Tuesday, July 15, 2025

Syrian forces enter Druze city after deadly clashes


By AFP
July 15, 2025


Syrian government forces were headed towards Sweida city to bring an end to clashes between Bedouin tribes and the Druze
 - Copyright AFP ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS

Syrian government forces entered the majority Druze city of Sweida on Tuesday, the interior ministry said, aiming to end clashes with Bedouin tribes that have killed nearly 100 people.

The southern city had been under the control of armed factions from the Druze minority, whose religious leaders said they had approved the deployment of Damascus’s troops and called on fighters to hand over their weapons.

A curfew was to be imposed on the southern city in a bid to halt the violence, which erupted at the weekend and has since spread across Sweida governorate.

Government forces said they intervened to separate the two sides but ended up taking control of several Druze areas around Sweida, an AFP correspondent reported.

Military columns were seen advancing toward Sweida on Tuesday morning, with heavy artillery deployed nearby.

The defence ministry said later that they had entered the city, and urged people to “stay home and report any movements of outlaw groups”.

An AFP correspondent heard explosions and gunshots as soldiers moved into Sweida.

Troops had begun heading towards the city on Monday, taking control of at least one Druze village, with one Druze faction saying talks were underway with the Damascus government.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor reported 99 people killed since the fighting erupted on Sunday — 60 Druze, including four civilians, 18 Bedouin fighters, 14 security personnel and seven unidentified people in military uniforms.

The defence ministry reported 18 deaths among the ranks of the armed forces.

While Druze religious authorities had called on Monday evening for a ceasefire and said they didn’t oppose the central government, Sheikh Hikmat al-Hijri, one of the three Druze spiritual leaders in Sweida, opposed the arrival of the security forces and called for “international protection”.

Israel, which has attempted to portray itself as a protector of the Druze in Syria and sees them as potential allies, bombed several Syrian tanks on Monday.

The strikes were “a clear warning to the Syrian regime — we will not allow harm to be done to the Druze in Syria”, said Defence Minister Israel Katz, whose country has its own Druze population.

– ‘Extreme terror’ –

The fighting underscores the challenges facing interim leader Ahmad al-Sharaa, whose Islamist forces ousted president Bashar al-Assad in December after nearly 14 years of civil war.

Syria’s pre-war Druze population was estimated at around 700,000, many of them concentrated in Sweida province.

The Druze, followers of an esoteric religion that split from Shiite Islam, are mainly found in Syria, Lebanon and Israel.

Following deadly clashes with government forces in April and May, local and religious leaders reached an agreement with Damascus under which Druze fighters had been providing security in the province.

“We lived in a state of extreme terror — the shells were falling randomly,” said Abu Taym, a 51-year-old father.

Amal, a 46-year-old woman, said: “We fear a repeat of the coastal scenario”, referring to massacres in March of more than 1,700 mostly Alawite civilians in northwest Syria, where groups affiliated with the government were blamed for most of the killings.

“We are not against the state, but we are against surrendering our weapons without a state that treats everyone the same,” she added.

In a post on X, Syrian Defence Minister Murhaf Abu Qasra urged his troops to “protect your fellow citizens” from “outlaw gangs”, and to “restore stability to Sweida”.

The violence began on Sunday when Bedouin gunmen abducted a Druze vegetable vendor on the highway to Damascus, prompting retaliatory kidnappings.

The Observatory said members of Bedouin tribes, who are Sunni Muslims, had sided with security forces during earlier confrontations with the Druze.

Bedouin and Druze factions have a longstanding feud in Sweida, and violence occasionally erupts between the two sides.

Syrian forces advance on Sweida as Druze leader says truce talks underway

By AFP
July 14, 2025


Security forces are seen during their deployment in Sweida in southern Syria
 - Copyright AFP Sam HARIRI

Syrian government forces were advancing towards the southern city of Sweida on Monday to quell deadly clashes between Druze fighters and Bedouin tribes, with one Druze armed group saying talks with authorities aimed at brokering a truce were underway.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor reported 99 people killed since the fighting erupted on Sunday — 60 Druze, including four civilians, 18 Bedouin fighters, 14 security personnel and seven unidentified people in military uniforms.

