- Ukrainian Drones Strike Saint Petersburg During Russia’s Economic Forum
- Muhammad Ali remembered as Louisville marks 10 years since his death
- State Senator Scott Wiener advances to general election for Nancy Pelosi’s seat in Congress
- US military intercepts Iranian missile and drone attacks targeting Kuwait
- Supreme Court allows Alabama to use congressional map favouring Republicans
- Libya’s national army conducts largest military exercise amid regional tensions
- Iranian Nobel laureate Narges Mohammadi released from hospital after treatment
- Anthropic experiences major outage affecting Claude AI chatbot services
LIVE German 2025 Election Results as they come in and analysi on who will be the next German Chancellor.
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Global Reaction to DE Elections
When are the German Elections?
The Elections are on Sunday the 23rd of Feb 2025
Why are they having a snap election?
The German coalition government failed a no confidence vote
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Germans vote in big numbers, usually as high 70+ percent voter turnout
Ukrainian Drones Strike Saint Petersburg During Russia’s Economic Forum
Ukrainian Drones Strike Saint Petersburg During Russia’s Economic Forum
Russia is facing heightened tensions as Ukraine launches drone strikes targeting St Petersburg, coinciding with the opening of the country’s flagship economic forum. The strikes occurred amidst escalating hostilities, with reports indicating that Russian air defence successfully repelled several attacks. This military action is raising alarms about further destabilisation in the region and its repercussions for the upcoming forum, which aims to project economic resilience despite ongoing conflicts. Related coverage can be found in our global conflict updates.
The situation is likely to exert additional pressure on Russian markets, particularly as investors respond to the thinly-veiled threats of retaliation. Analysts are closely monitoring the implications for energy prices and international investor confidence. What to watch: the outcome of the economic forum and any subsequent military responses from Russia.
Key developments across the world
‘You’re f****** crazy’: Trump clashes with Netanyahu over Lebanon
GLOBAL SECURITY — Tensions rise between the US and Israeli leaders amidst allegations of disagreements over Lebanon. Trump reportedly confronted Netanyahu, labelling certain strategies as “crazy,” indicating a significant diplomatic rift.
This outburst underscores growing frustrations within the US regarding Israel‘s regional strategies, particularly concerning negotiations with Iran. Analysts suggest this conflict may impact ongoing peace talks, further complicating Middle Eastern security dynamics.
US and Iran exchange renewed fire as tensions rise over stalled peace talks
DIPLOMACY — The US and Iran are experiencing heightened tensions following stalled negotiations on a nuclear deal. Recent exchanges have involved accusatory rhetoric and military posturing, signalling a potential escalation in hostilities.
Ukraine targets St Petersburg as ‘Putin’s Davos’ gets underway
GLOBAL SECURITY — Ukrainian drones have allegedly targeted Saint Petersburg amidst Russia’s economic forum. This marks a strategic move by Ukraine to disrupt key Russian events and signal its continuing resistance against Russian aggression.
The attack could heighten tensions further and complicate Russia’s already strained economic backdrop while showcasing Ukraine’s capabilities and resolve in the ongoing conflict.
Russia repels drone attack over Leningrad region as economic forum kicks off
GLOBAL SECURITY — Russia successfully repelled a drone attack during the opening of a major economic forum in Leningrad. The incident highlights the heightened security concerns for Russia amidst sustained military and economic pressures.
This event reflects ongoing vulnerabilities within Russian defenses and may provoke further military responses as international scrutiny of Russia’s actions continues to rise in the context of the Ukrainian conflict.
Ukraine rescuers pull dead from rubble after Russian strikes kill 22 people
GLOBAL SECURITY — Ukrainian officials reported 22 fatalities from recent Russian strikes in a residential area. The attacks have intensified amidst ongoing military action, raising alarms about the humanitarian impact on civilians.
This tragic event reinforces the severe consequences of the conflict and further consolidates international calls for increased humanitarian aid and interventions to safeguard civilians caught in the crossfire.
