Saturday, May 09, 2026


Could Iran use 'kamikaze dolphins' against the US in the Strait of Hormuz?


Issued on: 06/05/2026 - 


04:23 min From the show

As US-Iran tensions escalate around the Strait of Hormuz, a journalist at a Pentagon briefing this week asked top US officials an out-of-the ordinary question: whether Tehran could deploy "kamikaze dolphins" against US warships. The idea isn't as far-fetched as it seems, as multiple countries have a history of using marine mammals for military purposes.

The question stems from a Wall Street Journal report published last week. Citing Iranian officials, it said Iran could use "previously unused weapons to attack US warships, from submarines to mine-carrying dolphins".

Though Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth denied that Iran had these in their possession, he refused to "confirm or deny" whether the US does, and Tehran was quick to troll Washington online, with its embassy in Hyderabad posting an AI-generated "dolphin bomber" on its official X account.
A long history of military marine mammals

Military marine mammals - especially bottlenose dolphins - have been around for decades, with the Soviet Union in particular known for its dolphin training programme.

There have been reports of evidence that North Korea possesses a naval marine mammal programme as far back as 2015, as well as reports that the Russian Navy deployed trained dolphins in both 2018 to aid in the Syrian civil war, and its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

Rumours have floated for over two decades that Iran has "kamikaze dolphins" in its arsenal, after a Russian dolphin trainer claimed to have sold a group of Soviet "killer dolphins" to Tehran in 2000. But it's not known if they are still alive.

The US also has a "Marine Mammal Program", training dolphins and sea lions to detect and recover objects underwater, including mines.

Vedika Bahl goes through whether "kamikaze dolphins" are a myth or a military reality.


Israeli court rejects appeal by detained Gaza aid flotilla activists

An Israeli court on Wednesday rejected an appeal by two foreign nationals, one Spanish and one Brazilian, challenging their detention in Israel. The two men were seized in international waters last week while participating in a humanitarian aid flotilla seeking to break Israel’s blockade of the Gaza Strip. The ruling means an earlier decision extending their detention remains in place.


Issued on: 06/05/2026 - 
By: FRANCE 24

Brazilian national Thiago Avila were among dozens of activists aboard a flotilla intercepted in international waters off the coast of Greece. © Ilia Yefimovich, AFP

An Israeli court rejected on Wednesday an appeal filed by two foreign activists contesting their detention by authorities, their lawyer told journalists.

Spanish national of Palestinian origin Saif Abu Keshek and Brazilian Thiago Avila were among dozens of activists aboard a flotilla intercepted in international waters off the coast of Greece on Thursday.

The two were seized by Israeli forces and brought to Israel for questioning, while the others were taken to the Greek island of Crete and released.

On Tuesday, an Israeli court extended the detention of Abu Keshek and Avila until Sunday to allow police more time to interrogate them, according to their lawyers.

The pair's legal team then filed an appeal at the Beersheva district court against the detention.

But their appeal was rejected.

"Today, the district court of Beersheva denied our appeal and basically accepted all of the arguments that the state or the police have represented before the court and kept the previous decision," Hadeel Abu Salih said, referring to the earlier court's ruling.

The two activists had appeared in the district court, their feet shackled, an AFP journalist reported.

Abu Keshek looked exhausted and sat with his hands clasped in his lap, while Avila seemed calm, said the journalist.

Israeli rights group Adalah, which is representing the pair, has called their detention illegal.

"As we said from the first day, we're talking about an illegal arrest that took place in international waters where the activists were kidnapped by the Israeli navy without any authority," Abu Salih said after the hearing on Wednesday.

"It's so concerning that also the legal system is giving a free hand for the Israeli forces to continue with this illegal arrest in a way that would give it also legitimacy to do it again and again and kidnap international nationals."
'Stopped drinking'

Adalah has also accused the authorities of subjecting the men to continuous abuse in detention.

"Saif basically told us that he stopped drinking water in addition to the hunger strike he started on Thursday morning," Abu Salih said.

"They are also telling us that they keep interrogating them for most of the time, most of the day, and the questions keep going around the same context, which is the humanitarian mission context."

Adalah had earlier said that the two men were being held in "total isolation, subjected to 24/7 high-intensity lighting in their cells and kept blindfolded whenever they were moved, including during medical examinations".

Israeli authorities have rejected the allegations but have filed no charges against the men.

Adalah said authorities have accused the pair of several offences, including "assisting the enemy during wartime" and "membership in and providing services to a terrorist organisation".

Israel's foreign ministry says both men were affiliated with the Popular Conference for Palestinians Abroad (PCPA), a group accused by Washington of "clandestinely acting on behalf of" Palestinian militant group Hamas.

Spain, Brazil and the United Nations have called for their swift release.

"It is not a crime to show solidarity and attempt to bring humanitarian aid to the Palestinian population in Gaza, who are in dire need of it," UN rights office spokesman Thameen Al-Kheetan said in a statement.

The flotilla had set sail from France, Spain and Italy with the aim of breaking Israel's blockade of Gaza and delivering humanitarian aid to the war-ravaged Palestinian territory.

Israel controls all entry points into Gaza, which has been under an Israeli blockade since 2007.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)
New Trump counterterrorism strategy brands Europe an 'incubator' for terrorism



The Trump administration on Wednesday unveiled a new counterterrorism strategy, accusing Europe of fostering terrorism through mass migration, while also expanding US domestic focus to include what it called “violent left-wing extremists” and “radically pro-transgender” groups.



Issued on: 07/05/2026 - 
By: FRANCE 24

US President Donald Trump's administration accused Europe of being an "incubator" for terrorism fueled by mass migration, in a new counterterrorism strategy unveiled on Wednesday.

The strategy also focuses on rooting out "violent left-wing extremists", including "radically pro-transgender" groups, as Trump's administration steps up its political attacks on opponents.

It further places drug cartels in the Americas at the centre of counterterrorism efforts.

But some of its strongest language is reserved for Europe, home to numerous US allies who will be alarmed to see their continent in the Trump administration's crosshairs once again.


"It is clear to all that well-organised hostile groups exploit open borders and related globalist ideals. The more these alien cultures grow, and the longer current European policies persist, the more terrorism is guaranteed," the strategy said.

"As the birthplace of Western culture and values, Europe must act now and halt its willful decline," said the strategy, led by counterterrorism coordinator Sebastian Gorka, who has been accused of links to far-right groups.

The fresh criticism of Europe comes just months after Trump's new national security strategy said the continent faced "civilizational erasure" due to immigration.

