Sunday, April 26, 2026

Is a mysterious ‘fifth force’ hiding out in the depths our solar system?


By Dr. Tim Sandle
SCIENCE EDITOR
DIGITAL JOURNAL
April 24, 2026


This long exposure picture taken on December 23, 2017 shows the Andromeda galaxy -- where researchers believe they have witnessed the collapse of a dying star into a black hole. — © AFP John MACDOUGALL

Astronomers are grappling with a cosmic mystery: Why does the Universe behave differently on massive scales compared to our own solar system?

While distant galaxies reveal clear signs of something bending the rules of gravity—often attributed to dark energy or a hidden “fifth force”—everything nearby seems to follow Einstein’s playbook perfectly.

A force refers to an action that can cause an object to change its velocity or its shape, or to resist other forces, or to cause changes of pressure.

Dark energy and dark matter are among the most difficult concepts to test. Observations across vast regions of space clearly suggest that something is influencing gravity in ways Einstein’s theory does not fully explain. Yet within our own solar system, everything appears to behave exactly as expected.

Dark matter and dark energy are invisible components of the universe: dark matter pulls matter together through gravity, while dark energy drives the universe’s accelerated expansion.

A new study by Slava Turyshev, a physicist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, explores how researchers might address this mismatch. His work suggests that the key may lie in being extremely precise and selective in how experiments are designed to search for signs of dark energy and dark matter closer to home.

The Great Disconnect

At the centre of the problem is what scientists call the “Great Disconnect.” The laws of physics seem to operate differently depending on the scale being observed. In regions with very little matter (i.e. no gravitational force), the effects linked to dark energy or modified gravity become much more noticeable. In contrast, in dense environments filled with matter and strong gravity, those same effects seem to vanish, at least based on current instruments.

Within the solar system, everything aligns with traditional physics. Planets follow their expected orbits. Measurements of spacetime around the Sun, including data from spacecraft signals, match predictions precisely. Every probe sent through the solar system behaves as if only standard gravity is at work. There are no clear signs of anything unusual.

New perspectives

The situation changes when looking far beyond our ‘local neighbourhood’. On the scale of galaxies and beyond, the Universe appears to be expanding. While scientists continue to debate the exact rate of this expansion, there is strong evidence that something is influencing gravity or spacetime in ways not fully captured by current theories.

At present, dark energy is the best explanation for this behavior, even though its true nature remains unknown.

The universe is expanding due to dark energy, a mysterious force that drives this acceleration, making up about 68% of the universe.

One possible explanation involves a phenomenon known as “screening.” In this idea, whatever is causing the discrepancy changes how it behaves depending on the surrounding environment. As density increases, its effects become weaker or harder to detect.

Screening models

There are two main types of screening models. The first is called the “chameleon” model. In this scenario, a hypothetical fifth force of nature (other than gravity, electromagnetism, and the two nuclear forces) adjusts its strength based on the amount of nearby matter.

In low density regions, it becomes strong and produces effects associated with dark energy. In dense areas, it weakens so much that current instruments cannot detect it, even though it still exists. Around objects like the Sun, it might only appear in a thin outer layer, but in principle it could still be measured there.

Vainshtein Screening

Another explanation is the Vainshtein screening model. Arkady Vainshtein (born 24 February 1942) is a Russian-American theoretical physicist recognized for his contributions to particle physics.

Here, the force itself does not change. Instead, the surrounding gravity effectively suppresses its influence, making it appear weak. The model introduces the concept of a Vainshtein Radius, which marks the distance where the force regains its normal strength.

The Vainshtein screening model is a mechanism that suppresses extra gravitational forces near massive objects through derivative self-interactions in modified gravity theories. It operates in scalar-tensor systems where the action includes higher-derivative nonlinearities of the scalar field.

For the Sun, this radius is estimated to extend about 400 light years. That region includes many stars, meaning the force would remain suppressed well beyond the solar system and even across large parts of the galaxy.

Why New Solar System Missions May Be Needed


Both screening models could leave subtle traces in large-scale observations collected by missions such as Euclid and The Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI). However, these surveys focus on distant galaxies and cannot directly reveal how such forces behave within the solar system.

To test these ideas locally, scientists would need a dedicated mission designed specifically for that purpose. Even more important, researchers would need a falsifiable theory that predicts what such a mission should detect.

Next steps


It may take time to develop instruments sensitive enough to detect these subtle effects. In the meantime, incremental progress will be important, with missions focused on improving measurement capabilities step by step.

If a well-defined and testable prediction emerges from current data, and if an experiment can realistically be built to test it, pursuing that opportunity could lead to a major breakthrough. Such a discovery has the potential to reshape our understanding of gravity, dark energy, and the fundamental workings of the Universe.
Research paper

The findings appear in the journal Physical Review D. The research paper is titled “Solar-System experiments in the search for dark energy and dark matter.”
Q&A: How the drone market is shaping up with new technology


By Dr. Tim Sandle
SCIENCE EDITOR
DIGITAL JOURNAL
April 23, 2026


ZenaTech drone flying over an ocean. 
Image (C) ZenaTech, reproduced with permission.

What is the current state of the drone market, both commercial and military? To help answer this and related questions, Digital Journal spoke with Linda Montgomery, Vice President of Corporate Development at ZenaTech.

ZenaTech (Nasdaq: ZENA) is a technology company developing AI-powered drones, Drone-as-a-Service (DaaS), and enterprise software solutions for commercial, government, and defence customers. Its platforms combine autonomous drones, cloud software, and data analytics to deliver mission-critical aerial intelligence across sectors including agriculture, logistics, surveying, infrastructure, and public safety.

Digital Journal: Can you provide a brief overview of ZenaTech and the company’s mission in advancing AI-powered drones and enterprise solutions?

Linda Montgomery: ZenaTech operates across three core business areas.

First, through ZenaDrone, we design and manufacture AI-enabled autonomous drones. Second, our Drone-as-a-Service (DaaS) business provides drone-based solutions for inspections, surveying, power washing, and other enterprise applications—eliminating the complexity and cost of ownership. Third, we operate an established enterprise SaaS software business with 11 brands, providing a strong foundation of data, analytics, and software engineering expertise that directly supports our drone platforms.

Our solutions serve commercial, government, and defense customers, helping them improve speed, precision, data-driven decision-making, and operational safety. Increasingly, we are also building advanced AI drone systems for defense applications, including ISR (intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance), specialized cargo delivery, interceptor drones, and integrated maritime defense systems for counter-UAS missions.

DJ: How is ZenaTech’s Drone-as-a-Service (DaaS) model helping businesses and government organizations deploy drone technology without the complexity of owning and managing fleets?

Montgomery: Our DaaS platform allows clients to access advanced turnkey drone capabilities through subscription and usage bases, eliminating the upfront capital costs and operational burdens of owning a fleet. ZenaTech manages everything from aircraft, pilots, compliance, and maintenance to data capture and analytics, delivering faster, safer, and more accurate outcomes. This model is particularly valuable for enterprises requiring standardized operations across multiple locations, allowing them to focus on insights and results rather than the logistics of drone management. Our DaaS network is scaling globally, supported by strategic acquisitions that integrate established service providers in low-tech or legacy businesses and AI-powered drone systems into existing operations.

Our customers include municipal, county and federal government agencies. They use drones for land survey’s for building projects like sub-divisions, roads, buildings, bridges etc.

DJ: ZenaTech develops several platforms, including the ZenaDrone 1000, IQ Nano, and the ZenaDrone 2000 Maritime Interceptor. What sets these systems apart in the industry?

Montgomery: ZenaTech’s drone portfolio is designed as an integrated ecosystem of AI-powered, mission-specific platforms that combine autonomous flight, advanced sensors, and enterprise software to address both commercial and defense applications.ZenaDrone 1000: Our flagship medium-sized, heavy-lift drone is built for outdoor and field operations, supporting applications such as crop management, surveying, and critical cargo delivery for defense. It is designed for durability and autonomy in complex environments, making it well-suited for ISR (inspection, surveillance, and reconnaissance) and logistics missions.
IQ Series (Nano, Square, Quad): Our IQ line of drones is tailored for commercial and enterprise use cases across industries.The IQ Nano is an indoor drone used for inventory management, security, and warehouse automation.The IQ Square is an outdoor drone designed for power washing and inspection applications in commercial and government settings.The IQ Quad is optimized for land surveys and mapping.
Together, these drones enable frequent, precise, and safer data collection, helping modernize traditionally manual, labor-intensive workflows.
Counter-UAS & Maritime Interceptor Systems: We are advancing a suite of next-generation defense solutions, including our Interceptor P-1 and additional maritime interceptor drones currently in prototype development. These systems are designed to detect and neutralize hostile drones at a fraction of the cost of traditional defense methods. Complementing this is the IQ Glider, an autonomous marine landing station that enables persistent maritime operations as part of a broader integrated defense system.

