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  • Around 1,500 soldiers on standby for deployment to Minneapolis, reports say

    Around 1,500 soldiers on standby for deployment to Minneapolis, reports say


    Soldiers are on standby for possible deployment to Minneapolis, a US defence official has told CBS News, the BBC’s US partner.

    The official said the 1,500 soldiers, currently in Alaska, are an option for the US president if he decided to use active duty military personnel, as anti-Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) demonstrations continued in the city on Saturday.

    No decision has yet been made on whether to deploy the soldiers from Alaska, the official said.

    Minnesota officials have urged protesters to stay orderly and peaceful during demonstrations after an ICE agent shot dead US citizen Renee Good earlier this month.

    The soldiers are part of the 11th Airborne Division in Fort Wainwright, the official added.

    It comes as a US federal judge issued an order limiting the crowd control tactics that can used by ICE agents towards “peaceful and unobstructive” protesters in Minneapolis.

    Judge Katherine Menendez earlier ruled that federal agents cannot arrest or pepper spray peaceful demonstrations, including those monitoring or observing ICE agents.

    The state’s National Guard has been mobilised and placed on alert by Governor Tim Walz, and other law enforcement officers were deployed to Minneapolis ahead of the anti-ICE demonstrations.

    Recent protests in the city were sparked by widespread action by ICE in the city, and follow Good’s death on 7 January.

    City leaders said Good was there as a legal observer of ICE activity.

    But the Trump administration has called her a “domestic terrorist”.

    Good’s death sparked protests across the country, with many people holding signs that read “Justice for Renee”.



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  • Man swims in flooded Sydney golf course after heavy rain

    Man swims in flooded Sydney golf course after heavy rain


    An Australian man took a dive into a flooded golf course on Sydney’s northern beaches as heavy rains and thunderstorms lashed coastal communities.

    Craig Finniss soaked up the opportunity by swimming a lap of the waterlogged course at Palm Beach.

    Residents in some nearby suburbs were ordered to evacuate their homes due to flash flooding, as 180mm of rain hit some parts of Sydney over the weekend, according to the Australian Bureau of Meteorology.



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  • Lindsey Graham’s warning exposes gap between Arab rhetoric and reality

    Lindsey Graham’s warning exposes gap between Arab rhetoric and reality


    Ofer emphasized that Graham’s remarks represent a sharp shift in the usual approach to dealing with Arab states.

    In an interview with Maariv, Eyal Ofer, an expert on Hamas’s economy, addressed unusually blunt remarks made by US Senator Lindsey Graham, warning that they could carry significant regional and Israeli implications.

    In an interview before his visit to Israel, Graham addressed media reports claiming that “Arab leaders support the ayatollahs remaining in power”, telling journalists that “the era in which [Arab leaders] tell us one thing behind closed doors while publicly making opposing statements must end.”

    Ofer emphasized that Graham’s remarks represent a sharp shift in the usual approach to dealing with Arab states.

    “Graham, who for 30 years has supported the US having close ties with Saudi Arabia and Qatar, acknowledged what even some of Israel’s best intelligence professionals have been misled by: the gap between what Arab leaders say and do publicly and the calming messages they convey in diplomatic discussions that are always held in secret,” Ofer explained.

    Emir of Qatar Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, US President Donald Trump, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman and Bahrain's King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa attend a group photo session with Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) leaders in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, May 14, 2025. (credit: REUTERS/BRIAN SNYDER)

    Emir of Qatar Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, US President Donald Trump, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman and Bahrain’s King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa attend a group photo session with Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) leaders in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, May 14, 2025. (credit: REUTERS/BRIAN SNYDER)

    ‘Ignored what Arab leaders said publicly’

    Ofer went on, noting that while Israel and the West hold what is said behind closed doors to a high standard, in the Arab world, public declarations are what hold significant weight.

    “We have always convinced ourselves of the opposite: that Arabs ‘do not mean’ what they say publicly, and their assurances in secret represent the true agreement,” he said.

    Ofer linked this mindset directly to the October 7 massacre, claiming that “we [Israel] ignored what Arab leaders said publicly.”

    He brings the example of Yahya Sinwar, who “promised to return his people to ‘occupied’ Palestine,” and Egyptian President Abdul Fattah El-Sisi, who repeatedly threatened to cancel the Israel-Egypt peace treaty and “denounces us on every possible international stage (in English and Arabic) as Egypt moves forces into Sinai, allows weapons smuggling into the Negev and Gaza, and refuses to absorb Gazans while accusing Israel of imprisoning them.”

    “If, thanks to Senator Graham, the IDF General Staff also begins to understand that the drones being smuggled into the Negev and Gaza are not coming, as the IDF Spokesperson describes it, ‘from the western border,’ but from Egypt, and that we should listen to public declarations, perhaps one day we will finally learn that Arabs mean what they say, and not what we tell ourselves was said behind closed doors,” Ofer concluded.



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