Skip to content

World News |
The World Daily Brief: Iran, world react to Israeli retaliatory strike

Iranians at an anti-Israeli rally after Friday prayers in Tehran on Friday. The Israeli military struck Iran early on Friday, according to two Israeli and three Iranian officials. (Arash Khamooshi/The New York Times)
Iranians at an anti-Israeli rally after Friday prayers in Tehran on Friday. The Israeli military struck Iran early on Friday, according to two Israeli and three Iranian officials. (Arash Khamooshi/The New York Times)
Armstrong Williams one of the new owners of The Baltimore Sun. (Lloyd Fox/Staff photo)

International News

Israel and Iran

  • Israel launched at least one missile – and perhaps some drones – into Iran, and Iran’s air defenses were heard in Isfahan and Tabriz provinces. Iran said its air defenses successfully downed some Israeli drones, but explosions heard near Isfahan suggested they may have missed others. READ MORE
  • Isfahan is where one of Iran’s main nuclear enrichment and missile facilities is located, but Israel had assured the U.S. before the strike that it wouldn’t target nuclear facilities. Indeed, Iranian officials told the NYT the Isfahan strikes hit a military air base instead. READ MORE
  • Israeli media say the intent was to have the last word without inflicting such a black eye that Iran’s hardliners will demand re-re-retaliation. READ MORE
  • Separately, the U.S. vetoed a UN Security Council resolution that would have brought a vote on Palestinian statehood to the full General Assembly, where it probably would’ve passed (around 140 countries of the 193 UN member states have already recognized Palestine to some degree). READ MORE
  • U.S. Deputy Ambassador to the UN explained afterwards that the veto “does not reflect opposition to Palestinian statehood but instead is an acknowledgment that it will only come from direct negotiations between the parties.” READ MORE

Russia

  • Germany arrested two men suspected of plotting with Russia to sabotage military facilities – including Grafenwoehr, where U.S. soldiers carry out M1 Abrams tank training with Ukrainian troops. READ MORE
  • Separately – though perhaps linked to the same foreign intelligence handlers – Poland arrested one of its nationals for allegedly spying for Russia as part of an early plot to assassinate Ukraine’s Pres. Zelensky. Polish police say the suspect “proactively established contact” with Russia. READ MORE

Venezuela

  • Though the U.S. allowed a six-month license permitting Venezuelan oil sales to expire yesterday, U.S. companies doing business in the Venezuelan oil sector will have 45 days to wind down their sales, and the exceptional license granted to Chevron (which is currently producing about 90,000 barrels per day in Venezuela) may even remain valid after that. READ MORE
  • Pres. Maduro called the U.S. action (or rather, inaction on renewing license 44) a “grave error” and part of a “blackmail threat” [to blackmail him into holding free and fair elections?]. READ MORE

Other News

  • Kenya’s military chief, Gen. Francis Ogolla, died along with nine other senior Kenyan military officials in an apparently accidental helicopter crash about 250 miles (400 km) northwest of Nairobi. Two survived, including the pilot. READ MORE
  • Voting in the world’s largest democracy – India – began today. PM Modi is sure to win reelection, but the strength of his win will be seen as a gauge of support for his policies – especially on the economy. The election runs through June 1. READ MORE
  • The National Association of Broadcasters critiqued the Federal Communications Commission for its outdated broadcast-ownership rules, highlighting the need to modernize regulations to allow local broadcasters to effectively compete with major digital platforms like Google and Facebook in the rapidly evolving digital media landscape. READ MORE

The World Daily Brief is composed daily by former CIA and Intelligence officers.

Armstrong Williams (www.armstrongwilliams.com; @arightside) is a political analyst, syndicated columnist and owner of the broadcasting company, Howard Stirk Holdings. He is also part owner of The Baltimore Sun.