Trump has also recently lashed out at European NATO allies for failing to help with his war on Iran.

Left-wing groups are a major preoccupation for the Republican president's administration, with the strategy targeting what it calls "violent Left-Wing Extremists, including Anarchists and Anti-Fascists".

It says US counterrorism efforts will "prioritise the rapid identification and neutralisation of violent secular political groups whose ideology is anti-American, radically pro-transgender, and anarchist".

It specifically cited the alleged killer of Trump ally and conservative influencer Charlie Kirk "by a radical who espoused extreme transgender ideologies."

Since his return to power last year, Trump has demonised any recognition of gender diversity and transgender people.

He regularly boasts about how his administration has banned transwomen from women's sports and shortly after his inauguration signed an executive order proclaiming that there are only two genders.

FRANCE 24 with AFP



















Hantavirus on the rise in Argentina, where MV Hondius cruise ship set sail

Experts say that a surge of hantavirus cases in Argentina, where the MV Hondius cruise ship set sail, is in part due to climate change. The World Health Organization ranks the South American country as having the highest incidence of the rodent-borne disease.


Issued on: 07/05/2026 - 
By: FRANCE 24

A person in a hazmat suit is escorted to an ambulance from a medical aircraft allegedly carrying some of the passengers from the cruise ship MV Hondius believed to be infected with hantavirus, at Schiphol airport near Amsterdam on May 6, 2026. © Lina Selg, AFP

Officials and experts in Argentina are scrambling to determine if their country is the source of a deadly hantavirus outbreak that has gripped an Atlantic cruise.

The health emergency aboard the ship that's moored across the ocean comes as Argentina sees a surge of hantavirus cases that many local public health researchers attribute to the recently accelerating effects of climate change. Argentina, where the cruise to Antarctica departed, is consistently ranked by the World Health Organization (WHO) as having the highest incidence of the rare, rodent-borne disease in Latin America.

Higher temperatures expand the virus’ range because, in part, as it gets warmer and ecosystems change, rodents that carry the hantavirus can thrive in more places, experts say. People typically contract the virus from exposure to rodent droppings, urine or saliva.
Argentina probes link to deadly hantavirus outbreak on Atlantic cruise


“Argentina has become more tropical because of climate change, and that has brought disruptions, like dengue and yellow fever, but also new tropical plants that produce seeds for mice to proliferate,” said Hugo Pizzi, a prominent Argentine infectious disease specialist. “There is no doubt that as time goes by, the hantavirus is spreading more and more.”


The Argentine Health Ministry on Tuesday reported 101 hantavirus infections since June 2025, roughly double the caseload recorded over the same period the previous year.

A hantavirus found in South America, called the Andes virus, can cause a severe and often fatal lung disease called hantavirus pulmonary syndrome. The disease led to death in nearly a third of cases in the last year, Argentina’s Health Ministry said, up from an average mortality rate of 15 in the five years before that.

Hantavirus usually spreads by inhaling contaminated rodent droppings and can spread person-to-person, though that is rare, according to the WHO, whose top epidemic expert said the risk to the public is low. The Andes strain only hantavirus known to spread from human to human.

Authorities said passengers on the MV Hondius ship tested positive for the Andes virus. Argentina on Wednesday said it was sending genetic material from the Andes virus and testing equipment to help Spain, Senegal, South Africa, the Netherlands and the UK detect it.

Argentine officials say they’re trying to pin down where infected passengers travelled in the country before boarding the Dutch-flagged cruise liner in Ushuaia, a city in southern Argentina known as the end of the world. Once they know the itineraries, they plan to trace contacts, isolate close contacts and actively monitor to prevent further spread.
'Unconscionable to keep them on cruise ship': WHO's Gostin on hantavirus outbreak




The UN health agency, or WHO, says that the first death on board, a 70-year-old Dutch man, happened on April 11. His 69-year-old wife, also Dutch, died on April 26. The third passenger, a German woman, died on May 2.

The virus can incubate for between one and eight weeks. That makes it hard to know whether the passengers contracted the virus before leaving Argentina for Antarctica on April 1; during a scheduled stop to a remote South Atlantic island; or aboard the ship.

The province of Tierra del Fuego, where the vessel docked for weeks before departing, has never seen a case of hantavirus. Before boarding, the Dutch couple went sightseeing in Ushuaia, and travelled elsewhere in Argentina and Chile, WHO said.

The Argentine government’s leading hypothesis is that the couple contracted the virus during a bird-watching outing in Ushuaia, according to two investigators who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to brief the media, with the investigation ongoing. Authorities are also tracing the Dutch tourists' footsteps through the forested hillsides of Patagonia in southern Argentina where some infections are clustered.



Because early symptoms resemble the fever and chills of a flu, “tourists might think they just have a cold and not take it seriously. That makes it particularly dangerous,” Raul Gonzalez Ittig, genetics professor at the National University of Cordoba and a researcher at state science body CONICET, said.

Argentina in recent years endured a historic drought. But it also had bouts of unexpectedly intense rainfall, part of a broader pattern of wild weather that scientists attribute to climate change.

Some of this variability has created conditions that have allowed hantavirus to flourish, experts say. Dry spells drive animals out of their usual habitats in search of food and water. Huge amounts of rain lead to vegetation growth, scattering seeds that attract leaf-munching rodents.

“When precipitation increases, food availability increases, rodent populations grow, and if there are infected rodents, the chance of transmission between rodents – and eventually to humans – also increases,” Ittig said.


What is hantavirus and how does it spread?
Infection generally occurs through the inhalation of dust and aerosols contaminated by the excretions of infected rodents. © FRANCE 24
04:30



Although hantavirus cases once were limited to the southern reaches of Patagonia, now 83 percent of cases are found in Argentina’s far north, according to the Health Ministry.

The ministry issued an alert in January about several fatal outbreaks, including in the most populous province of Buenos Aires.

With rural hospitals under-equipped, residents had no clue what hit them.

Daisy Morinigo and David Delgado said they initially thought their 14-year-old son had the flu when he came down with a fever and body aches. Doctors who first saw Rodrigo in the town of San Andres de Giles sent him home with ibuprofen and orders to rest.

But the feisty fourth grader's breathing worsened. On January 1, they rushed Rodrigo to intensive care. He died just two hours after a hantavirus test came back positive.

"I wouldn’t wish this pain on anyone in the world,” Delgado said.