What to watch — The escalation in US-Iran relations could have significant implications for global security and diplomacy.
Further reading from global news sources
Reuters
Russia repels drone attack over Leningrad region as economic forum kicks off
BBC
‘They’ll fix the building, but not our souls’: Sleepy Kyiv neighbourhood hit in Russian strike
The Guardian
Kyiv picks up the pieces after another attack by Russia – photo essay
Financial Times
US and Iran exchange renewed fire as tensions rise over stalled peace talks
Al Jazeera
Trump berated Netanyahu? Analysts question US-Israel feud rumours
Muhammad Ali remembered as Louisville marks 10 years since his death
Get you up to speed: ‘Service is the rent we pay’: Muhammad Ali remembered 10 years on
Muhammad Ali is being honoured with a global “Day of Compassion” to mark the tenth anniversary of his death, which took place on June 3, 2016, after a long battle with Parkinson’s disease. The Muhammad Ali Center in Louisville is encouraging acts of service and care worldwide in commemoration of the event.
The Muhammad Ali Center in Louisville is hosting a global “Day of Compassion” this week, encouraging acts of service in honour of the late boxing champion. The initiative aims to evolve into an annual event celebrating volunteerism and represents a call for compassion and community engagement amid increasing societal polarisation.
The Muhammad Ali Center is encouraging global acts of service in honour of the “Day of Compassion,” a new initiative marking the tenth anniversary of Ali’s death. Lonnie Ali has called for political leaders to “lead with compassion,” challenging them on issues such as the Voting Rights Act, as the Centre aims to establish this observance as an annual event to promote volunteerism and community engagement.
What remains unclear — It is not specified whether the “Day of Compassion” will be held annually beyond this year.
Muhammad Ali remembered as Louisville marks 10 years since his death
By APPublished On 3 Jun 20263 Jun 2026
Muhammad Ali’s legacy extends far beyond his world titles and Olympic gold, his widow has said, as his hometown prepares to mark 10 years since the boxing icon’s death with a global “Day of Compassion”.
Ali, who died on June 3, 2016, after a long battle with Parkinson’s disease, is being honored this week at the Muhammad Ali Center in Louisville, which is encouraging people worldwide to mark Wednesday’s anniversary with acts of service and care.
“He transcended boxing into every space you can imagine,” Lonnie Ali said in an interview at the centre. “Muhammad lived by this mantra: Service to others is the rent we pay for our room here on Earth.
“He showed up every day with kindness and empathy in his heart for people who are in need.”
Known in his hometown as the “Louisville Lip”, Ali rose from a modest background to become a three-time heavyweight champion and 1960 Olympic gold medallist.
As his fame grew in the 1960s, he became an outspoken voice on civil rights and the Vietnam War, cementing his status as one of the most influential athletes of all time.
The Ali Center, where Lonnie Ali serves as lifetime director, hopes the “Day of Compassion” will grow into an annual event highlighting volunteerism and service.
“The day will focus on one of the core values that made up Muhammad Ali,” she said, warning that the United States is “losing touch with our humanity and with each other”.
“We’re becoming increasingly polarised and separated, and sort of retreating to people who think like us, look like us – and not really reaching out,” she added.
Lonnie Ali also challenged political leaders to “lead with compassion”, criticising moves that have weakened the landmark 1965 Voting Rights Act. “We should always be thinking about how we can uplift a community, not how we can make it harder for them.
“You can’t have equal representation when you’re denying people voting rights,” she said.
She said she still draws hope from how Louisville came together during a weeklong celebration of Ali’s life in 2016, when thousands lined the streets as his funeral procession passed his childhood home and millions watched the service online.
A decade later, Ali’s face now appears on a US postage stamp – another sign, she said, that his message of courage, faith, and service still resonates “from kings and princes to ordinary fans who never met him, but felt they knew his heart”.
Heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali, right, launches an attack on Joe Bugner, British and European heavyweight champion, during their 12-round Heavyweight fight in Los Vegas, Nevada, on February 14, 1973. [AP Photo]
Muhammad Ali chops at a tree with an axe at his training camp in Deer Lake, Pennsylvania, on August 23, 1973, as he prepares for his rematch against Ken Norton. The rustic camp, now restored, opened to the public in 2019 as a shrine to his life and career. [Rusty Kennedy/AP]
Muhammad Ali is greeted by fans in downtown Kinshasa, Zaire, on September 17, 1974, before his “Rumble in the Jungle” heavyweight title fight against George Foreman. [AP]
US President George W Bush presents the Presidential Medal of Freedom to former heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali in the East Room of the White House in November 2005. [Evan Vucci/AP]
Former heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali, centre, is crowned “King of Boxing” during the 50th convention of the World Boxing Council in Cancun, Mexico, on, December 3, 2012, alongside his wife, Lonnie, right, and Argentinian boxer Sergio Martinez. [Israel Leal/AP]
Muhammad Ali’s funeral procession passes as onlookers line the street in Louisville, Kentucky, on June 10, 2016. [Jeff Roberson/AP] Advertisement
The hearse carrying Muhammad Ali’s body passes in front of his boyhood home, seen at top centre, during his funeral procession in Louisville, Kentucky, on June 10, 2016. [Mark Humphrey/AP]
Lonnie Ali, widow of boxing legend Muhammad Ali, speaks about a 1975 painting of him at the Muhammad Ali Center in Louisville, Kentucky, on January 8, 2026. [Dylan Lovan/AP]
Commemorative stamps honouring boxing legend Muhammad Ali are sold after their unveiling by the US Postal Service in Louisville, Kentucky, on, January 15, 2026. [Dylan Lovan/AP]
State Senator Scott Wiener advances to general election for Nancy Pelosi’s seat in Congress
Get you up to speed: State Sen. Scott Wiener advances to general election in race to succeed Pelosi in Congress, WTX US News projects
Voters in San Francisco advanced state Sen. Scott Wiener in the race for California’s 11th Congressional District, succeeding former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. The top two candidates will progress to the November election, with the other candidate yet to be confirmed.
The top two Democratic candidates are Scott Wiener and either Saikat Chakrabarti or Connie Chan, with the latter two yet to be determined. The election will take place in November, following a primary where eight Democrats, two Republicans, and one no party preference candidate competed.
State Sen. Scott Wiener has advanced in the race to succeed former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in California’s 11th Congressional District, following a San Francisco Chronicle poll that placed him in the lead with 40%. The top two vote-getters will move on to the November election, with the other candidate yet to be determined.
What remains unclear — The other candidate to advance in the race for California’s 11th Congressional District has not yet been identified.
State Senator Scott Wiener advances to general election for Nancy Pelosi’s seat in Congress
Voters in San Francisco on Tuesday advanced state Sen. Scott Wiener in the race to succeed former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in California’s 11th Congressional District, WTX US News projects. The other candidate to advance has not yet been projected.
Eight Democrats, two Republicans and one no party preference candidate ran to represent the 11th District, the boundaries for which are entirely within San Francisco and cover most neighborhoods in the city except for the Excelsior District, Ocean View, Portola and Visitacion Valley.
The top two vote-getters will advance to the November election.
The Democratic field includes economic policy director Saikat Chakrabarti, San Francisco Supervisor Connie Chan and State Sen. Wiener, along with John “Gus” Buffler, a rocket scientist, small business owner Keith Freedman, technology advocate Omed Hamid, civil rights advocate Gregory Haynes, attorney and reform advocate Marie Hurabiell.
The Republicans running for the seat are newspaper publisher David Ganezer and social management scientist Jingchao Xiong. Nathan Deer, a homeowners’ association treasurer, is running under no party preference.