What sets ZenaTech apart is our ability to unify drone hardware, AI-driven autonomy, and data analytics into scalable solutions—whether deployed directly or through our Drone-as-a-Service model—allowing customers to improve speed, precision, safety, and decision-making across mission-critical operations.

DJ: How does ZenaTech approach innovation in the drone industry, and what types of challenges or opportunities drive your development of new products and solutions?

Montgomery: Innovation at ZenaTech is driven by real-world operational challenges in autonomy, mobility, cost, and safety across targeted commercial and defense sectors.

We focus on AI-enabled autonomous systems, mission-specific drone design, and enterprise software that transforms operational data into actionable insights. Emerging threats such as drone swarms, combined with the complexity of scaling UAV adoption across industries, continue to drive our R&D priorities.

Our innovation model is supported by in-house development, strategic acquisitions, and continuous iteration to ensure our technology evolves alongside market and regulatory needs.

DJ: Looking ahead, what emerging trends and opportunities do you see in the AI-powered drone and autonomous systems industry over the next five years, and how is ZenaTech positioned to lead in this space?

Montgomery: The AI-powered drone market is expanding rapidly, some market analysts say that the Drone as a Service segment may reach $355B by 2032- that’s over 25% growth rates annually, with growing demand for autonomous solutions across defense, industrial, and commercial sectors. Key trends include subscription-based UAV deployment, advanced counter-UAS systems, and increasing use of AI-driven operational analytics. ZenaTech is positioned to lead through our global DaaS network, integrated enterprise software, and a diversified drone portfolio that addresses both civilian and defense needs. By combining scalable operational models with next-generation drone technology, ZenaTech enables organizations to deploy drones efficiently- in the model they want from purchase to “as a service” model for, and improve safely, cost-effectively and smart data insights while staying ahead of evolving industry demands.

Regulatory changes- FAA opening up more of the airspace for drones. Military procurement cycles being made faster so Made in America drones can replace Chinese ones, the market leader, not banned in the US. Historic changes just in the last 2 years for the industry.
Musk says Tesla has started ‘robotaxi’ production


ByAFP
April 24, 2026


A prototype of Tesla's Cybercab seen at the 8th International Import Expo in Shanghai in November 2025 - Copyright AFP/File Hector RETAMAL

Tesla’s much-touted autonomous “robotaxi”, called the Cybercab, has started production, CEO Elon Musk said on Friday, a day after the carmaker reported first-quarter profits that beat expectations.

Musk posted a promotional video on X accompanied with the brief caption, “Cybercab has started production.”

The 38-second clip, mostly shot from within a driverless Cybercab, showed the vehicle rolling off the factory floor and driving onto streets.

Musk also shared a short video clip showing what appeared to be multiple gold-colored Cybercabs driving in formation on a road.

Tesla said on Wednesday it was on track to commence “volume production” of both its Cybercab and Tesla Semi this year, after reporting first-quarter profits of $477 million.

Cybercab — billed as a self-driving robotaxi without a steering wheel or pedals — was first unveiled in the fall of 2024, with Musk predicting at the time that it would become available in 2027.

Tesla began offering robotaxi services to “early access” users on an invitation-only basis in the US city of Austin, Texas, last June.

The auto manufacturer posted a photo in February showing employees gathered around a Cybercab on a factory floor, with the caption “First Cybercab off the production line at Giga Texas.”




China’s DeepSeek releases long-awaited new AI model

ByAFP
April 24, 2026


ChatGPT maker OpenAI's initiative to help countries build infrastructures for 'sovereign' artificial intelligence systems comes as it faces competition from China-based DeepSeek - Copyright AFP NICHOLAS KAMM

Chinese startup DeepSeek released a new artificial intelligence model Friday, more than a year after it stunned the world with a low-cost reasoning model that matched the capabilities of US rivals.

DeepSeek-V4 “features an ultra-long context of one million words,” the company said in a statement on social media platform WeChat, hailing it as “cost-effective” in a separate announcement on X.

The announcement came as Meta said it planned to cut a tenth of its staff as it looks for productivity gains from the rest of the workforce while investing heavily in artificial intelligence. Reports said Microsoft was also looking to trim its ranks.

DeepSeek-V4’s context length, which determines how much input a model is able to absorb to help it complete tasks, “(achieves) leadership in both domestic and open-source fields across agent capabilities, world knowledge, and reasoning performance”.

A “preview version” of the open source model is now available, the company said.

DeepSeek-V4 is released as two versions, DeepSeek-V4-Pro and DeepSeek-V4-Flash, with the latter being “a more efficient and economical choice” because it has smaller parameters.

V4-Pro has 1.6 trillion parameters while the V4-Flash has 284 billion parameters, which refine models’ decision-making ability.

The model has also been “optimised” for popular AI Agent products such as Claude Code, OpenClaw, OpenCode and CodeBuddy, the statement said.

“In world knowledge benchmarks, DeepSeek-V4-Pro significantly leads other open-source models and is only slightly outperformed by the top-tier closed-source model, (Google’s) Gemini-Pro-3.1,” the statement added.

Hangzhou-based DeepSeek burst onto the scene in January last year with a generative AI chatbot, powered by its R1 reasoning model, that upended assumptions of US dominance in the strategic sector.

This so-called “DeepSeek shock” sparked a sell-off of AI-related shares and a reckoning on business strategy in what was also described as a “Sputnik moment” for the industry.

The chatbot performed at a similar level to ChatGPT and other top American offerings, but the company said it had taken significantly less computing power to develop.

However, its sudden popularity raised questions over data privacy and censorship, with the chatbot often refusing to answer questions on sensitive topics such as the 1989 Tiananmen crackdown.

At home, DeepSeek’s AI tools have been widely adopted by Chinese municipalities and healthcare institutions as well as the financial sector and other businesses.

This has been partly driven by DeepSeek’s decision to make its systems open source, with their inner workings public — in contrast to the proprietary models sold by OpenAI and other Western rivals.

“China-made large AI models spearheaded the development of the global open-source AI ecosystem,” Chinese Premier Li Qiang told an annual gathering of China’s top decision-makers last month.

The AI race has intensified the rivalry between China and the United States, and the White House on Thursday accused Chinese entities of a massive effort to steal artificial intelligence technology.

“The US has evidence that foreign entities, primarily in China, are running industrial-scale distillation campaigns to steal American AI,” science and technology chief Michael Kratsios said in a post on X.

“We will be taking action to protect American innovation.”


Canada’s Cohere buys Germany’s Aleph Alpha to take on US AI giants

ByChris Hogg
DIGITAL JOURNAL
April 24, 2026

File photo: Aidan Gomez, co-founder and CEO of Cohere, speaks at Toronto Tech Week. - Photo courtesy Toronto Tech Week

Two of the most prominent AI companies outside the United States are joining forces.

Cohere, the Toronto-based enterprise AI firm founded in 2019, is acquiring Aleph Alpha, a German company founded the same year and once positioned as Germany’s answer to OpenAI.


The deal, endorsed by the Canadian and German governments, was announced Friday in Berlin and aims to give enterprise and public sector customers a credible alternative to American AI dominance.


Cohere focused on building enterprise AI tools for businesses and governments, winning federal investment, government contracts, and commercial partnerships with companies like Bell and RBC along the way.

Aleph Alpha has taken a different path. After failing to keep pace with OpenAI and Anthropic on foundation model development, it abandoned that race and pivoted to helping governments and enterprises deploy AI they could control.

The combination brings those two stories together into a single company pitched as a transatlantic answer to Silicon Valley AI giants.

Financial terms of the acquisition were not disclosed by the companies.

German business daily Handelsblatt, which first reported the deal, valued the combined entity at roughly $20 billion, citing sources in government and industry.

Germany’s Digital Minister Karsten Wildberger announced the transaction at a press conference in Berlin on Friday, joined by Canada’s Minister of AI and Digital Innovation Evan Solomon, Cohere CEO Aidan Gomez, Schwarz Digits chief Rolf Schumann and Aleph Alpha co-founder Samuel Weinbach.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz approved the deal, according to Handelsblatt.
The deal

Cohere will retain its name and operate dual headquarters in Canada and Germany, with Heidelberg becoming a second global headquarters.

Cohere shareholders will hold about 90% of the combined entity, with Aleph Alpha shareholders taking about 10%, according to Handelsblatt.

The acquisition is subject to regulatory approval.

Alongside the announcement, Germany’s Schwarz Group committed €500 million to Cohere’s upcoming Series E round. Schwarz, parent company of discount retailers Lidl and Kaufland, was already a lead backer of Aleph Alpha.

Cohere CFO Francois Chadwick told Reuters the company expects to close the funding round in the coming months.

The combined company will target regulated sectors including public services, finance, defence, energy, manufacturing, telecommunications and healthcare. Both the Canadian and German governments said they would use Cohere technology.

Cohere has raised about $1.6 billion since its founding, with investors including Nvidia and AMD. Its most recent valuation was roughly $6.8 billion after a $500 million raise in August 2025.