(FRANCE 24 with AP)
ANALYSIS


How India's pharmaceutical pipeline is fueling West Africa's opioid crisis


Sierra Leone, Togo, Ghana, Nigeria and several more countries in West Africa are in the midst of an overlooked opioid crisis that's crippling the population and devastating families. The drugs that are fueling this crisis aren't made in makeshift labs, but imported by the millions from India's pharmaceutical industry.



Issued on: 06/05/2026 
FRANCE24
By: Diya GUPTA

A young man smokes Kush, a derivative of cannabis mixed with synthetic drugs like fentanyl and tramadol and chemicals like formaldehyde, at a hideout in Freetown, Sierra Leone, April 29, 2024 © Misper Apawu, AP


For more than a decade, a sizable chunk of West Africa – including Ghana, Sierra Leone, Senegal, Nigeria and Ivory coast – has been gripped by an opioid-abuse epidemic that has devastated families, killed thousands and strained an already overburdened healthcare system. Once primarily a transit zone for the trade of illicit drugs that linked Latin America to Europe, West Africa has become one of the primary consumers of these painkillers.

Broadly, about 30% of West Africa’s population has been found to use tramadol and codeine, making these prescription opioids among the most widely abused substances in the region. Another notoriously dangerous opioid mix is ‘Kush’ – a synthetic drug which commonly contains cannabinoids and synthetic opioids like nitazenes, which can at times be even more powerful than fentanyl. The state of drug abuse has been so devastating that in 2024 leaders of both Sierra Leone and Liberia, in an unprecedented decision, declared national emergencies over drug use. Ghana’s Food and Drugs Authority also said last year that the abuse of the opioid tapentadol, known on the street as “Red”, was on the rise.

The root of addiction in these countries is no different than anywhere else: poverty, unemployment and weak governance have created a vulnerable youth who turn to substance abuse during trying times.

Illicit pills have been in circulation outside formal markets in several countries in the region since the surge in drug use began about a decade ago. But unlike the crisis in the US, where Purdue Pharma’s now infamous OxyContin pills were manufactured and distributed, several investigations have revealed that the crisis plaguing West Africa has its roots in India.

India has exported more than 1,400 consignments of tapentadol, worth almost USD $130 million, to several countries in the region, including Ghana, Sierra Leone, Benin, Senegal and Nigeria.

Porous borders and lax regulation

India, the world's largest producer of generic medicines and self-styled "pharmacy of the world", has been in the spotlight several times for flooding West Africa with illicit opioids.

A BBC investigation released in February last year took a deep look at one Indian company, Aveo Pharmaceuticals, based in Mumbai, which manufactured a drug they called "Tafrodol" – a particularly addictive and deadly combination of tapentadol, an opioid painkiller, and carisoprodol, a muscle relaxant. It isn’t legal anywhere in the world, including India or Ghana (the main point of shipment deliveries). Yet it was exported in vast quantities by Aveo Pharmaceuticals using regulatory loopholes.

In response to the investigation, Indian authorities seized Aveo’s stock and halted production. The disruption in the supply chain was expected to reduce the export of opioids by Indian pharmaceutical companies.

But new investigation published by investigative agency Bellingcat and independent Indian news platform Newslaundry revealed that, in fact, exports of other opioids like tapentadol have sharply increased.

02:26


Indian companies shipped more than 320 million tapentadol pills to West Africa. The value of tapentadol sent to the region has risen from about $27 million between 2020 to 2022 to almost $130 million from 2023 to 2025.

More than 80 percent of the total value of the potent drug was exported to Sierra Leone or Ghana. Both countries have sizable ports and sit in the middle of a wider trafficking route where these illicit substances – which are often hidden in cargo or courier parcels – can be transported to neighbouring regions.

The drugs were in high-strength 200mg doses or more – an amount that isn’t even approved in India. Ghana’s Food and Drugs Authority (FDA) categorically stated that they had not issued any permits for the import of tapentadol in any strength to any country in the neighbouring region.

The trade suggests serious gaps in export oversight, enforcement and cross-border drug controls.

Dinesh Thakur, public health activist and co-author of "Truth Pill: The Myth of Drug Regulation in India", says the problem lies in regulatory gaps and a lack of transparency between countries.

“There are two aspects to this issue. First, in the country of manufacture, how does a manufacturer make and export these opioids without any regulatory oversight? Current law in India is that if a particular formulation is not sold in the Indian market, the Indian regulator, CDSCO, has no role in its manufacture and export," he says. "For opioids especially, which fall under Schedule H (prescription only), approval from the Narcotics Bureau is necessary for export; however, how well this process functions is anyone's guess." Thakur adds that on the other side, the importing country will also have to execute their own rules to check for specific batches of drugs.

Nelson Aghogho Evaborhene, a Nigerian PhD fellow at Roskilde University, Denmark, says the spike in opioid use began about a decade ago and its circulation has been challenging to control.

“There are supposed to be border controls to look at drugs that are coming into the country. But most times we see is that this can be bypassed and products can be smuggled through different routes. In like West Africa, the borders are very porous – sometimes it’s just a bridge or a fence. They’re not really manned.”

Evaborhene says Nigeria’s National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control has tried hard to curb the problem, but it needs the support of customs and neighbouring countries.


He also says that many countries in the region lack robust systems to collect comprehensive data on drug use patterns: “Countries are trying to document but it’s not done at the scale it needs to be. A lot of people will not come to the hospitals and some primary, even secondary healthcare spaces have not transitioned to electronic systems. So it is difficult."

'The pharmaceutical giant of the world'


More than 60 Indian suppliers have made a tidy profit exporting tapentadol to West Africa since 2023. Out of those, three companies – Syncom Formulations, Puizer Pharmaceuticals and Twin Impex – have dominated the market.

According to a detailed investigation into India’s West African opioid economy, only two firms were granted approval to manufacture tapentadol for export but neither was in the 60 exporters released. This marks a serious lapse in India’s regulatory structure.

"Raw materials and API manufacture is China's forte. But to convert those into formulation (pills) requires skills in medicinal and process chemistry which are largely available in India," says Thakur, adding that as far as he is aware, India's pharmaceutical industry has not taken appropriate responsibility and action on the matter.

Evaborhene says that the reckless import puts vulnerable communities most at risk, especially in countries facing socioeconomic hardship: "Sierra Leone is an important case. It’s a relatively small country of less than 10 million people and everybody's cramped in Freetown, so whatever is going on there, it easily spread."