As the violence escalated, Israel — which has previously warned it would intervene in Syria to protect the Druze — said it struck “several tanks” in the area as a “warning” to Damascus

An AFP correspondent saw Syrian forces on Monday take control of the Druze village of Al-Mazraa, where Bedouin fighters were also located.

A commander, Ezzeddine al-Shamayer, told AFP the forces “are heading toward Sweida” city.

In a statement, the interior ministry declared that “army and internal security forces have moved closer to the centre” of Sweida province.

Bassem Fakhr, spokesperson for the Men of Dignity movement, one of the largest Druze factions in Sweida, told AFP talks were “underway between the notables of the city of Sweida and representatives of the general security (forces) and the defence ministry to reach a solution”.

Druze religious authorities had called on Monday evening for a ceasefire in the area, saying they were not opposed to the Syrian central government.

But Sheikh Hikmat al-Hijri, one of the three Druze spiritual leaders in Sweida, expressed his “rejection of the entry” of general security forces into the province, demanding “international protection”.

Israel — which also has a Druze population, and has previously attacked Syria in purported defence of the group — reported hitting several tanks heading towards Sweida on Monday.

The strikes were “a clear warning to the Syrian regime — we will not allow harm to be done to the Druze in Syria”, Defence Minister Israel Katz posted on X.

– Fear of massacres –


The fighting in the south underscores the challenges facing interim leader Ahmad al-Sharaa, whose Islamist forces ousted president Bashar al-Assad in December after nearly 14 years of civil war.

Syria’s pre-war Druze population was estimated at around 700,000, many of them concentrated in Sweida province.

The Druze, followers of an esoteric religion that split from Shiite Islam, are mainly found in Syria, Lebanon and Israel.

Following deadly clashes with government forces in April and May, local and religious leaders reached an agreement with Damascus under which Druze fighters have been providing security in the province.

The streets of Sweida were deserted Monday, with an AFP photographer reporting distant gunfire during funerals.

“We lived in a state of extreme terror — the shells were falling randomly,” said Abu Taym, a 51-year-old father, adding “most shops are closed”.

“We fear a repeat of the coastal scenario,” said Amal, 46, referring to massacres in March of more than 1,700 mostly Alawite civilians in northwest Syria, where groups affiliated with the government were blamed for most of the killings.

“We are not against the state, but we are against surrendering our weapons without a state that treats everyone the same,” she added.

In a post on X, Syrian Defence Minister Murhaf Abu Qasra urged his troops to “protect your fellow citizens” from “outlaw gangs”, and to “restore stability to Sweida”.

– ‘Lack of state institutions’ –

The violence began on Sunday when Bedouin gunmen abducted a Druze vegetable vendor on the highway to Damascus, prompting retaliatory kidnappings.

Though hostages were later released, the fighting carried on Monday outside Sweida city, with mortar fire hitting villages and dozens wounded, according to the Suwayda 24 news outlet.

In a Sunday post on X, Interior Minister Anas Khattab said “the lack of state, military and security institutions is a major reason” for the ongoing tensions in Sweida.

The Observatory said members of Bedouin tribes, who are Sunni Muslims, had sided with security forces during earlier confrontations with the Druze.

Bedouin and Druze factions have a longstanding feud in Sweida, and violence occasionally erupts between the two sides.

The wave of coastal massacres in March targeting the Alawite community and the subsequent attacks on Druze areas, as well as a deadly attack on a Damascus church in June, have undermined confidence in the new Syrian authorities’ ability to protect minorities.

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UN demands justice in any Ukraine peace talks, as civilian deaths spike


By AFP
July 15, 2025


A Russian drone is shot down during overnight attacks on Kyiv
 - Copyright AFP Roslan RAHMAN


Robin MILLARD

The United Nations insisted on Tuesday that any peace talks on Russia’s war in Ukraine must include full accountability for the conflict’s litany of violations, following the deadliest month for civilians since May 2022.

The call from UN rights chief Volker Turk came the day after US President Donald Trump told Moscow to end the war within 50 days or face massive new economic sanctions.