That’s a fraction of what OpenAI, Anthropic and Google have mobilized for training infrastructure, talent and chip supply.

Aleph Alpha’s pivot away from foundation model development brought its business model closer to Cohere’s. Its existing contracts with the German federal ministry for digital affairs and the Baden-Württemberg regional government give Cohere a direct foothold in European public sector procurement.
What this means for Canadian technology leaders

At the press conference, Solomon framed the deal as a stand against concentrated power.

“We need to make sure that the power does not rest in the hands of a few dominant players,” he said. Wildberger said the two countries were “creating a global AI leader.”

The announcement builds on the Sovereign Technology Alliance that Canada and Germany signed earlier this year.

It also extends a visible stretch of Canadian government support for Cohere.

Ottawa finalized a $240 million investment in March 2025 to help fund Cohere’s $725 million data centre project in Cambridge, Ontario. In August 2025, the federal government signed a memorandum of understanding with Cohere to explore deploying its tools across public service operations.

Commercial momentum has followed. Bell Canada announced its own partnership with Cohere last July, making it Cohere’s preferred Canadian infrastructure partner. Last week, Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada began rolling out Cohere’s North platform to up to 1,400 staff.

Industry Minister Mélanie Joly told The Logic last week that Canada needs a “trading bloc” of like-minded countries to counter U.S. protectionism and the power of hyperscalers. She called Cohere “a gem” and said her goal in conversations with the German government was to “build a national champion.”

Cohere has publicly committed to maintaining Canadian operations. The company retains its name, will continue to operate from Toronto as its primary headquarters, and the Canadian government remains a customer. Cohere’s CFO told Reuters the merger will help Cohere reach more customers in regulated markets.

The Series E close, expected later in 2026, will be the next concrete signal on how investors value the combined company and how the capital gets deployed between the two headquarters.

Aleph Alpha’s existing European public sector contracts will shape part of the product roadmap, which Canadian enterprise buyers should factor into their planning.
Final shotsWatch the Series E close. The valuation investors settle on for the combined company will signal more about near-term trajectory than any ministerial statement.
For other Canadian AI firms, Cohere and Aleph Alpha is a model worth studying. Scale reached through partnership, with sovereignty framing as the political cover.
Watch the product roadmap. European public sector contracts will shape product decisions for a company now marketed as transatlantic.



Written ByChris Hogg

Chris is an award-winning entrepreneur who has worked in publishing, digital media, broadcasting, advertising, social media & marketing, data and analytics. Chris is a partner in the media company Digital Journal, content marketing and brand storytelling firm Digital Journal Group, and Canada's leading digital transformation and innovation event, the mesh conference. He covers innovation impact where technology intersections with business, media and marketing. Chris is a member of Digital Journal's Insight Forum.

Billionaire Elon Musk enters courtroom showdown with OpenAI



ByAFP
April 25, 2026


Elon Musk. — © AFP Brendan SMIALOWSKI
Benjamin LEGENDRE

Jury selection is to begin Monday in a high-profile legal battle between billionaire Elon Musk and artificial intelligence startup OpenAI, which he accuses of betraying its non-profit mission.

The clash in a courtroom across the bay from San Francisco pits the world’s richest man against a startup that Musk once backed and now competes against in the booming AI sector.

OpenAI’s ChatGPT is a formidable rival to the Grok chatbot made by Musk’s xAI lab.

While the lawsuit filed by Musk is part of a feud between him and OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman, it spotlights a debate whether AI should ultimately benefit the privileged few or society as a whole.

Court filings lay out how Altman tried to convince Musk to back OpenAI in 2015, acting as a co-founder for a non-profit lab whose technology “would belong to the world.”

Musk pumped some $38 million into the lab before he left.


Elon Musk (l) and OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman are both on the witness list for the trial in a case filed against the startup by the Tesla tycoon – Copyright AFP/File Frederic J. BROWN, Jung Yeon-je

OpenAI is now valued at $852 billion, with Microsoft among its backers, and is preparing to go public on the stock market.

The judge presiding over the trial is aiming for a jury to decide by late May whether OpenAI broke a promise to Musk in its drive to be a leader in AI or just smartly rode the technology to glory.

– Musk duped? –

Musk argues in his lawsuit that he was deceived about OpenAI’s mission being altruistic.

The tycoon cites an email from Altman in 2017 claiming that he remained “enthusiastic about the non-profit structure” of their AI venture after Musk threatened to cut off funding for the lab.

Just a few months later, however, OpenAI established a commercial subsidiary in the face of needing to invest hundreds of billions of dollars in data centers to power its technology.

Over the course of the following two years, Microsoft pumped billions of dollars into OpenAI and the tech stalwart’s stake in the startup is now valued about $135 billion.

Microsoft chief executive Satya Nadella is among those slated to testify at the trial.

– Aimed at Altman –

Along with calling for OpenAI to be forced to revert to a pure nonprofit, Musk’s suit urges the ousting of Altman and OpenAI co-founder and president Greg Brockman.

Musk is also seeking as much as $134 billion in damages and to have the court make OpenAI sever ties with Microsoft.

During pre-trial hearings, US Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers mused that Musk team seemed to be “pulling numbers out of the air” when it came to calculating damages.

If the jury sides with Musk, it will be left to Rogers to determine any remedies or payment.

In what OpenAI has dismissed as a public relations stunt, Musk has vowed that any damages awarded in the suit will go to the startup’s nonprofit foundation.

– Quest for control? –

OpenAI internal communications brought to light by the lawsuit reveal tensions that culminated with the temporary ouster of Altman as AI chief executive in late 2023.

Musk’s legal team highlighted a 2017 entry in Brockman’s personal journal reasoning that it would be lying if Altman publicly asserted OpenAI would stay a nonprofit but became a corporation a short time later.

OpenAI now has a hybrid governance structure giving its nonprofit foundation control over a for-profit arm.

In court filings, OpenAI countered that its break-up with Musk was due to his quest for absolute control rather than its nonprofit status.

“This case has always been about Elon generating more power and more money for what he wants,” OpenAI said in a post on X, a platform Musk owns.

“His lawsuit remains nothing more than a harassment campaign that’s driven by ego, jealousy and a desire to slow down a competitor.”

The startup noted that days after Musk entered the AI race in 2023 he called for a 6-month moratorium on development of advanced AI.

Op-Ed: GPT 5.5 — Hype, obviously, but redefining the AI environment as well


ByPaul Wallis
EDITOR AT LARGE
DIGITAL JOURNAL
April 24, 2026


OpenAI says it is building a 'superapp' that combines ChatGPT, a coding tool, online search, and AI agent capabilities - Copyright AFP SEBASTIEN BOZON

If you read OpenAI’s blurb on GPT 5.5, “Introducing GPT 5.5,” you’ll notice a very upbeat description of the new platform, but with an interesting addition in plain sight.

OpenAI is clearly trying to address the many issues arising from prior platforms and consumer grumblings on multiple levels. This is critical because so far, the responses to AI problems have been largely useless and anything but reassuring.

This is important. AI hype has been seriously getting on people’s nerves, notably the people paying for it. Most professional IT commentators are far less than impressed with the constant sales pitch, particularly when it includes glossing over major issues like security and just getting things done properly.

There are problems. There are risks. We’re also talking about big outlays for businesses and significant challenges in core functions for just about everybody.

The market isn’t helping itself with absurd situations like its idiotic dismissal of Software as a Service, aka SaaS, assuming coding somehow is a thing of the past, when it’s absolutely integral to every step forward with AI. Future coding for AI is likely to look very different and evolve into something totally new overnight. It will need to be hyper-efficient, perhaps totally rewritten to manage basic operations. You will need SaaS like you will need to breathe.

What’s desperately needed is clarity, and above all, credible responses to criticisms. This clarity needs to be at the consumer, tech, and business levels, and structured to address all of the issues.

This is why “Introducing GPT 5.5” needs to be seen as an actual response. OpenAI have gone to some lengths to try to fit all of these minefields into one press release, and they’ve managed to keep it interesting.

I won’t rehash the blurb. Just read it and watch the priorities emerge. Suffice to say that it’s still a sales pitch, but at least it’s believably ballpark for addressing this daily-growing encyclopaedia of situations. They’ve even managed to address heuristics, the thankless and much-bitched-about frontier of vibe coding and inferences for prompts, etc., into the mix.

Now we can get to the environment. AI is creating new environments for itself and the world at incredible speed. It’s easy to forget that most of the current issues weren’t even beginning to be mainstream issues a year ago. This level of response from a major player like OpenAI is new and indicates a level of market awareness not particularly noticeable a year ago, too.

So what is this new environment? It’s a patchy, buggy, vague businessscape, a consumer wading pool with sudden deep ends, and more. It’s an arena for half-baked employment issues. It’s also a self-inflicted problem for Big AI.

The adoption and deployment of AI are looking pretty chaotic. It’s nebulous in areas where it needs to be well-defined. It’s looking like an ADHD version of the early internet.