India ranks third globally by production volume (pills and units) for generics, supplying roughly 20% of global generics and over 60% of vaccines by volume. The country excels in affordable, high-volume generics, but lags behind in high-value branded drugs and research and development. These investigations into the opioid exports and previous scandals have brought the quality and legality of some of those medicines, particularly exports to Africa, into question.

Evaborhene says that both India and West African nations have to come together to curb the opioid use. "We need to adopt better transnational policies and joint strategies to manage the issues. That could mean better border control, since the trafficking has a particular route, better regulations and more accountability."

India 'funds organisations behind terror activities in Pakistan': Bilawal Bhutto Zardari

TÊTE À TÊTE © FRANCE 24
13:49


Issued on: 06/05/2026 - 

In an interview with FRANCE 24, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, head of the Pakistan People's Party, discussed the ongoing tensions between India and Pakistan. One year ago, after a five-day war between the two countries, US President Donald Trump announced a full ceasefire, but "there are underlying tensions that can, at any point, lead to yet another conflict", our guest warned.

The head of the Pakistan People's Party, which is part of the governing coalition, pointed out that the ceasefire "was meant to be the beginning of a process the Indian side had committed to at the time", but "unfortunately, that didn't happen". He claimed that India "continues to collectively punish the people of Pakistan by violating the Indus Water Treaty", which was suspended by India after the 2025 Kashmir attack. According to Bhutto Zardari, "both countries should engage in a dialogue in pursuit of peace through diplomacy".

Asked about India accusing Pakistan of hosting and supporting terrorist groups, Bhutto Zardari said Pakistan had been "consistently challenging this threat". He added: "Terrorism is not only an issue for Pakistan; this is an issue for India as well. Pakistan and India have no lines of communication, no means of coordinating. You can't counter terrorism without cross-border cooperation."

"Unfortunately, most of the terrorist attacks that do take place in Pakistan are linked to organisations within Afghanistan," Bhutto Zardari declared. Tensions between Islamabad and Kabul have been rising, which led to deadly air strikes on Kabul in March.

"As far as the Indian element is concerned, they continue to fund organisations that are behind terrorist activities within Pakistan," he claimed.

'No military solution to the Strait of Hormuz crisis'

With its strategic location at the crossroads of the Middle East, Pakistan has emerged as a central player in brokering the US-Iran talks. "There's no military solution to the Strait of Hormuz crisis," Bhutto Zardari said.

"Ultimately, we need to build on the momentum of this ceasefire for a more permanent solution, a more permanent peace," he added.

For Bhutto Zardari, the repercussions of a return to conflict would not affect only Pakistan – there would be "consequences for the entire international community".

Is Tucker Carlson eyeing a 2028 US presidential run?


Issued on: 08/05/2026 - FRANCE24

Former Fox News host Tucker Carlson knows how to get and keep an audience. Amid his recent criticism of US President Donald Trump, the controversial podcast host has drawn in fans from unexpected parts of the political spectrum. This week on FRANCE 24's media show Scoop, we look at Carlson's history, influence and ambition. Our guest is The New Yorker's Jason Zengerle, author of "Hated by All the Right People: Tucker Carlson and the Unravelling of the Conservative Mind."




11:50 min From the show

FOUR YEARS LATE

CPJ demands update on US probe of journalist Abu Akleh’s killing in West Bank


The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) on Thursday demanded a "public progress update" from the US Department of Justice on the investigation into the Israeli military's killing of Palestinian American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh, who was gunned down while reporting for Al Jazeera in the occupied West Bank in 2022.



Issued on: 08/05/2026 
By:FRANCE 24

A woman takes a photo of a mural dedicated to Palestinian American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh after it was unveiled in the West Bank city of Bethlehem on August 30, 2023. 
© Nasser Nasser , AP

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) on Thursday called for US authorities to relaunch their investigation into the Israeli military's killing of Palestinian American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh, who was gunned down while reporting for Al Jazeera in the occupied West Bank in 2022.

In a letter to the US Department of Justice -- which oversees the Federal Bureau of Investigation -- and FBI chief Kash Patel, the global press freedoms group demanded a "public progress update" on Abu Akleh's death.

"Although the FBI reportedly opened an investigation into her killing in November 2022, it has made no demonstrable progress," the letter noted, adding that CPJ was "not aware that any formal interviews have been conducted with witnesses despite the willingness of multiple witnesses to cooperate."


"This troubling lack of concrete progress -- four years after Abu Akleh's death -- represents a profound failure of the US government to respond promptly and impartially to the killing of one of its citizens by a foreign military."

Abu Akleh was 51 when she was fatally shot on May 11, 2022 by Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) soldiers while covering an Israeli raid on the Jenin refugee camp in the north of the occupied West Bank, CPJ said.

Then-Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett initially claimed gunfire from Palestinian fighters was the likely cause of her death.

The IDF later released a statement saying it was "not possible to unequivocally determine the source of the gunfire" that killed Abu Akleh, adding there was "a high possibility that Ms. Abu Akleh was accidentally hit by IDF gunfire."
Truth in conflict

But CPJ notes that multiple independent investigations from leading news organizations "concluded that Abu Akleh was killed by IDF fire; some found evidence that she was deliberately targeted."

Abu Akleh was "a household name across the Middle East, widely respected for her courageous and in-depth reporting on Palestinian life," CPJ said, adding that she was wearing a vest marked "PRESS" and "clearly identified as press at the time of her killing."

In a separate statement Thursday, Abu Akleh's family also sought justice for violence at the veteran reporter's funeral -- Israeli police attacked her pallbearers, who nearly dropped her coffin -- saying "no one has been brought to justice, neither for her killing nor for the attack on her funeral."

"Her killing was not only a tragic loss for our family, but also a grave attack on press freedom and the fundamental right to report the truth," the family's statement said. "This ongoing impunity sends a dangerous message that journalists can be targeted without consequence."

Abu Akleh's death also made her a broader symbol of the Palestinian struggle: murals of her face adorn walls, her office's street in Ramallah was renamed in her honor and a museum was named for her.

In addition to demanding a public update on the investigation, press advocates called for the FBI to commit to a timeline to "complete a thorough criminal investigation and publicly release its findings," urging the agency to maintain an impartial and independent inquiry "free from political considerations."

CPJ said since Abu Akleh's killing, Israel has killed 258 more journalists and media workers across the Middle East, including 207 in Gaza alone.

Israel was responsible for two-thirds of journalist deaths in 2025, CPJ said.