A San Francisco Chronicle poll released in early May found Wiener leading the race with 40%, while Chakrabarti and Chan are in a statistical dead heat for second place, at 18% and 17%, respectively.
(L-R) Connie Chan, Saikat Chakribarti and Scott Wiener, candidates who are seeking to succeed former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi for California’s 11th Congressional District. WTX 
Wiener has represented San Francisco and northern San Mateo County in the state Senate since 2016 and has previously served on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors.
During his time in Sacramento, Wiener authored key legislation later signed into law including bills to expand the supply of housing and ban most law enforcement wearing face masks and a proposed tax measure to fund Bay Area transit. Wiener received the endorsement of the California Democratic Party at its convention in February.
A former software engineer, Chakrabarti entered politics by joining Sen. Bernie Sanders’ 2016 presidential campaign, eventually becoming chief of staff to Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-New York). Chakrabarti has spent the most money in the race, $8.8 million as of May 13 according to Federal Election Commission data.
Chan was first elected to the Board of Supervisors in 2020, representing the Richmond District, Sea Cliff, Presidio Terrace and other neighborhoods in the northwestern part of the city. Earlier this month, Chan received Pelosi’s endorsement.
Pelosi, 86, is ending a historic career in Congress, which included becoming the first woman to serve as Speaker of the House. She was elected to the House of Representatives in 1987.
In:
US military intercepts Iranian missile and drone attacks targeting Kuwait
Get you up to speed: Middle East war live: US military says it intercepted Iranian missile and drone attacks
The US military intercepted a series of Iranian missile and drone attacks targeting regional neighbours, including Kuwait and Bahrain, on 3 June 2026. Two Iranian missiles fired at Kuwait fell short, while three missiles launched at Bahrain were intercepted by US and Bahraini air defence forces.
Investigations into the Iranian missile and drone attacks are ongoing, with US Central Command confirming that all targeted missiles failed to hit their intended destinations. The incidents followed a complex escalation of hostilities between the US and Iran, particularly in relation to recent strikes on Qeshm Island.
The US military confirmed it “successfully defeated” a series of Iranian missile and drone attacks on regional neighbours, while US Secretary of State Marco Rubio stated that no sanctions relief has been offered to Iran for reopening the Strait of Hormuz. Oil prices rose over one per cent amid ongoing tensions, reflecting uncertainty in the market as peace talks in the region falter.
What remains unclear — Details about the US military’s self-defence strikes on Iran’s Qeshm Island have not been fully disclosed.
US military intercepts Iranian missile and drone attacks targeting Kuwait

The US military said on Tuesday that it had intercepted and defeated a series of Iranian missile and drone attacks targeting regional neighbours, including Kuwait and Bahrain, while also carrying out self-defence strikes on Iran’s Qeshm Island, according to US Central Command. Follow our liveblog for the latest developments.
Oil rises on Middle East tensions as AI-fuelled stock rally continues
Oil prices extended gains on Wednesday as Middle East peace talks stuttered, though stocks mostly rose on the back of continued demand for all things linked to artificial intelligence.
Uncertainty about a peace deal pushed oil prices up more than one per cent, with both main contracts up around five per cent this week.
However, stocks extended their breathtaking rally, fuelled by the tech sector and AI demand.
Tokyo climbed more than two per cent, helped by a more than 11 per cent surge in chipmaker Tokyo Electron, while Advantest also jumped.
Taipei was up a similar amount thanks to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company’s strong advance.
Shanghai, Sydney, Singapore and Manila were also up, though Hong Kong, Wellington and Jakarta retreated. Seoul was closed for a holiday.
“Equity markets are once again taking their cue from the technology sector rather than the geopolitical headlines,” said IG chief market analyst Chris Beauchamp.
Iranian Revolutionary Guards say they attacked US Fifth Fleet and regional bases
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps has attacked the US Fifth Fleet headquarters and an airbase and helicopters in a regional country using missiles and drones, Iranian media reported on Wednesday, in response to what the IRGC described as a US attack on a communications tower south of Qeshm Island.