What’s needed is much more clarity, and plenty of it, preferably in LEGO form. Digitization required systemic training of everybody on Earth, workplace practices and protocols definition, and above all, personal-level familiarity with the real-world applications.

OpenAI doesn’t actually say in so many words that they’ve at long last declared war on slop. They’re just constantly talking about refining all the areas that generate slop. To be fair, there’s a clear drive to quality control and oversighted functionality.

Can somebody tell me why any of these countless AI dysfunctions are tolerated at all by anyone? Nobody needs expensive chatty evasive unreliable automated idiots. You can get verbose excuse factories at any meeting for free. This is business.

Almost unnoticed in “Introducing GPT 5.5” is a very welcome nod and acknowledgement of the super high-value scientific AI. This is the true Golden Goose of AI. How they fitted it into the blurb, I don’t know, but it desperately needed to be there. This level of operations is bread and butter for top level AI, and cutesy chatbots are nothing by comparison.

That’s good news for the high end of AI applications. The public face of AI is somewhere between Ronald McDonald and Freddy Krueger.

The overall look is terrible. “It’s great, it’s wonderful, it’s dangerous, and we may or may not know which at any given moment” isn’t good enough. The pity of it is that this look is pretty accurate.

This bizarre look creates instant sales resistance as well as some pretty justifiable fear and loathing. It’s totally counterproductive.

Some questions:

How much of future AI development looks at objectives like modelled values for users?

Can you put an ROI on a given AI task before you start it?

What are the opt-out and standalone choices for people who don’t want third-party involvement in high-value IP work?

Is there such a thing as an Off switch?

How do people pin down AI management and fixes into a demonstrable and quantifiable contract service cost? That’s not at all clear.

At what point does AI stop being an undefinable threat?

GPT 5.5 may well be great. It’s the business environment you need to talk about.

_______________________________________________________

Disclaimer
The opinions expressed in this Op-Ed are those of the author. They do not purport to reflect the opinions or views of the Digital Journal or its members.

Saturday, April 25, 2026

‘Stigmatized’ or ‘sustainable’? Vintage sales boost sees fur return


By AFP
April 23, 2026


Owner of Madison Avenue Furs Larry Cowit assists a customer in his store, which has seen an uptick in interest in vintage fur in recent years - Copyright AFP ANGELA WEISS


Maggy DONALDSON

Laura Jacobs thought she’d never wear animal fur, having witnessed years of protests over its use in clothing — until suddenly she started spotting it all over New York.

Jacobs fished out the long mink her grandmother left her years ago and took it to a Manhattan furrier to give it a second act.

Fur “was stigmatized for so long,” Jacobs told AFP, posing before a full-length mirror and assessing a potential crop.

But the return of real fur “fits with everything that’s going on with recycling and bringing back vintage,” she said.

“I never would have bought a fur coat,” Jacobs said, adding that the thought of “killing animals like that” gave her pause.

But “this felt like I was recycling it,” she said.

New York is thawing out after a particularly cruel winter that’s included debates over fur’s revival as influencers push the look and retail sites report a jump in searches for vintage pieces.

Business owners like Larry Cowit — who inherited and runs his family’s Madison Avenue Furs — are celebrating a sales spike.

“I have girls as young as 20 years old walking in, coming in from college, and putting on a fox jacket,” Cowit told AFP. “We haven’t seen that in quite a while.”

Noelle Sciacca — head of fashion at the high-end resale site The RealReal — said “interest in fur has accelerated dramatically,” with searches for vintage fur on their website nearly tripling in 2025 from 2024.

The trend is “booming across the board,” she told AFP, “but real fur is clearly leading the surge.”

Sciacca owes part of the interest to “sustainable, accessible resale options,” which she said “has made consumers feel comfortable embracing fur as both stylish and thoughtful.”

– Muddled public opinion –

The global fashion industry’s use of fur has been on the outs for decades.

Synthetic, cheaper alternatives have gained traction, and animal rights activists continue to push dropping the real thing.

Demonstrators recently urged Milan Fashion Week to go fully fur-free. New York’s Fashion Week fur ban goes into effect in September 2026.

Many major designers have vowed to stop using it, including Prada, Michael Kors and Saint Laurent.

The European Commission meanwhile is reviewing a citizen’s initiative that drew millions of signatures urging an EU-wide ban on fur farming. A spokesperson told AFP the commission would communicate in the coming weeks whether it would propose such a prohibition.

Yet the culture’s court of public opinion has grown muddled, notably as concerns about fast fashion and petroleum-based materials grow.

“I always imagine all of the faux-fur coats being produced right now melting into a puddle of plastic. The idea of reuse and recycling can include vintage fur,” Vogue archivist Laird Borrelli-Persson said in comments recently published by the fashion magazine.

“The question for me is whether wearing vintage fur increases the appetite for lookalikes — either faux or new fur.”

Real fur coats demand consistent upkeep. The skins contain natural oils, and garments not kept in a temperature-controlled environment — ideally off-season in cold vaults — can dry out and disintegrate.

“It’s biodegradable,” said Cowit.

But Ashley Byrne of animal rights group PETA said buying vintage under the banner of sustainability is “well-meaning but misguided.”

She told AFP that shoppers who didn’t grow up exposed to footage from inside fur farms should “understand that wearing any fur that came from the back of an animal who was tortured and killed is endorsing things that we’re sure they do not want to support.”

– Online influence –

Cowit said their ratio of vintage to new fur sales is now approximately 70 to 30. Pre-owned coats can go anywhere from $500 to $10,000, and the average mink is $1,500 to $1,800, he said.

He credits the internet with boosting business: “The influencers on social media have really changed the whole world.”

Part of the online drive stems from the “mob wife” aesthetic that’s trended on TikTok in recent years, looks featuring flashy jewelry, animal prints, and — you guessed it — fur.

Madison Avenue Furs’ Instagram features Cowit’s niece posing on the shop’s balcony in a variety of plush coats recalling “Sopranos”-esque fashion.

Stylist Renee May, who stopped by with shoppers looking to modernize their grandmother’s coats and check out new jackets, told AFP “a lot of my clients are wearing their furs again.”

Nicole Bellmier, 36, called the look “very nostalgic.”

“It’s something to pass down to our children,” her cousin Dominique Defonte added.
Stuffed toys in US capital symbolize displaced Ukrainian children


By AFP
April 23, 2026


A fence on the National Mall in Washington was adorned with 20,000 stuffed teddy bears to represent Ukrainian children abducted by Russia since the start of the war - Copyright AFP GREG BAKER


Paul NOLP

In the heart of the US capital, a fence stands adorned with 20,000 teddy bears to represent the Ukrainian children who, according to Kyiv, have been abducted by invading Russia, as war rages on.

Activists held a gathering of US lawmakers on Thursday at the somber display located a stone’s throw from the Capitol, with a simple plea: “Bring Them Home.”

“When you see the scale… you then start to understand how terrifying this is, and that all this time, while we are waiting for some kind of negotiations, there is children’s life at stake,” said Mariia Hlyten, a 24-year-old Ukrainian activist.

“They have to be returned immediately, as soon as possible.”

Congressmen Richard Blumenthal, Jamie Raskin and Michael McCaul took turns speaking about the plight of Ukraine’s missing children at Thursday’s event, coordinated by Razom for Ukraine in partnership with the American Coalition for Ukraine.

“What Vladimir Putin is doing here is not trying to take territory alone. He’s not trying to defeat a nation alone,” Blumenthal, a Senate Democrat, said.

The Russian leader is “trying to destroy the people, that is the purpose of abducting children, changing their names, re-education. Killing their identity, if not the children themselves — making sure that they never grow up speaking their own language, knowing their own religion and culture,” Blumenthal added.

Democrat Jamie Raskin called Putin’s actions “a blatant violation” of human rights, international humanitarian law and the laws of war.

“It’s a war crime and if it’s done intentionally… it is part of the proof of genocide,” Raskin said.

Hlyten’s relative, fellow Ukrainian Arkady Dolina, stood nearby with a large blue and yellow flag draped over his shoulders at the event.

“Absolutely horrible,” the 28-year-old exclaimed, referring to what he said was a vast number of kidnappings from occupied territories by Russia since it invaded Ukraine in 2022.

Moscow denies the claims.

“This is the continuation of a centuries long Russian policy to abduct, indoctrinate kids and then send them as their cannon fodder to fight their stupid, useless, brutal wars,” Dolina said.

In February, President Volodymyr Zelensky said 2,000 Ukrainian children had been brought back from Russia and Russian-occupied territories, but that thousands more remained “captive.”

In March, the United States announced the creation of a $25 million fund to aid in the return of Ukrainian children, a cause that First Lady Melania Trump has also spoken out on.

The International Criminal Court in 2023 issued an arrest warrant for Putin and his children’s rights commissioner “for the war crime of unlawful deportation” of children.