The Israeli army rejects allegations of targeted violence, saying it does not intentionally target journalists or their families.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)
Germans confront past with Nazi party membership lists available online

Issued on: 08/05/2026 - FRANCE24


05:05 min  From the show


As Europe commemorates the 81st anniversary of the Allied victory over the Nazis this May 8, many in Germany are discovering long-buried family secrets. Nazi party membership lists – saved from destruction in 1945 – are now available online. In just a few clicks, the Nazi past of millions of German families is within reach.

This online access to Nazi party membership lists comes at a crucial time. As the generation that lived under the Third Reich gradually disappears, it is now their grandchildren and great-grandchildren who are daring to ask the long-taboo question: what role did my grandfather or and grandmother play under the Nazis?
Germany is often held up as a model for its remembrance culture. But an intimate reckoning with its Nazi past remains far from complete. In 2020, only 3 percent of Germans surveyed by Die Zeit said their ancestors had supported National Socialism – a figure that speaks volumes about the silence that still lingers within families.

FRANCE 24's Anne Mailliet, Caroline du Bled, Leyla Sobler, Raphaël Kominis and Nick Holdsworth report.

BY:

Anne MAILLIET

Caroline DU BLED

Raphael KOMINIS

Nick HOLDSWORTH

Leyla Sobler
Pentagon releases new files on UFOs

Issued on: 09/05/2026 -

Bright lights and mysterious objects, those are what could be found in a new batch of files on UFOs that the Pentagon began releasing on Friday as President Donald Trump taps into the public's long-held curiosities about "unidentified anomalous phenomena” in the broader universe.

Video by: FRANCE 24




Pentagon releases first batch of ‘top secret’ UFO files


The Pentagon on Friday released decades of previously classified UFO sightings recorded by the FBI and NASA and other federal agencies. At least two of the more than 160 documents date back to the 1940s and report sightings of flying "discs” and “saucers”.



Issued on: 08/05/2026 
By: FRANCE 24

This video grab image obtained April 28, 2020 courtesy of the US Department of Defense shows part of an unclassified video taken by Navy pilots that have circulated for years showing interactions with "unidentified anomalous phenomena". © US Dept of Defense handout, AFP file picture


The Pentagon on Friday released a first batch of secret files documenting reported sightings of unidentified flying objects – some dating back to the 1940s – fanning speculation over whether extraterrestrial life exists.

Reports of flying saucers and discs, and a sighting of an orb that resembled the "Eye of Sauron" are among the incidents in the files, which are from the FBI, State Department and NASA in addition to the Pentagon.

Trump orders Pentagon, other US agencies to release files on UFOs and aliens

Interest in UFOs has been renewed in recent years as the US government investigated numerous reports of seemingly supernatural aircraft, amid worries that adversaries could be testing highly advanced technologies.

"These files, hidden behind classifications, have long fueled justified speculation – and it's time the American people see it for themselves," Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth said in a statement.

More than 160 files were released on the website of the defence department, which officially refers to UFOs as "Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena," or UAPs.

One file – from December 1947 – contains a series of reports on "flying discs."

"Continued and recent reports from qualified observers concerning this phenomenon still makes this matter one of concern to Headquarters, Air Material Command," a document in the file said.

An Air Force intelligence report – marked "top secret" – from November of the following year features information on reported sightings of "unidentified aircraft" and "flying saucers".

"For some time we have been concerned by the recurring reports on flying saucers," a document in that file said.

Another file summarises statements from seven federal government employees who separately reported "several unidentified anomalous phenomena" in the United States in 2023.

'Most compelling'

"The reporters' credibility, and the potentially anomalous nature of the events themselves – combine to make this report among the most compelling within AARO's current holdings," a description of the file said, referring to the Pentagon's All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office.

In one of the incidents, three teams of federal law enforcement special agents independently described "seeing orange 'orbs' in the sky emit/launch smaller red 'orbs.'"

In another, two federal special agents witnessed "a glowing orange orb... perched close to a rock pinnacle". That account included an artist rendering of a red-orange circle with a streak of yellow in its lower third.

The object was described as looking "similar to the Eye (of) Sauron from Lord of the Rings, except without the pupil."

President Donald Trump directed US federal agencies in February to begin identifying and releasing government files related to UFOs and aliens, saying the move was "based on the tremendous interest shown."

The Republican president also claimed the same day he issued the release order that one of his Democratic predecessors, Barack Obama, had revealed "classified" information in viral podcast remarks about the existence of extraterrestrial life.

"They're real, but I haven't seen them and they're not being kept in... Area 51," Obama told host Brian Tyler Cohen, referring to the top-secret US military facility in Nevada at the heart of many UFO conspiracy theories.

Trump told reporters at the time that Obama "gave classified information, he is not supposed to be doing that," while saying of his own beliefs: "I don't know if they are real or not."

No evidence has been produced of intelligent life beyond Earth.

In March 2024, the Pentagon released a report saying it had no proof that UAP were alien technology, with many suspicious sightings turning out to be merely weather balloons, spy planes, satellites and other normal activity.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)

Putin's 'paranoia': 'He is fearful of Ukrainians & afraid the elite around him is starting to break'


Issued on: 08/05/2026 - FRANCE24

Play (07:18 min)
From the show


Mark Owen is pleased to welcome Melinda Haring, expert on Ukraine, non-resident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council's Eurasia Center and senior advisor to Razom Advocacy's advisory board. According to Haring, the psychological and military balance between Russia and Ukraine is pivoting. Her central argument, in the lead-up to Russia's May 9 Victory Day celebrations, is that the Kremlin's increasingly defensive posture reveals a profound shift in the war: "Vladimir Putin is finally afraid".

Haring frames the Victory Day parade not as a display of triumphant state power, but as a diminished and anxious spectacle. The contrast she draws is vivid and politically consequential: "A year ago, the celebration in Red Square was big and bold… This year, it's not big. It's not bold. It's going to be kind of pathetic and they're fearful."

In her telling, Ukraine's rapid advances in drone warfare and long-range strike capabilities have altered not only the battlefield, but the psychological architecture of the Kremlin itself.

Beyond military developments, Haring focuses on the realm of political psychology and elite instability. She paints a portrait of an increasingly isolated Russian president whose paranoia has deepened under the pressures of war, technological vulnerability and internal power struggles. "He's not only afraid of the Ukrainians wanting to whack him", she argues, "he's afraid that the elite around him is starting to break".

Perhaps most compelling is her broader reframing of the war narrative itself. Rather than accepting the mythology of Soviet military grandeur traditionally embodied in Victory Day commemorations, Haring redirects attention towards "the defenders of Ukraine and what they've been able to accomplish with so little."