IRGC navy also targeted a vessel it identified as Panaya with missiles in response to what it said was a US attack on an Iranian tanker near the Strait of Hormuz with a projectile that damaged the engine room, Iranian media reported.
“Disrupting the security of the Strait of Hormuz will carry a heavy price for the US military,” local media cited the IRGC as saying.
US military says it intercepted Iranian missile and drone attacks
The US military said on Tuesday that it had “successfully defeated” a series of Iranian missile and drone attacks on its regional neighbours, and conducted self-defence strikes on Iran’s Qeshm Island.
“Iran launched several ballistic missiles towards regional neighbours; however, all failed to hit their intended targets,” US Central Command said in a statement.
“Two Iranian missiles fired at Kuwait fell short or broke apart en route, and three missiles launched at Bahrain were immediately intercepted by US and Bahrain air defence forces.”
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said President Donald Trump‘s negotiating team has not offered Iran any sanctions relief in exchange for reopening the Strait of Hormuz.
The first day of direct talks between ambassadors of Israel and Lebanon in Washington made no headway, after President Donald Trump said he had received commitments to de-escalation from both sides.
Israel kept up strikes on southern Lebanon just a day after Trump asked Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu not to attack Beirut to avert further escalation in the three-month-old war.
Supreme Court allows Alabama to use congressional map favouring Republicans
Get you up to speed: Supreme Court lets Alabama use House map that favors GOP in midterms
The Supreme Court has cleared the way for Alabama to use a congressional map favoured by Republicans, despite a lower court finding it intentionally discriminated against Black voters. This decision affects the state’s electoral landscape as Alabama prepares for its upcoming midterm elections.
The Supreme Court’s decision allows Alabama to implement the 2023 congressional map ahead of the special primary on August 11. Legal challenges from voting rights groups continue, with the district court maintaining that the 2023 map unlawfully discriminates against Black voters.
The Supreme Court’s 6-3 decision allows Alabama to proceed with a congressional map favouring Republicans, overriding a lower court’s finding of intentional discrimination against Black voters. Kristen Clarke of the NAACP has warned that the ruling could lead to a “chaotic election,” while Alabama plans to hold a special primary for affected House seats on 11 August.
What remains unclear — It is not specified how the Supreme Court’s decision will impact the voting process in the 2026 elections.
Supreme Court allows Alabama to use congressional map favouring Republicans
Washington — The Supreme Court on Tuesday cleared the way for Alabama to use a congressional map that is more favorable to Republicans in this year’s midterm elections, despite a lower court finding that the plan intentionally discriminated against Black voters.
In a divided 6-3 decision, the high court agreed to freeze the district court decision that prevented the state from using the map drawn by Republicans in 2023, which included one majority-Black congressional district out of Alabama’s seven. The lower court had found that Alabama intentionally discriminated against Black voters when it crafted those House district lines three years ago.
The lower court judges instead ordered the state to keep using a court-selected congressional map, which was in place for the 2024 elections, that includes two districts where Black voters have the opportunity to elect their preferred candidates. Under that map, the state’s seven-member congressional delegation is divided between five Republicans and two Democrats.
Now, under the 2023 plan that Alabama can swap in as a result of the Supreme Court’s order, which reconfigures the district currently represented by Democratic Rep. Shomari Figures, Republicans are likely to be favored 6-1. A special primary for four House seats altered by the 2023 map is set for Aug. 11. Primaries for the other three districts were held May 19.
In Tuesday’s unsigned opinion, the Supreme Court wrote that the lower court “interposed itself into Alabama’s ongoing efforts to conduct its imminent 2026 congressional elections under maps that its elected representatives selected. Its view that conducting the elections under court-imposed maps would be more convenient for the State was not a valid justification for that intervention.”
The high court said that Alabama was likely to prevail on its argument that the 2023 map is lawful.