Kyiv says Russia has indoctrinated them, forced many to adopt Russian citizenship and tried to scrub them of their Ukrainian identity — accusations supported by testimony from Ukrainians who managed to leave Russian occupation.
G20 summit invites to include Russia: US official

TRUMP ABANDON'S UKRAINE


By AFP
April 23, 2026


An invitation to the G20 summit would come as the Trump administration pushes to further ease the international isolation Russia brought on itself by invading Ukraine in 2022 - Copyright AFP Mandel NGAN

An invitation to the December G20 summit in the United States will be sent to Russia as a member of the organization, a senior US official said Thursday.

Such an invitation would come as the Trump administration pushes to further ease the international isolation Russia brought on itself by invading Ukraine in 2022.

“All G20 members will be invited to attend ministerial meetings and the leaders’ summit,” a senior Trump administration official said in a statement.

The Kremlin said earlier in the day that Russian President Vladimir Putin had not yet decided if he would attend.

“No such decisions have been made yet,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said in Moscow.

Putin has not participated in a meeting of the world’s top economies since 2019, first because of the coronavirus pandemic and then due to the war in Ukraine.

Russia was invited at “the highest level” for the December 14-15 summit in Miami, the state news agency RIA Novosti quoted Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Pankin as saying.

After sending troops into neighboring Ukraine in 2022, Russia was slapped with numerous international sanctions and faced diplomatic isolation from the West.

In 2023, the International Criminal Court (ICC) issued an arrest warrant for Putin over the war, limiting the Russian leader’s travel.

The United States is not a member of the ICC and Putin travelled to Alaska last August for a summit with US President Donald Trump.

Since returning to the White House last year, Trump has sought to revive long-frozen relations with Russia in a bid to end the war in Ukraine.

Initially promising to end the war in 24 hours, Trump’s attempts so far have delivered few tangible results, even as Moscow and Kyiv met multiple times for talks.
Images of dead Maradona rock trial of medical team


By AFP
April 23, 2026


Seven medical workers face prison terms of between eight and 25 years if convicted of homicide with possible intent over the conditions of Maradona's care in his final days - Copyright AFP GREG BAKER

Shock images of Argentine football icon Diego Maradona lying dead in bed, his stomach grotesquely swollen, rocked the negligence trial of his medical team on Thursday.

Maradona, regarded as one of the greatest football players of all times, died in November 2020 at age 60, while recovering at home from surgery for a brain clot.

The larger-than-life footballer died of heart failure and acute pulmonary edema — a condition where fluid accumulates in the lungs — two weeks after going under the knife.

The emergency room doctor, Juan Carlos Pinto, who arrived by ambulance at his home, on Thursday testified about the condition in which he found the star after his death.

“He had a lot of edema, his face was very swollen, there was edema on his limbs, and a globular abdomen, like a balloon.”

The court was shown a 17-minute video shot by forensic police of Maradona on his deathbed, wearing a pair of football shorts and a black t-shirt pulled up to reveal a cavernous stomach.

Pinto said the swelling was caused by a large quantity of both fat and ascites, an abnormal buildup of fluid in the abdominal cavity often linked to cirrhosis of the liver.

Maradona’s daughter Gianinna, who was in court for the hearing, wept as Pinto spoke and buried her head in her hands as the video was shown.

Seven medical workers, including a neurosurgeon, a psychiatrist and a nurse, face prison terms of between eight and 25 years if convicted of homicide with possible intent — pursuing a course of action despite knowing it could lead to death — over the conditions of Maradona’s care in his final days.

Both Pinto and a police officer testified about the lack of medical equipment in the rented residence where Maradona was recuperating.

“There was no defibrillator, no oxygen, nothing. In the room, there was nothing to suggest that the patient was in hospital at home,” Pinto said.

The accused deny responsibility for Maradona’s death, saying the star of the 1986 World Cup, who battled cocaine and alcohol addictions, succumbed to natural causes.

The first trial over his death was annulled last year following revelations that one of the judges took part in a clandestine documentary about the case.

A second trial, conducted by a new panel of judges, began last week.

It is expected to last at least three months.

Lebanon leaders accuse Israel of war crime after journalist killed


By AFP
April 23, 2026


A photograph shows Amal Khalil, a veteran correspondent for the daily newspaper Al-Akhbar, in the southern Lebanese border village of Jebbayn in 2024 - Copyright AFP GREG BAKER

Lebanon’s leaders accused Israel on Thursday of committing a war crime, after an airstrike killed a Lebanese journalist in the country’s south, with the Israeli army saying it was reviewing the incident.

Rescuers and the reporter’s employer on Wednesday confirmed the death of Amal Khalil, a 42-year-old journalist who worked for the Lebanese daily Al-Akhbar.

The civil defence agency said she was killed in a strike on a house in the village of Al-Tiri.

“Israel deliberately targets journalists in order to conceal the truth about its crimes against Lebanon,” President Joseph Aoun said in a statement denouncing “war crimes”.

Prime Minister Nawaf Salam wrote on X that “targeting journalists and obstructing access for rescue teams constitutes a war crime”, adding that his government would take the case to international bodies.

When contacted by AFP on Thursday, an Israeli army spokesperson said “the incident is still under review”.

A 10-day ceasefire has been in effect in Lebanon since Friday, pausing the war between Israel and Iran-backed Hezbollah that has left more than 2,400 people dead in Lebanon.

Khalil and another journalist had taken refuge in a house in Al-Tiri after an Israeli airstrike targeted a car in front of them, according to Lebanon’s National News Agency (NNA).

It said the two occupants of the vehicle, the mayor of the nearby Israeli-occupied town of Bint Jbeil and a man with him, were killed.

An Israeli strike then targeted the house where the two journalists had taken refuge.

The health ministry said the attack wounded journalist Zeinab Faraj — who was taken to hospital — and left Khalil trapped.

A Lebanese Red Cross official told AFP they had “managed to rescue Zeinab Faraj” but were unable to reach Khalil and withdrew “because of a warning strike”.

Lebanese authorities had to contact UN peacekeepers deployed in southern Lebanon, and it took several hours before rescue workers could regain access to the area to recover the journalist’s body from the rubble.

The health ministry accused Israel on Thursday of “obstructing rescue operations” and “targeting an ambulance clearly bearing the Red Cross symbol”.

The Israeli military said in a statement on Wednesday it had “identified two vehicles in southern Lebanon that had departed from a military structure used by Hezbollah”.

The air force then struck a vehicle carrying “terrorists”, it said, who had crossed what Israel calls the “forward defence line” in southern Lebanon and approached its troops.



– ‘Accountability’ –



Israel says it has established a “yellow line” deep into southern Lebanon where its troops have been posted, stopping residents from returning.

Its army denied preventing rescue teams from “accessing the area”.

Dozens of journalists attended Khalil’s funeral in her southern hometown of Baysariyeh on Thursday. Her coffin was draped in the Lebanese flag and covered in flowers, her helmet and press vest placed on top.

Rights groups have condemned Israel’s repeated killing of press workers.

Stephane Dujarric, spokesperson for the UN secretary-general, said that “targeting civilians and obstructing aid are violations of international humanitarian law”.

UN chief Antonio Guterres “reiterates that journalists must be able to perform their essential duties without fears of interference, harassment or worse”, he added.

Jonathan Dagher, head of the Middle East desk at Reporters Without Borders (RSF), said the sequence of strikes on Wednesday “would indicate targeting and obstruction of aid constituting war crimes”.

Ramzi Kaiss, Lebanon researcher for Human Rights Watch, said “Israel’s killing of journalist Amal Khalil should be credibly investigated”.

“Intentionally targeting civilians is a war crime.”

On March 28, three journalists were killed in an Israeli airstrike in the south, and UN experts called for an international investigation.

They joined several other Lebanese journalists who have been killed by Israel since the previous conflict with Hezbollah started in 2023.

From a protest in Beirut commemorating Khalil, journalist Inas Sherri told AFP “accountability is the most important thing”.

“If we were holding people accountable, Israel would not have continued killing journalists one after another.”
Map of the Eastern Mediterranean region. Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Global Energy Monitor, Global Gas Infrastructure Tracker, and the World Bank Group



By 

By Najia Houssari

Lebanon faces growing concern over what officials describe as potential Israeli encroachment onto its offshore energy resources, after the Israeli military published a map extending its buffer zone into the Mediterranean, raising questions about the fate of the Qana gas field.

The map, released by the Israeli army on April 19 amid a fragile ceasefire with Hezbollah, outlines the deployment of its forces following their advance into parts of southern Lebanon, which Israel said was intended to prevent direct threats to its northern towns.

Israel’s newly delineated “Yellow Line,” which marks the expanded buffer zone about 5-10 km into Lebanese territory, appeared to extend not only across areas south of the Litani River — where Israeli forces pushed deeper during the recent war — but also into maritime areas, including waters linked to the Qana gas field.

The development has triggered alarm in Beirut, particularly as Lebanon had secured exploration rights in Qana under a US-brokered maritime border agreement with Israel in 2022, following years of complex negotiations.