VIDEO BY:

Ilayda HABIP

Mark OWEN



ANALYSIS


Russia loses ground – but not the war – in Ukraine


Moscow lost territory on the battlefield in April 2026 for the first time since Ukraine’s bold August 2024 incursion into Russia's Kursk oblast, according to an analysis published this week. Moscow's losses were equivalent to some 116 square kilometres across several areas of the front line.


Issued on: 08/05/2026 
FRANCE24
By: Sébastian SEIBT


Soldiers from Ukraine's 65th Mechanised Brigade train in the Zaporizhzhia region.
 © Andriy Andriyenko, AP

Russia lost territory in Ukraine in April for the first time since 2024, according to a report by the Institute for the Study of War (ISW) published May 2.

Ukraine gained some 116 square kilometres (45 square miles) along several areas of the front, including in the Sumy region north of Kharkiv but also further south in Zaporizhzhia province, says Huseyn Aliyev, a specialist on the war in Ukraine at the University of Glasgow.

The Russian advance has been slowing significantly since November 2025, according to the report, and is sluggish overall in 2026 compared to this time last year. But the changing nature of the war – and Russia’s increased use of infiltration tactics – make year-on-year comparisons difficult, it noted.

"Russian forces have been using infiltration tactics in part to create the perception of continuous Russian advances across the front and to support Kremlin cognitive warfare efforts to exaggerate Russian successes," the ISW wrote. "Russian forces, however, do not control these infiltration areas, which are often collocated among Ukrainian positions in contested 'gray zones.'"


Russian Offensive Campaign Assessment, May 2, 2026 © Institute for the Study of War

Tactical withdrawals?

But this is not a large-scale military retreat that would involve a strategic repositioning along the entire front, says Erik Stijnman, a specialist in military security and the Russo-Ukrainian war at the Dutch Clingendael Institute for International Relations.

These are more like tactical withdrawals, with both sides testing enemy defences at different points along the front line, adds Ivan U. Klyszcz, a Russia specialist at the International Centre for Defence and Security in Tallinn, Estonia.

Nevertheless, the situation is much bleaker for Moscow than at the same time in 2025.

Russia had already begun its spring-summer offensive as the weather conditions improved around this time last year, Aliyev notes. Russia is still managing to advance, albeit modestly, on the fronts it considers priorities, such as the region around Pokrovsk and towards the city of Kramatorsk.

Fewer soldiers, more drones

Ukraine’s territorial gains also demonstrate the effectiveness of its strategy of harassing Russian troops rather than simply holding onto positions, Klyszcz says.

Simultaneously, Ukraine is intensifying its campaign of launching ever-deeper strikes on Russian infrastructure, forcing Moscow to allocate more resources to defending its territory, says Will Kingston-Cox, a specialist on Russia and the war in Ukraine at the International Team for the Study of Security (ITSS) Verona.

The Russian army has been struggling for months to mobilise more troops, Aliyev says, including recruiting more aggressively from universities.

These recruitment troubles can be seen on the battlefield, Klyszcz observes, with troops that are less well-trained and less effective than last year.

The difficulty in finding new troops for the front is even greater for Ukraine than for Russia, which has a much larger population. But the realities of the front line – which is now largely manned by drones – makes any offensive far more dangerous and deadly for the attacker, says Kingston-Cox.

War of attrition

And Ukraine now has another technological advantage: Starlink 's decision to cut off Russian troops' access to its satellites was a major blow to Russia, which is now struggling to communicate as effectively as before.

In February, the Kremlin also began restricting access to Telegram, where a lot of tactical communication was previously shared.


Ukraine’s territorial gains could have a long-term impact if they allow Ukraine to recapture ever-more-strategic areas, Aliyev says.

Nevertheless, recent Ukrainian territorial successes should not be overestimated. The 116 square kilometres lost in April will mean nothing if Russia eventually succeeds in destroying Ukrainian defences.

This is now a true war of attrition, Stijnman says, in which territorial gains are less important than one side's ability to inflict more losses than the other can withstand.

This article was translated from the original in French.






Norway's Svalbard archipelago, a pawn on Russia's chessboard

Issued on: 07/05/2026 - FRANCE24




25:00 min From the show

Not far from the North Pole, in the Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard, lies a piece of Russia. In NATO member state Norway, two Russian villages, or "settlements" as Moscow calls them, have been active for decades. This frozen, hostile land at the ends of the Earth has caught Moscow's interest.

Since Moscow's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, this Russian presence in Norway has become a cause for concern. Relations between Oslo and Moscow have worsened and despite European sanctions against these "settlements" in Svalbard, Moscow is holding its ground.

A few kilometres away, residents of the Norwegian town of Longyearbyen are wary of the slightest move on the Russian side.

With Europe ever more divided between East and West, Svalbard is strategic. Both sides know this gateway to the Arctic and its natural resources is crucial. And Russia intends to maintain its presence on European soil.

A report for Arte and FRANCE 24 by Gaël Mocaer
ANALYSIS

Keeping the Lebanese army weak: A hardened US military doctrine at Israel's service


As Lebanon marks a month since “Black Wednesday”, when massive Israeli strikes killed 361 people, the international community continues to call on the Lebanese army to disarm Hezbollah. But the US legal imperative to ensure Israel has a “qualitative military edge” (QME) has kept the Lebanese military under-funded, under-equipped and unable to perform its role.


Issued on:  08/05/2026 - 
FRANCE24
By: Leela JACINTO

Two Israeli soldiers operate in southern Lebanon on April 29, 2026. © Ariel Schalit, AP

Exactly a month ago, Wissam Charaf was in Yarze, a picturesque town in the hills overlooking Beirut, when he suddenly heard the rumbling sound of an Israeli warplane just before it fired on a hill right across from where he was enjoying a break with his family from the Lebanese capital.

The warplane had struck Kayfoun, a town south of Beirut, which had been hit in the past during the waves of air strikes and bombardments Israel has conducted in Lebanon since October 2023. Charaf, like many Lebanese, had grown sickeningly accustomed to Israel’s frequent breaches of Lebanese sovereignty and airspace. So the 52-year-old filmmaker initially thought it would be more of the same in Lebanon’s new normal.

But this time, it was different. “Then there was another hit and then another hit. And then it went downwards towards Beirut, and it was like baba-baba-baba-baba-baba-baba-baba,” he said, recounting the sound of incessant, quick-fire strikes. “Under our eyes, downhill, Beirut was being bombed. It was massive. It was gigantic. It was everywhere.”