Justice Sonia Sotomayor penned a dissent that was joined by the court’s two other liberal justices, arguing that setting aside the current congressional map — and reassigning many voters to new congressional districts — could lead to a “chaotic election, held under a never-before-used congressional map that intentionally discriminates against Black Alabamians.”
She said the court’s conservative majority “disregards both democratic values and the rule of law.”
Alabama GOP officials turned to the Supreme Court for emergency relief last week, after the district court’s decision finding the 2023 map unlawful because it purposefully discriminates based on race. They said that when drawing the district lines, mapmakers aimed to help Republicans and keep the Gulf Coast region together in one congressional district.
The Trump administration backed Alabama in its effort to put the congressional districts drawn in 2023 in place for the midterm elections, arguing that federal courts shouldn’t interfere with elections or usurp states’ role in drawing congressional districts.
But a group of voters and voting rights groups pushed back on Alabama’s assertion that it was seeking to achieve partisan goals when it drew the congressional map three years ago. In a filing with the Supreme Court, they said the legislature did not cite partisan goals at the time, and noted that the district court found “zero evidence” that mapmakers were motivated by party or incumbent protection.
“Granting Alabama’s request would insert the Court into an ongoing election in a manner that upsets settled expectations, causes voter confusion, and creates chaos and unworkable deadlines for even the most diligent election officials,” the voters, represented by the NAACP and the ACLU, said.
Kristen Clarke, general counsel of the NAACP, criticized the Supreme Court’s order, but encouraged Black voters to cast ballots in upcoming elections to express their dissent.
“The Supreme Court continues to unleash chaos in our democratic process, and with this latest action, gives Alabama approval to use a congressional map that had previously been found to be intentionally discriminatory,” she said in a statement. “This is a Court that is stripping Black voters of power and voice at a speed that would put Jim Crow jurists to shame.”
The legal battle involving Alabama’s voting boundaries posed an early test of the Supreme Court’s blockbuster decision in late April that weakened a key provision of the Voting Rights Act and invalidated a majority-Black congressional district in Louisiana. On the heels of that ruling, several states in the South, like Alabama, have moved to reconfigure House districts that have favored Democrats.
The high court’s decision came amid a separate push by President Trump for GOP-led states to redraw their congressional maps to bolster Republicans’ chances of holding onto their House majority in November, which set off a mid-decade redistricting battle.
Alabama has been involved in a protracted legal fight over its congressional boundaries that dates back to the redrawing of its House districts after the 2020 Census. After the Supreme Court ruled in 2023 that a congressional map adopted in 2021 — which included one majority-Black district — likely violated Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, the state’s GOP-led legislature crafted a new map in the summer of 2023 that maintained a single majority-Black district.
But a district court blocked the state from using that map and found that it unlawfully diluted the votes of Black Alabamians. It ordered a special master to come up with a new plan, which was selected by the district court in October 2023 and used in the 2024 elections.
After the Supreme Court’s decision in the Louisiana voting rights case, Alabama asked the high court to lift the district court’s injunction and allow it to revive the 2023 map that had been blocked. The Supreme Court agreed to set aside the lower court’s decision and sent the case back for more proceedings.
When the three-judge district court panel took another look at the 2023 map, it maintained its earlier finding that the plan is racially discriminatory.
“Ultimately, we cannot see our way clear to requiring Alabamians to cast their votes in the 2026 elections under a districting plan tainted by intentional race-based discrimination,” Circuit Judge Stanley Marcus and District Judges Anna Manasco and Terry Moorer found.
Alabama Republican officials asked the Supreme Court to step in, arguing that the state’s 2023 map was “lawful then, and it is lawful now.”
Libya’s national army conducts largest military exercise amid regional tensions
Get you up to speed: ‘Message for friends and foes’: Libyan National Army conducts grand exercises
The Libyan National Army, led by Marshall Khalifa Haftar, is conducting its largest military exercise to date approximately 100 kilometres from Derna. Over 25,000 troops are involved in the two-week drills, which will culminate on May 19 and are intended to demonstrate the military’s capabilities and control over eastern and southern Libya.