Analysts and observers warned that Israel’s expansion of its operational map into the sea could signal a shift toward asserting influence over offshore resources, mirroring what they describe on land as the doctrine of “forward defense.”

Lebanon now faces the challenge of how to respond to what it sees as a new threat to its sovereignty both on land and its offshore economic lifeline.

Retired Brig. Gen. Mounir Shehadeh, former head of Lebanon’s Military Court, said Israel would face significant challenges in attempting to control or exploit offshore gas resources.

“Control over gas fields is not that simple. A field is not just a maritime space,” he told Arab News, noting that fields such as Qana (Block 9) require extensive infrastructure, including drilling and production platforms and the involvement of international companies such as TotalEnergies.

He stressed that any temporary military control would not translate into the ability to extract gas or derive economic benefit.

“Maritime operations differ fundamentally from land occupation. Israel may assert military pressure, but it cannot legally operate gas fields unilaterally without the participation of international firms,” Shehadeh said.

Any company working in a disputed area without a formal agreement risks sanctions and legal disputes, he added, warning that the political and financial costs would be considerable.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he plans to establish a buffer zone extending from Lebanese territorial waters in the south to the Syrian side of Mount Hermon, via its Lebanese slopes.

In Lebanon, officials have described the move as Israel “reshaping the map of the region.”

Shehadeh warned that any attempt to seize Lebanese oil fields would amount to a major regional escalation and a direct threat to the Eastern Mediterranean’s economic infrastructure, one that could spark a far wider confrontation, not a one-off operation.

Addressing whether the maritime border demarcation prevents such a move, Shehadeh said that the 2022 agreement, mediated by US envoy Amos Hochstein, serves as a significant deterrent.

“It clearly defines the maritime boundary, Line 23, and implicitly recognizes Lebanon’s right to develop the Qana field,” he told Arab News.

There is also an indirect mechanism for sharing revenues in the event of a geological extension, but its boundaries remain to be determined.

The agreement, Shehadeh said, is not a full peace treaty, but what prevents military violations depends largely on political balance and deterrence, not just the law.

“To be more precise: the agreement makes it difficult for Israel to act unilaterally, but it does not prevent it on the ground if it decides to escalate.”

Lebanese Minister of Energy and Water Joe Saddi said the Israeli map “does not change any of the facts established by the maritime border demarcation agreement,” and that “the agreement remains in effect, with no official amendment.”

The maritime border demarcation agreement between Lebanon and Israel is legally binding on both signatories and has been registered with the UN.

Lawyer Christina Abi Haidar, an expert in energy and governance law, said it would be illegal for Israel to cancel it unilaterally.

“Legally speaking, any change to the agreement requires the consent of both parties,” she told Arab News. “The agreement also stipulates that any party objecting must file a complaint with the American side, which has not occurred. At this stage, no changes are permissible.”

Israeli Energy Minister Eli Cohen said in mid-March that the Israeli government was considering canceling the maritime border demarcation agreement.

Abi Haidar warned that no company would move forward with drilling operations while the country remains at war.

She said it remains unclear whether Block 9 has been formally awarded to the consortium or approved by the Lebanese government.

“Either way, as long as the country is in a state of war, this is no moment to be talking about investment,” she said.

Even if the fighting ends, any continued Israeli presence in the occupied border strip would require Lebanon to escalate the issue diplomatically, including at the UN and with the US as mediator, she added.

However, Lebanon’s situation is largely without precedent.

“Here you have a country technically at war with Israel, yet one that managed to strike a maritime demarcation deal through American mediation,” she said, pointing out that Israel has not signed the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea — a factor that complicated negotiations and ultimately led Lebanon to accept US involvement in reaching the current arrangement.

Israel, meanwhile, appeared to be seeking to establish a buffer zone stretching from the slopes of Mount Hermon in Syria to Lebanon’s territorial waters, a move that could give it significant leverage in future negotiations over offshore resources.

It also casts a long shadow over the maritime demarcation agreement with Lebanon and the fate of the oil and gas reserves lying beneath the seabed.

Shehadeh dismissed Israel’s Yellow Line as having no legal standing.

“It carries no weight under international law,” he told Arab News.

“It is a military and media tool aimed at creating new realities on the ground and expanding Israel’s room for maneuver.”

He said extending the line into maritime areas suggests an attempt to merge land and sea into a single “operational zone,” calling it a “bargaining tactic” rather than a legitimate claim of sovereignty, and an effort to sidestep the maritime demarcation agreement between the two countries.

On safeguarding Lebanon’s rights, Shehadeh stressed that neither legal measures nor military capabilities alone are sufficient.

“The equation is a mixture of the two,” he said, adding that diplomatic pressure, particularly from the US and Europe, remains essential, given Washington’s role as the agreement’s sponsor.

Shehadeh warned that any targeting of gas infrastructure could provoke a response from Hezbollah, underscoring the need to resolve the issue through agreement rather than force.

“So far, Israel has not completely broken the agreement because it realizes that doing so could trigger a wide confrontation and destabilize its own fields as well,” he said.

While Israel may exert pressure and maneuver politically and militarily, it cannot unilaterally seize or operate Lebanon’s gas resources.

“Lebanon’s real guarantees lie in the presence of international companies, American backing, and a balance of deterrence on the ground,” he added.

In January, before the latest war between Israel and Hezbollah broke out, Lebanon signed an agreement with a consortium comprising French TotalEnergies, QatarEnergy, and Italian Eni to explore for gas in Block 8.

Lebanon has divided its exclusive economic zone into 10 blocks for oil and gas exploration. Seismic surveys have been conducted across most of them, with the exception of Block 8, which lies adjacent to the disputed maritime border with Israel.

According to unofficial estimates, Lebanon’s offshore gas reserves are estimated at 96 trillion cubic feet, and oil reserves at 865 million barrels.

Israel and Lebanon extended their shaky ceasefire by three weeks on Friday, President Donald Trump said, as the US remained at a standstill in negotiations with Iran to end the Middle East war.

Trump announced the truce extension as he met with ambassadors of the two countries and despite recent Israeli strikes in Lebanon and fresh rocket fire from Iran-backed Hezbollah, which was not part of the talks in Washington.

“I think there’s a very good chance of having peace. I think it should be an easy one,” Trump told reporters. The truce had initially been set to expire on Sunday.

Hezbollah reacted dismissively to Trump’s statement, warning that it would respond to any Israeli attacks.

Ali Fayad, an MP for the party, said extending the ceasefire “makes no sense” in light of continued “hostile acts” by Israel, saying they gave “the resistance the right to respond at the appropriate time.”

 

Israel's Lebanon offensive threatens to unravel US-brokered gas deal and block Beirut's energy future

Israel's Lebanon offensive threatens to unravel US-brokered gas deal and block Beirut's energy future
IDF's officially declared "Forward Maritime Defence Zone" absorbs disputed offshore territory, jeopardising a TotalEnergies-led exploration consortium awarded rights to Block 8 just months ago / bne IntelliNewsFacebook
By Ben Aris in Berlin April 23, 2026

Israel's military occupation of southern Lebanon is threatening to upend a landmark 2022 US-brokered maritime border agreement and derail Lebanon's best remaining hope of tapping its offshore gas wealth.

On April 19, the Israel Defence Forces published an official Arabic-language map explicitly delineating what it calls a "Forward Maritime Defence Zone" extending diagonally into the Mediterranean from the Lebanese coast.

The map, bearing the IDF emblem and distributed publicly, places the Qana Gas Prospect within the declared zone — making the maritime dimension of Israel's southern Lebanon operation a matter of stated military doctrine rather than analyst inference.

A separate map distributed by researcher Ahmad Baydoun, drawing on IDF, UN and US State Department sources, confirmed that the IDF's declared maritime exclusion boundary runs northwest into the Mediterranean, encompassing the Qana Prospect in Block 9.

The IDF's on-land zone also covers dozens of Lebanese villages named on the official map, including the Christian villages of Rmeish and Ain Ebel, which are clearly labelled within the declared occupation area.

Israel has been explicit that it wants to occupy all of southern Lebanon as part of its Greater Israel project to create a buffer zone on its northern border.

The dry well that isn't the point

The map has been taken by many to infer that Israel is also in annexing gas deposits in the Qana Prospect and not just security issues.

But the energy dimension of Israel's Lebanon occupation is a bit more complicated than that. The Qana Prospect, which sits within the IDF's declared maritime zone, is not a producing gas field. Test drilling some of the blocks has come up dry.

TotalEnergies (NYSE: TTE) drilled in 2023 and found no commercial reserves, abandoning Block 9 entirely.

"There's no gas in the Qana prospect," noted Elai Rettig, an assistant professor in Energy Politics at Bar-Ilan University. "In 2023, TotalEnergies announced it did not find commercial gas reserves in that field and abandoned Block 9 entirely."

However, the same may not be true of Block 8, which lies further northwest of the IDF's published maritime line.

