawns, streets, or recreational areas can cause serious health concerns. Contaminated water can contain bacteria, viruses, parasites, worms, and industrial chemicals such as per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, commonly known as PFAS or “forever chemicals.”

Official data put the number of Americans affected by waterborne pathogens annually at 7.15 million, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Within that group, about 118,000 are hospitalized and 6,630 die from related illnesses.

A plumber turns the water back on after repairing a burst pipe in a home in Houston on Feb. 21, 2021. Bland Warren said that as weather patterns shift, wastewater systems and storage infrastructure are often required to manage more variable conditions. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images Long Range Impacts

Leaky pipes take on a whole new dimension when it’s toxic sludge entering rivers and other water resources. Groundwater contamination is prevalent at 85 percent of EPA Superfund project cleanup sites.

Failing sewer lines or poorly maintained [wastewater] lagoons can allow untreated sewage to seep into groundwater. However, this is typically a smaller-scale localized contamination,” Underwood said.

“I would say there is a larger contamination risk with [treatment] plant bypasses where a portion of untreated wastewater is discharged to a surface water outfall.”

A 2023 study from the University of Parma observed that leaky sewers negatively impacted not only surface and groundwater but also subsurface aquifers.

“Sewer pipeline ruptures are a severe risk to groundwater quality. When sewerage deterioration conditions occur, aquifers can be contaminated by contaminants contained within sewer water,” the study said.

Read the rest here...

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/01/2026 - 18:00

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