The two-week military exercises conducted by the Libyan National Army are set to culminate on May 19, marking the anniversary of the LNA’s 2014 “Operation Dignity.” The exercises involve over 25,000 troops and a variety of military hardware, as the LNA aims to assert its control and safeguard the interests of all Libyans amid ongoing divisions within the country.
The Libyan National Army (LNA) is showcasing its military capabilities in a two-week exercise that culminates on May 19, with officials stating it aims to “safeguard the interests of all Libyans.” In a potential shift towards greater unity, the eastern and western authorities in Libya recently signed a US-mediated agreement to unify public spending, marking a significant political response to the ongoing division in the country.
What remains unclear — It is unclear how the unification of public spending will affect the ongoing power dynamics between Libya’s eastern and western authorities.
Libya’s national army conducts largest military exercise amid regional tensions
The Libyan National Army (LNA), commanded by Marshall Khalifa Haftar and controlling southern and eastern Libya, is conducting what officers describe as its biggest military exercise yet — and a message for both friends and foes.
At the entrance of a sprawling military encampment some 100 kilometers away from Derna, a towering portrait of Haftar overlooked the scene.
The sand whipped across a barren landscape as armored vehicles sped along.
The two-week exercises, which AFP journalists were permitted to observe during a visit over the weekend, will culminate on May 19 to mark the anniversary of the LNA’s 2014 “Operation Dignity” campaign against jihadist groups, including the Islamic State, in Benghazi.
The campaign allowed Haftar’s forces to wrest control over the east and ultimately parts of southern Libya.
Haftar, 82, and his sons — including Saddam, his heir apparent — will attend the display of firepower on May 19, along with foreign and Libyan officials.
The drills have deployed a panoply of military hardware — including tank formations and Russian-made Pantsir air-defense systems — with over 25,000 troops, said General Omar Mrajah Al Jedid, the officer overseeing the exercises.
General Abdallah Noureddine, another senior commander supervising operations near the village of El Ezzeiat, told AFP the manoeuvres were “a message for our friends and our foes.”
Several reports have said that the United States, through Trump’s senior adviser on Arab and African affairs Massad Boulos, is trying to promote a rapprochement between Libya’s eastern and western authorities, signalling a potential shift in power structures.
The legislative bodies of both authorities last month signed a US-mediated agreement to unify public spending across the divided country for the first time in over a decade.
‘ARMY FOR ALL LIBYANS’
Libya has remained fractured since chaos broke loose following the 2011 Arab Spring uprising that toppled longtime ruler Muammar Qaddafi.
The oil-rich country remains divided between a UN-recognized government based in its capital, Tripoli, and an eastern administration in Benghazi backed by Haftar.
Haftar’s forces attempted to seize Tripoli in 2019 but failed after a year of armed conflict. Since then, a change of tack appears to have taken place.
General Noureddine said the LNA has focused less on outright conquest and more on showcasing its control over the east and south of the country, all while “wishing the same for the rest of Libya.”
Human rights groups, however, have over the years accused forces linked to Haftar of arbitrary arrests, forced disappearances, and centralising power only within the Haftar clan.
General Al Jedid said the military drills would also demonstrate the army’s capacity to “safeguard the interests of all Libyans.”
The LNA is capable of “protecting the borders from all attacks,” he added, citing threats from “smugglers or terrorist groups currently moving through Mali, Niger and other countries in attempts to enter Libya.”
Responding to critiques on whether the force represents Libya as a whole, Al Jedid — himself from Tripoli and a former officer under Qaddafi — said the army did not serve only Haftar and eastern Libya.
“This is not a private army,” he said. “It’s not Marshall Haftar’s army, nor an army for the east, west or south. It’s the army of all Libyans, tribes and families.”
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