Trump also laid out plans for infusions of weaponry for Kyiv via NATO.

In recent weeks, Trump has shown increasing frustration with Russian President Vladimir Putin, with Moscow stepping up attacks rather than stopping them.

“An immediate ceasefire is needed now to end this unbearable suffering,” Liz Throssell, a spokeswoman for Turk’s office, told a media briefing.

“Work on a lasting peace, in line with international law, must intensify — a peace that ensures accountability for gross violations of international human rights law and serious violations of international humanitarian law.”

Rather than being sidelined or overlooked, “any move towards ceasefire, towards peace — accountability must be at its heart”, she added.



– Surging civilian casualties –



Throssell said Turk wanted any negotiations to focus in the immediate term on ending attacks that affect civilians and protecting the rights of people in occupied territory.

They should also seek to return forcibly transferred or deported children, establish humanitarian corridors across the line of control and an bring end to the torture and ill treatment of prisoners of war and other detainees, she said.

Russia launched the full-scale invasion of its neighbour in February 2022.

Moscow has unleashed record waves of drone and missile attacks over the past few weeks, with the number of Ukrainian civilians killed or wounded in June hitting a three-year high, according to UN figures, with 232 people killed and 1,343 injured.

“July has brought no respite for civilians in Ukraine,” said Throssell.

So far this month at least 139 civilians have reportedly been killed and 791 wounded, she said, citing the “intense and successive waves of missile and drone strikes” launched by Russian forces.

“Intense and sustained attacks using explosive weapons with wide area effects in populated areas are likely to have indiscriminate impacts and as such raise serious concerns as to their compliance with international humanitarian law,” said Throssell.

The UN human rights office has so far been able to verify and document at least 13,580 civilians killed and 34,115 wounded since the Russian invasion began but acknowledges that the full figures will be far higher.



– Attacks on healthcare –



Meanwhile Jarno Habicht, the World Health Organization’s representative in Ukraine, said civilian casualties “almost doubled” in the second quarter of 2025 compared to the first.

He said the WHO had recorded 2,504 attacks on healthcare since the start of the war, involving 212 deaths and 768 injuries.

The WHO records attacks but does not attribute blame as it is not a criminal investigations body.

“That means that healthcare is not a safe place for the patients and healthcare workers — and it’s a violation of humanitarian law,” said Habicht.

He also sounded an alarm on “problem” behaviours growing during the war — heavy drinking among adults, and new tobacco products used by youths.
CRIMINAL CAPITALI$M

Fallen Austrian tycoon Benko charged with fraud


By AFP
July 15, 2025


New York's iconic Chrysler Building was once part of the property empire of fallen Austrian tycoon Rene Benko - Copyright AFP Roslan RAHMAN

Austrian tycoon Rene Benko has been charged with fraud as part of a wide-ranging probe into the insolvency of his real estate empire, prosecutors said Tuesday.

Benko, once one of Austria’s richest men, founded the Signa real estate empire in 2000, but the debt-laden group crumbled in 2023 in the largest insolvency proceedings in the country’s history. Signa has creditors in Europe but also the United Arab Emirates and Thailand.

Signa shot to prominence with its vast portfolio including New York’s Chrysler Building and several prestigious department store chains in Europe.

Prosecutors have been investigating Benko on suspicion of fraud and other offences.

Benko, 48, is charged with concealing assets amounting to some 660,000 euros ($770,000) at the expense of creditor claims, prosecutors said in a statement. He faces up to 10 years in prison if found guilty.

He has been detained in Vienna since his arrest in January at his villa in Austria’s western city of Innsbruck.

More than a dozen suspects are being investigated over the insolvency, with damages currently estimated at around 300 million euros, according to prosecutors.

In December, Austrian authorities questioned Benko in Innsbruck after Italy issued an arrest warrant against him for allegedly participating in a criminal organisation.