It was April 8. Black Wednesday, as the Lebanese call it. Operation Eternal Darkness as the Israeli military called it.


In just 10 minutes, the Israeli military offloaded 100 bombs across Lebanon, from Hermel in the far north, across the eastern Bekaa Valley, to Beirut on the western coast and down to the towns and villages in the country’s already battered south. The death toll on one day mounted to 361, including women and children. In a matter of minutes, Israel had carried out one of its worst mass killings in Lebanon’s history.

Amid an international outcry, diplomatic attempts to include Lebanon in the Iran ceasefire deal – which was announced by Pakistani mediators on April 8, before a US-Israeli rollback – went into high gear.

A week later, US President Donald Trump announced that the leaders of Israel and Lebanon had agreed to a 10-day truce. The US State Department brief on the ceasefire deal noted that, “All parties recognize Lebanon’s security forces as having exclusive responsibility for Lebanon’s sovereignty and national defense; no other country or group has claim to be the guarantor of Lebanon’s sovereignty.”

The long history of Israel’s entanglement with its northern neighbour has produced a diplomatic lexicon that is familiar to the Lebanese and the wider Middle Eastern public. Calls for the Lebanese security or armed forces – sometimes abbreviated to LAF – to defend Lebanon’s sovereignty dot realms of official agreements, briefings, notes and dispatches. Most bear a deceiving tone of resolution in a conflict that has defied diplomacy for decades.

Less well-known is another term, “qualitative military edge”, or QME, that has long been used in Washington policy circles. It was enshrined in US law in 2008, and guides US foreign policy to this day. QME pertains to Israel and is the underlying source, a growing number of experts say, of the bloodshed in the Middle East that shows no sign of abating.

In Lebanon, QME has a particular bearing as the country marks a month since Black Wednesday with Israel continuing to bombard Lebanon despite the shaky ceasefire, killing more than 2,700 people and displacing more than a million since the latest round of fighting re-erupted on March 2, following the outbreak of the US-Israeli war on Iran.
An Israeli military concept becomes US law

The concept to ensure Israel always has a qualitative military edge over its enemies traces its roots to the country’s first prime minister David Ben Gurion. Drawing from the lessons of the 1948 Arab-Israeli war, Ben Gurion’s 1953 defence doctrine concluded that since Israel “will continue to be quantitatively inferior vis a vis the Arab world”, the new nation “must develop a very strong qualitative edge”.

In the US, the concept did not take hold until two decades later, following the end of the 1967 war, when then-president Lyndon Johnson approved the sale of F-4 Phantom fighter jets to Israel, according to the pro-Israel think tank The Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

It was enshrined in US law in 2008 under George W. Bush’s presidency, when Congress passed the Naval Transfer Act, which requires the US to ensure that arms exports “to any country in the Middle East other than Israel shall include a determination that the sale or export… will not adversely affect Israel's qualitative military edge”.

The concept has continued to frame US legislation approving military aid to Israel through Republican and Democrat presidencies, including the 2012 US-Israeli Enhanced Security Cooperation Act, signed by Barack Obama, which mandates that the US must “help the Government of Israel preserve its qualitative military edge”.

It has ensured that Israel stands as the largest cumulative recipient of US military aid since its founding, receiving over $300 billion in assistance. Since the start of Israel’s Gaza war in October 2023, the US has enacted legislation providing at least $16.3 billion in direct military aid to Israel, according to the Washington DC-based Council on Foreign Relations.

“Initially, the idea [of QME] was simply to ensure that Israel always maintains technological and military superiority over any possible combination of regional adversaries,” explained Karim Emile Bitar, international relations professor at Beirut’s Saint Joseph University and a lecturer in Middle East studies at the Paris-based Sciences Po. “The fact that it's now embedded into US law affects arms sales and military assistance across the Middle East, including Lebanon.”

QME is “not a household concept” Bitar concedes, but it is important because “it’s one of the structural principles shaping US security architecture. It explains why some Arab states receive sophisticated weapons, those pro-US states that are very aligned with Israel, and others face major restrictions. And military aid to Lebanon has ceilings that have rarely been crossed”.

A national army weaker than a militia

In Lebanon, the flip side of Washington’s QME imperative to ensure Israel has the military edge is the enforced weakness of the Lebanese armed forces, according to many Middle East analysts.

“My critique of it [QME] is what it implies on the ground, which is this idea that we constantly hear that the Lebanese military needs to provide security in Lebanon and especially in southern Lebanon. But what we don't hear in this debate is that the Lebanese army is purposefully kept weak and under-prepared and under-equipped by the US and by Western countries that provide military aid and weapons,” said Mohamad Bazzi, director of the Hagop Kevorkian Center for Near Eastern Studies and a professor at New York University.

For more than two decades, Israel’s repeated attacks and encroachments on Lebanese territory have been aimed at fighting Hezbollah, the Shiite group with a military wing that is widely considered stronger than the Lebanese national army.

Hezbollah emerged from the 1980s Lebanese civil war – which ended with the 1990 Taif Agreement – stronger than the Lebanese national army, which had fractured along sectarian lines and dissolved during the brutal internecine conflict. At that time, Israel was still occupying southern Lebanon. Hezbollah’s supporters argued that it was the only force capable of resisting the Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon – which it did until the 2000 Israeli military withdrawal, giving the Arab world its first military victory against Israel.


While the rationale for Hezbollah retaining its weapons ended with the Israeli withdrawal, the militia group had, by then, amassed considerable firepower from its backers in Tehran. It had also made in-roads into Lebanese politics under the protection of Bashar al Assad, the strongman in neighbouring Syria. But during the Syrian civil war and Lebanon’s crippling economic crisis, the group’s popularity began to decline – including among Shiites in a deeply divided country where sectarian political parties often provide for their communities in the absence of state services.

But Hezbollah’s plummeting popularity, and the groundswell of Lebanese discontent over the extent of its state capture, has not translated into its disarmament, much less extinction.

Over the past two years, Israel has conducted massive campaigns against the group, assassinating its leader Hassan Nasrallah and top commanders. On Thursday, the Israeli military announced that it had killed ⁠a commander of ​Hezbollah’s elite Radwan force in an air strike on Beirut in the first Israeli attack on the Lebanese capital since the ceasefire agreed ​last month.

Israel today has carved ​out a self-declared buffer zone extending as deep as 10 km into southern Lebanon. The population that once lived in these areas has been displaced, and many Lebanese fear a strike at any time, anywhere as the buzz of Israeli surveillance drones offer an incessant soundtrack to their daily lives.