"The more interesting issue is Block 8, which is beyond this map, which Total wants to explore," Rettig added.

In January 2026, TotalEnergies announced it was redirecting its Lebanon exploration efforts to that block.

"Although the drilling of the well Qana 31/1 on Block 9 did not give positive results, we remained committed to pursue our exploration activities in Lebanon," TotalEnergies chief executive Patrick Pouyanné said earlier this year. "We will now focus our efforts on Block 8."

A consortium of TotalEnergies, Eni (BIT: ENI) and QatarEnergy — holding stakes of 35%, 35% and 30% respectively — signed the Block 8 exploration agreement with Lebanon in January 2026 and planned to begin 3D seismic surveys across 1,200 square kilometres.

If Israel moves to formally revise its maritime coordinates back to what is known as Israeli Line 1, a large part of Lebanese Block 8 could fall within disputed territory, effectively sending a warning to the consortium that exploration in parts of the block is untenable.

Lebanese Petroleum Administration president Gaby Daaboul had said Lebanon aimed to "step up exploration and achieve a commercial discovery to boost the economy and support sustainable development."

Energy Minister Joseph Saddi said Lebanon was working on its fourth exploration licensing round before the war started at the end of February. Both statements now look premature.

The 2022 deal under threat

The 2022 US-brokered maritime border agreement was hailed as a diplomatic breakthrough for a region long locked in dispute. Under its terms, Israel obtained full control of the Karish field, while Lebanon received rights to the disputed area including the Qana Prospect — along with recognition that Israel was entitled to royalties on portions of the Qana field that overlapped with Israeli maritime claims.

Now Israel is moving the lines on the maps. The occupation zone now extends into Lebanese territorial waters, cutting approximately nine kilometres into Lebanon's exclusive economic zone according to researchers tracking the boundary.

If Israel formally revises its maritime boundary, Lebanon would retain legal options. Analysts note that in such a scenario Lebanon could demand adoption of Line 29 — the line it had abandoned in 2022 — which would give it the entire Qana area and approximately half of the Karish field. That outcome would represent a significant economic blow to Israel's existing energy infrastructure.

Israel's energy minister Eli Cohen has already signalled interest in revisiting the 2022 agreement, which was signed by the outgoing government of Yair Lapid and has long been contested by the Netanyahu coalition. During the 2022 election campaign, Netanyahu had threatened to "neutralise" the maritime border deal if elected. Now he has boots on the ground in Lebanon, the change in territorial ownership may be simply delivered as a fait accompli as part of the current military operation.

The Gaza precedent

The energy dimension of Israel's Lebanon operations has prompted comparisons to Gaza Marine, the gas field discovered approximately 36 kilometres west of Gaza City in 2000.

Containing an estimated 28.3 to 39.6bn cubic metres of natural gas, it has been stalled for decades. The field is owned by the Palestine Investment Fund and Consolidated Contractors Company. Although Israel approved its development in June 2023, ongoing conflict has rendered any near-term exploitation impossible, and Palestinian access to the resource remains effectively blocked by Israeli security control over the maritime area.

Israel and Cyprus have made major offshore gas discoveries in the eastern Mediterranean — including the Leviathan and Aphrodite fields — highlighting the region's geological potential and the enormous value of controlling maritime territory in these waters. The question now being asked in Beirut, Paris and Doha is whether Lebanon will ever be permitted to join them.

Israel's buffer zone in Lebanon won't stop Hezbollah's fibre optic drones

Israel's buffer zone in Lebanon won't stop Hezbollah's fibre optic drones
Hezbollah's adoption of fiber-optic guided drones, immune to electronic jamming, threatens to negate the strategic rationale behind Israel's ten-kilometre security zone. / bne IntelliNewsFacebook
By Ben Aris in Berlin April 24, 2026

 

Israel’s security buffer zone in southern Lebanon is supposed to be a shield against Hezbollah missile and drone attacks that have battered its northern communities for months. But even if the IDF occupies the entire territory that won’t protect it from attack by fibre-optic drones.

The US-Israeli coalition appears to have learnt nothing from the conflict in Ukraine that has seen the rapid development of drone warfare. Traditional air defences have proven ineffective against drone swarms in the asymmetric warfare tactics that has changed the face of modern warfare. Israel may have more sophisticated US-made interceptor missiles but facing swarms of some 200 drones or more for each interceptor missile, defences are easily overwhelmed.

The fibre-optic -controlled drones, reportedly made in Ukraine, are even more deadly. Developed by Russia before being adopted by the Armed Forces of Ukraine (AFU), the fibre-optic control wires mean these drones are totally impervious to electronic warfare (EW) countermeasures. The only way to stop them is to shoot down each drone individually, one-by-one.

Ukraine supply controversial

Hezbollah is now deploying these fibre-optic controlled drones and Israeli newspaper Haaretz claims they are Ukraine-made, but there is no confirmation.

They could also be Russian-made, produced in the upgraded Iranian factories or domestically assembled by Hezbollah itself. As IntelliNews reported, the members of the CRINK alliance (China, Russia, Iran and North Korea) have been sharing military technology with Iran, which in turn may be passing this technology to its regional proxies. Iran has long armed Hezbollah to act as its proxy in Lebanon.

Ukraine has sent advisors to Gulf states contending with Iranian Shahed drones, demonstrating it is willing to share drone expertise. However, there is no confirmed evidence of Ukraine supplying drones or components directly to Hezbollah, which would be politically extraordinary, given Ukraine's dependence on Israeli-aligned Western support.

On March 27, Andriy Kovalenko, head of Ukraine's Centre for Countering Disinformation, stated there was "information that the proxies may be receiving assistance from Russians, including instructors from the Wagner PMC," adding that "the more active use of FPV drones by Iranian proxies points to deeper Russian involvement, which may include providing instructors and mercenaries."

He was careful to frame this as an assessment rather than a proven fact The Times of Israel reported.

The Knyaz Vandal Novgorodsky fibre-optic FPV drone, built by Russian volunteers, was first deployed in Russia's Kursk region to counter Ukrainian incursions in August 2024, with elite Russian fibre-optic units achieving ranges of 20-30km by late 2024. Russia has both the technology and the motive to transfer it to Hezbollah via Iran.

It is also not unlikely that Hezbollah has been given the technology to assemble the drones itself. Hezbollah operatives already assemble FPV drones using components purchasable online or produced with 3D printers, with warheads based on RPG charges or grenades. This has been confirmed by multiple sources.

The technology is clearly Ukrainian/Russian in origin, but the fibre-optic drones could be homemade on a small scale in kitchen factories, similar to how Ukraine produced drones in the earlier stages of its war with Russia.

This week, the IDF released a map of its intended occupation zone, that includes all of southern Lebanon up to the Litani River and beyond, that it has dubbed the “Forward Maritime Defence Zone” that includes a block extending into the sea that includes offshore gas fields.

Within days of that declaration, the fibre-optic technology, refined on the battlefields of Ukraine, was already demonstrating why the zone may offer less protection than its architects had hoped.

Writing in Haaretz, a left-leaning Israeli publication that has been critical of Israel’s military campaigns in Lebanon and Gaza, defence analyst Oded Yaron argues that fibre-optic guided drones — cheap, precise, jam-resistant and with rapidly increasing range — are being transferring from Ukraine to Lebanon at a pace that the Israeli defence establishment did not anticipate and has not yet solved.

"Over the past three years, while Israel has been absorbed in its own wars, the drone revolution in Ukraine has advanced at a breakneck pace," Yaron writes. "But in the latest round of fighting with Hezbollah, something changed."

The technology

The fibre-optic drone is a first-person view (FPV) drone guided not by radio signal but by a spool of ultra-thin cable that unspools as the drone flies, maintaining a direct physical connection between the operator and the aircraft. That cable — which can extend up to 10 to 20km— makes the drone completely invulnerable to electronic warfare jamming systems, which have no effect on a physical connection. Radio-controlled drones can be detected by radar and jammed; fibre-optic drones cannot.

Electronic spoofing was effective against Iranian-made drones in the 12-day war between Iran and Israel last summer, but Tehran learnt its lessons from that conflict. It has abandoned using the US-controlled GPS satellite system since then and switched to China’s BeiDou satellite navigation system that has made its drones impervious to Israeli EW countermeasures and a lot more accurate, allowing these drones to penetrate Israel’s famed Iron Dome defences. The introduction of Russia/Ukraine style fibre-optic drones would represent another innovation lifted from the war in Ukraine against which Israel or America have not developed any effective defences.

The number of reported FPV assault drones attacks using optical fibres has escalated dramatically in just the last few weeks, The Jerusalem Post reported, citing Israeli defence officials.

The drones are also cheaply made using 3D printers and armed with RPG charges or grenades. Their affordability gives Hezbollah an practical way to attack Israel and negates the advantage Israel has with a much larger defence budget. This is an entirely different economic proposition from the anti-tank missiles the IDF's buffer zone was principally designed to defeat.