An Innsbruck court ruled that Benko should not be extradited as the case can be probed in Austria.
Upscaling: AI generated scams are becoming more sophisticated


By Dr. Tim Sandle
July 15, 2025
DIGITAL JOURNAL


Image: — © THOMAS SAMSON/AFP // Getty Images

The U.S. just stopped nearly $15 billion in healthcare fraud, exposing how organized scams are evolving fast. Building on this, the company Webshare highlights modern scams like AI-powered phishing, clone emails, voice modification, and gift card fraud that use personal data to create highly convincing attacks.

Understanding how these scams work is essential to protecting personal information and money.

AI-Powered Scams

Scammers now use AI to impersonate family or friends, creating realistic voice recordings or videos from social media content. These deepfakes are used to ask for money or personal information, making the scams feel alarmingly real.

What to Do: If you receive an unexpected request, ask questions or details only the real person would know. A wrong or vague answer is a strong sign of a scam.

Gift Card Scams

Scammers analyse online shopping habits to target victims with gift card requests from stores they frequently use, especially during busy shopping seasons. The cards are quickly redeemed once the codes are shared, leaving the victim with financial loss.

What to Do: If someone asks for gift card codes, especially for payment or problem resolution, it’s likely a scam. Always verify requests directly with the person or organization before taking action.

Vishing

Vishing involves phone scams where attackers impersonate trusted organizations, like banks or government agencies, creating urgency—such as reporting “suspicious activity”—to pressure victims into sharing sensitive details.

What to Do: No legitimate organization will ever ask over the phone for sensitive information, like PINs or card details. If unsure, hang up and contact the institution directly using a verified number. Always take a moment to verify before acting on any request.

Smishing

Smishing scams use fake text messages that mimic delivery updates or account alerts, often targeting online shoppers, to steal credentials or spread malware.

What to Do: Always check the sender’s number. If it doesn’t match the official organization, it’s likely a scam. Verify messages directly with the company before taking action.

Clone Phishing

Clone phishing replicates real emails, like receipts or notifications, but replaces links or attachments with malicious ones. The familiarity makes them easy to fall for.

What to Do: Check the sender’s email address and double-check any links by hovering over them. If the email feels off, contact the sender directly using their official contact details.

Social Media Phishing

Social media phishing uses fake or hacked profiles to send messages that mimic giveaways or urgent requests. These scams aim to steal login credentials or personal information.

What to Do: Avoid clicking links in unsolicited messages. Verify requests directly with the sender and double-check login pages for authenticity.

Man-in-the-Middle Attacks

Man-in-the-middle attacks happen when hackers, like passwords or banking details, intercept what you send or receive on public Wi-Fi. Using Wi-Fi at places like cafés or airports can make your data a target.

What to Do: Avoid logging into important accounts on public Wi-Fi. Use a VPN for extra security and look for “https://” on websites to ensure they are encrypted.

Ransomware

Ransomware blocks access to files or devices by encrypting them and then demands payment to unlock them. These attacks often start with phishing emails or fake downloads and target personal data like photos or documents.

What to Do: Back up important files offline and avoid clicking on suspicious links or attachments. If attacked, report the incident to the relevant authorities and seek professional advice on the next steps.

DNS Spoofing

DNS spoofing redirects users to fake websites that look like real ones. These sites are designed to steal sensitive information like passwords or credit card details.

What to Do: Always check the website address carefully before entering any information. Use secure websites with “https://” and consider tools that protect against DNS attacks.

Fake Job Offers

Scammers post fake job offers, often promising high pay or remote work, to steal personal details or money. They may ask for fees or sensitive information, pretending to be real companies.

What to Do: Before paying or sharing personal information, ensure the request comes from the right source. Research the company and confirm details through official channels. AI is changing how scammers operate, making their attacks more personal and harder to spot. They use tools to mimic voices, create fake videos, or send messages that seem to come from trusted contacts.
Mexican voice actors demand regulation on AI voice cloning


By AFP
July 14, 2025


Voice actors demonstrate in Mexico City demanding regulation of artificial intelligence in their industry. — © AFP Carl de Souza

Mexican actors protested the growing threat artificial intelligence poses to their industry, calling on Sunday for better regulations to prevent voice cloning without consent.

The rise of AI was a key issue in Hollywood’s 2023 actors and writers’ strikes, as creatives feared studios would use the technology to replace paid content.