And yet, the Lebanese Shiite group has managed to keep up its fight against Israel. “Hezbollah still possesses capabilities, even though it has been weakened. It still possesses capabilities that in some domains surpass those of the Lebanese state. It has a large missile arsenal. It has extensive combat experience that it gained mostly in Syria when it was fighting alongside Bashar al-Assad, and it has highly motivated, ideological cadres,” said Bitar.

Coffins of Hezbollah fighters are carried on a truck during a mass funeral procession in the southern village of Kfar Sir, Lebanon on April 21, 2026 © Hassan Ammar, AP

Hezbollah fights Israel, the Lebanese army polices

As it continues to battle the IDF in southern Lebanon and launch rockets into northern Israel, Hezbollah argues that it needs to retain its weapons since it’s the only force in Lebanon that can resist Israel.

Technically, Hezbollah has a point. “If the Lebanese military was better equipped and had the resources it needs, there would be a stronger argument for disarming Hezbollah. That's the crux of this issue. It would take away Hezbollah's argument that it needs to be the one that defends Lebanon because the military isn’t capable of doing it,” explained Bazzi.

The Lebanese army today is among the world’s weakest, ranking 118 in the 2026 Global Firepower index of 145 countries. The primarily US-funded military barely has a navy, with its patrol boats conducting mostly coastguard and anti-smuggling duties. Its “air force” has long been a source of Lebanese jokes, including on social media, where wags remark about its lowly Cessna helicopters hovering below Israel’s fighter jets combing the Lebanese airspace. Defence systems, vital for a country’s security in the modern age, are absent as Israel adds layers of shields to its Iron Dome system.



Despite the quips and barbs, the national army is a beloved institution. “The Lebanese army is widely respected by most Lebanese. The Lebanese people want to empower the army. They want the army to be in charge of security,” explained Bitar.


Bazzi agrees. “The Lebanese army has been hailed as this one institution that's cross-sectarian, that's been successful, that's been rebuilt in a way that preserves the power and the interests of the Lebanese state. We've heard a lot of that. But,” he added significantly, “it's never really confronted an external enemy.”


US envoy’s ‘wild interview’


Meanwhile the US and its European allies display all the signs that they want the Lebanese army to succeed, with statements proclaiming it the sole guarantor of Lebanon’s sovereignty amid frequent calls for the Lebanese army to disarm Hezbollah.

France, Lebanon’s former colonial power, also issues statements advocating the strengthening of the country’s security forces. In March, France repeated its call to “step up support to the Lebanese Armed Forces, whose mission in this difficult context is to continue disarming Hezbollah”. A Paris summit was set for April. But it was then cancelled due to the Iran crisis.

The gap between statements and reality spilled into the open last year, when Trump’s envoy for the region, Tom Barrack, publicly expressed what many Lebanese knew but never imagined they’d hear from a US diplomat.

US envoy Tom Barrack speaks at a panel in Antalya, southern Turkey, April 17, 2026.
© Riza Ozel, AP


In what came to be called Barrack’s “wild interview”, the US envoy called for the Lebanese state to disarm Hezbollah before confessing that Washington does not want to arm the Lebanese army. “We don’t want to arm them… so they can fight Israel? I don’t think so,” Barrack said.

The clincher however came when the US diplomat noted that the Lebanese army was not going to “go knock on the door of a Shia house… and say, 'Excuse me, ma’am, can I go and take the rockets and the AK-47s out of your basement?”

Barrack’s comments, Bitar noted, were “very significant because it was a sort of acknowledgement that pushing the Lebanese army to take on Hezbollah would potentially lead to civil strife.”

More than three decades after the end of the civil war, the US still fears an injection of arms into Lebanon could set the populace at each other’s throats. Meanwhile it continues to provide Israel a qualitative military edge while the Palestinian issue remains unresolved after nearly 80 years.

A month after he watched Israeli warplanes conduct its Operation Eternal Darkness from a hill overlooking Beirut, Charaf is clear-eyed about the dismal chances for peace in his homeland. “The Lebanese army is torn between an international community that is telling them, fight Hezbollah, disarm Hezbollah, and we'll give you aid later. And the Lebanese army is saying, guys, if you want us to disarm Hezbollah, well at least give us weapons to do it,” he noted with a sigh.

“They're asking the Lebanese army somehow to obey the decisions of the Israeli army,” he added. “And they're asking the Lebanese army to do something that I would say is mission impossible.”

 

© France 24
02:03



Propaganda war: The Gen Z team behind Iran’s hit anti-Trump videos


Issued on: 07/05/2026 -

Satirical Lego animations depicting US President Donald Trump as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s puppet while casting Iran as the defender of the oppressed mark the latest propaganda coup for the Iranian regime in its war with the US. The FRANCE 24 Observers team spoke to one of the young Iranians behind the videos.





From being portrayed as Benjamin Netanyahu’s puppet to being shown entangled in the Epstein affair, Donald Trump has become the star of a series of satirical Lego animations.

Posted by Iranian officials and embassies, these videos have been a worldwide hit – marking a propaganda coup for the Iranian regime in its war with the United States.

The group that first created the videos calls itself Explosive Media. Our team spoke with their spokesman:

“We’re a group of friends. Most of us are students – or recently graduated. We’re between 19 and 25. We listen to a wide range of music – rap, pop.

We write our own rap lyrics. But when it comes to the final track – the singing voice – that part is generated using AI.”

The videos portray Iran as acting in self-defence and as the defender of people oppressed by the US around the world.

The group told FRANCE 24 they do not take orders from the Iranian regime. We were not able to confirm this.

“We’re independent. But even if people call it propaganda, does that really matter? What matters is whether American people believe us.

Whether they connect with what we’re saying. Because we see ourselves as speaking the truth.”
‘They don’t limit their religious acts to just reading the Quran or praying’

So how is it that young conservative Iranians who support the regime have adopted the codes of Generation Z? We put that question to Iranian journalist Ali Pourtabatabaei:

“From my perspective, this is not unusual. This is because the same tools and resources available worldwide for creating such animations have also been accessible in Iran. At the same time, rap has become very popular among Iranian youth.

It might be hard for people outside Iran to understand how young religious Iranians are aware of these possibilities and how to use them. Perhaps it’s because there are stereotypes about them.

They have interests and skills that go far beyond what we imagine.

They don’t limit their religious acts to just reading the Quran or praying. Making these kinds of videos and music can also be considered a religious act.”