Both Israel and the US have armed themselves for the wrong war. The Russian-made Kornet missiles, which generally require a relatively direct line of sight, and Iranian-made Almas missiles, typically limited to a range of around eight kilometres, cost tens of thousands of dollars per unit and require supply chains that run through Iran. Drones have no such constraints.

Hezbollah has released dozens of videos of assault drones striking Israeli armoured vehicles and military installations, including Merkava Mk.4 tanks, a D9 Caterpillar armoured bulldozer, and what appears to be a rare Namer heavy infantry fighting vehicle. In early report as the IDF moved into Lebanon, Hezbollah reported it destroyed over 20 Merkava tanks in a single day in a move that echoes the early days of the Ukraine conflict when small teams of Armed Forces of Ukraine (AFU) armed with US-made Javelin shoulder launched missiles destroyed Russian tanks with impunity.

Nevertheless, the technology arrived in Lebanon via a well-documented route. There are indications that Hezbollah has learned from Russian and Ukrainian experience in utilising fibre-optic guided drones to evade Israeli electronic interference, fuelling speculation that a sharing of experience between Hezbollah and Russian forces may have taken place.

"Military commanders believe 2025 is the 'year of the fiber-drone,'" with Ukrainian officers describing the current goal as increasing their range even further, with some spools already reaching beyond 20 kilometres, Yaron claims,

Fiber-optic -controlled drones are already in use at ranges of 20 to 30 kilometres, and beyond in Ukraine as the drone arms race between Russia and Ukraine continues to unfold.

"Based on past experience, it is likely that long-range fibre-optic drones will soon reach this region as well," Yaron writes. That trajectory points to a weapon that could strike Israeli targets from positions well behind the forward defence line — negating the strategic geography on which the buffer zone is premised.

The widespread use of drones in Lebanon could be a gamechanger. The Ukraine conflict has already shown that a smaller, weaker army can effectively bog down a much larger and heavily armed invading force and make infantry advances impossible. While the Armed Forces of Russia (AFR) outguns and outmans the AFU, as drones have a 50% kill-rate, following through on assault with infantry advances to occupy territory becomes impossible, as was illustrated in the recent battle of Pokrovsk in Ukraine, where the AFR took the city but has been unable to occupy it due to constant at-distance deadly drone attacks on its men.

The buffer zone's logic — and its limits

Israel's Defence Minister Israel Katz described the security zone last week as "extending 10km from the border to the 'anti-tank line,' stretching from the Mediterranean coast in the west to the Mount Hermon area in the east, in order to remove infiltration threats and defend against direct fire on communities."

Katz’s remarks highlight that the IDF is still thinking in terms of countering anti-tank missiles and has not taken into account the threat of Hezbollah’s drones. Ukraine’s European allies made a similar mistake when they finally supplied the AFU with Germany’s state-of-the-art Leopard II tanks that were supposed to be a gamechanger in that conflict. However, the Leopards proved to be ineffective as they were overwhelmed by Russia drone swarms and since have been held in the rear. One destroyed Leopard tank is currently on display on Red Square in Moscow to rub the point in.

The IDF has acknowledged that Hezbollah likely possesses more advanced versions of its anti-tank missiles, with ranges of up to 16km and the ability to overcome line-of-sight limitations. The buffer zone was calibrated with those weapons in mind. But drones threaten to turn the whole of southern Lebanon into a kill-zone for the IDF.

The effective operating range for a fibre-optic drone is about 20km which has created a no-go zone of those dimensions along the Russian/Ukraine line of contact in Donbas. The distance between the Israel-Lebanon border, the Blue Line, and the Litani River, is between 20-30km, increasing to 30-35km at its widest point at the eastern end. That puts almost the entire Forward Maritime Defence Zone within effective drone range – deadly drones that can be operated by small teams hidden in positions tens of kilometres away from their targets. A Hezbollah unit positioned north of the occupied buffer zone could, in principle, fly a fibre-optic drone south across the line of contact and strike Israeli targets with precision at will.

"The implication is that Hezbollah could soon possess a cheap, flexible and precise weapon, resistant to electronic warfare, capable of 'leapfrogging' the 'anti-tank line' in southern Lebanon," Yaron concludes.

Israel's response

The Israeli defence establishment is aware of the problem. The IDF has moved to purchase thousands of FPV drones of its own as drone warfare reshapes the battlefield, but it is still playing catch-up.

Israeli defence companies are simultaneously developing dedicated interception and protection solutions for fibre-optic threats, though no system has yet demonstrated reliable operational effectiveness against them.

Ukraine has made the most progress in dealing with the problem and has developed a new family of interceptor drones that it has been rolling out this year, but it is also locked in an arm race with Russia, which continues to develop its own counters. For example, Russia has recently rolled out the Geran-5 jet powered drone that doesn’t rely on fibre-optic control, but travels so fast it is almost impossible to stop, and has an upgraded electronic guidance and communication system that makes it largely impervious to EW countermeasures.

Fibre-optic drones are cheap enough to be produced in volume by a non-state actor, require no sophisticated supply chain beyond commercially available components, and cannot be neutralised by the electronic warfare systems in which Israel has invested heavily.

Former Ukraine commander-in-chief General Valerii Zaluzhnyi summed up the changes in modern warfare in a recent opinion piece: “The large-scale changes that have occurred on the battlefields of the Russian-Ukrainian war have changed the paradigm of how warfare is waged… Today, in a relatively cheap way, any country can have combat capabilities that completely outstrip its economic or demographic situation if there is a desire and political will for it.”

Israeli strikes kill 5 in Lebanon, Beirut to seek truce extension


ByAFP
April 22, 2026


Rescue teams work to remove the rubble of a building hit by the Israeli army in the southern Lebanese village of Hanaouay - Copyright AFP Kawnat HAJU

Israeli strikes killed five people, including a journalist, and wounded another in Lebanon on Wednesday, despite an ongoing ceasefire that Beirut will request an extension for in upcoming talks with Israel in Washington.

Ahead of the talks on Thursday, Israel called on the Lebanese government to “work together” with it against Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah.

The two governments, which do not have diplomatic relations with each other, are set to hold a second round of talks under US auspices on Thursday, in a bid to end more than six weeks of fighting between Israel and Hezbollah that began on March 2.

Lebanon will request a one-month extension of the ceasefire during the meeting with Israel, a Lebanese official told AFP.

“Lebanon will request an extension of the truce for one month, an end of Israel’s bombing and destruction in the areas where it is present, and a commitment to the ceasefire,” the Lebanese official told AFP, on condition of anonymity given the sensitive nature of the talks.

The 10-day ceasefire, which expires Sunday, was announced after an initial meeting last week.

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun, for his part, said that “contacts are underway to extend the ceasefire period”.

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said Israel does not have any “serious disagreements” with Lebanon.

“Unfortunately, Lebanon is a failed state, a state that is de facto under Iranian occupation through Hezbollah,” he said.

Hezbollah, which is represented in the Lebanese cabinet and parliament, strongly opposes the direct talks with Israel pushed by Aoun and Prime Minister Nawaf Salam.

A Hezbollah lawmaker, however, told AFP on Monday that the group might accept indirect talks mediated by the United States.

“The obstacle to peace and normalisation between the (two) countries is one — Hezbollah,” said Saar.



– ‘Serious disagreements’ –



Israeli attacks on Lebanon have killed at least 2,454 people since the start of the war, according to Lebanese authorities.

On Wednesday, the state’s scientific research council estimated that more than 50,000 housing units had been damaged or destroyed by the war.

Israeli forces remain in dozens of southern villages, behind what the army has called a “Yellow Line”, described by the Israelis as a 10-kilometre (six-mile) deep “security zone” along the border in southern Lebanon.

Despite the truce, Israel is continuing its strikes in Lebanon.

Lebanese rescuers said an Israeli strike killed journalist Amal Khalil on Wednesday.

Before rescuers had found her body, Lebanon’s state media said Israeli strikes had killed four people in the south and east of the country.

Khalil’s employer, Lebanese daily newspaper Al-Akhbar, also announced her death and said fellow journalist Zeinab Faraj was wounded.

The health ministry said Faraj was transported to hospital.

Lebanon’s Information Minister Paul Morcos said on X that Khalil “was targeted by the Israeli army while carrying out her professional duty”.

The Israeli army said in a statement it had “identified two vehicles in southern Lebanon that had departed from a military structure used by Hezbollah”.

“After identifying the individuals as violating the ceasefire understandings and posing an imminent threat, the Israeli Air Force struck one of the vehicles. Subsequently, the structure from which the individuals had fled was also struck.”

Hezbollah issued four statements on Wednesday saying it had struck Israeli targets in south Lebanon, “in response to the Israeli enemy’s violation of the ceasefire”.

French President Emmanuel Macron said on Wednesday that a second French soldier died “of the consequences of his wounds” suffered in a weekend ambush against UN peacekeepers in Lebanon blamed on Hezbollah, which has denied responsibility.