Last year, actor Scarlett Johansson accused tech firm OpenAI of imitating her voice for one of their chatbots. The company responded by modifying the tone.

From the Monument to the Revolution in downtown Mexico City, dozens of audiovisual professionals held signs, including ones that read: “I don’t want to be replaced by AI.”

“We are requesting that the voice be considered a biometric so that it is protected,” Lili Barba, president of the Mexican Association of Commercial Announcements, told AFP.

The 52-year-old actress, known for voicing Disney’s Daisy Duck, referred to a video by the National Electoral Institute (INE) on TikTok.

Released following the judicial elections on June 1, the video used the voice of the late actor Jose Lavat — famous for the Spanish dubbing of stars like Robert De Niro and Al Pacino — to thank citizens for voting.

According to local media, Lavat’s voice was used without his family’s consent.

“It’s a major violation, and we can’t allow it,” said Barba.

Actress Harumi Nishizawa, 35, said dubbing a character is “like embroidery.”

“As an artist, you can create certain tones, pay attention to nuances … observe the real actors’ expressions and try to emulate what’s happening on screen,” she said.


Image: — © AFP

If no legislation is passed, she said voice dubbing done by humans “will disappear,” at the expense of millions of artists’ jobs.

In March, Amazon’s streaming platform Prime Video announced tests of an AI-assisted dubbing system, a technology also promoted by YouTube.

Last month, South Korea’s entertainment powerhouse CJ ENM — behind the Oscar-winning film Parasite — showcased an AI tool that combines visuals, audio and voice in one system while automatically generating consistent 3D characters.

But human voice actors still have the edge, said Mario Heras, dubbing director for video games in Mexico.

AI cannot make dialogue “sound funny, broken, off — or alive,” he said.

The human factor, he added, “protects us in this rebellion against the machines.”
Hospitality industry hiring crisis reaches new heights


ByDr. Tim Sandle
July 14, 2025
DIGITAL JOURNAL


Waiter and diners. — Image by © Tim Sandle.

Many activities undertaken in leisure time in the U.S., including eating out, traveling and recreation, depend on a large workforce. Data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) show that the leisure and hospitality sector is growing, adding many new jobs to support these activities. However, the sector is facing a recruitment ‘crisis’.

Rising earnings are the leading trend in the leisure and hospitality industry, with average hourly pay increasing to $22.53 in 2025 and outpacing inflation by 8.6%. In particular, hotels report the most understaffing, with 67% showing a lack of employees, while 45% of the restaurants cannot get enough workers.

To counterbalance these trends, the most popular recruitment strategy in the industry was social media use, with 60% of human resources professionals citing it as the best approach.

In March of 2025, for the U.S., the leisure and hospitality sector finally surpassed the 2020 peak, with 16.99 million jobs. A recent study by the firm Escoffier analysed statistics across the industry to identify 2025 hospitality hiring trends. The research compared restaurants, hotels, and event spaces across key factors, including average pay, understaffing issues, recruitment strategies, and the impact of global trade and tariffs on the industry.

Uneven Recovery: Sector Disparities in Hiring

Since the pandemic, the leisure and hospitality sector has been on the course to recovery, and in 2025, the trends show a significant growth in employment and hiring. Although the leisure and hospitality workforce has finally surpassed pre‑pandemic levels, with 16.99 million jobs in 2025, recovery is not uniform. Arts and recreation increased the number of jobs by 197.7K, while accommodation and food services lost 93.9K.

Labour Costs Surge

Average weekly hours in hospitality remain steady at 25.5, but average hourly earnings have jumped from $16.84 to $22.53 (up ~34%), outpacing inflation by 8.6%. Nearly 92% of operators report rising labour costs, and 74% see it as a major challenge.

Understaffing Crisis: Hotels Are Hit The Hardest

Understaffing impacts vary across sectors. Hotels report the most understaffing, with 67% showing a lack of employees, while 12% are in danger of closure due to staffing shortages. Restaurants are also affected on a large scale, with 45%, but only 19% of travel agencies have problems with finding staff.

Tech vs. Talent: High Hopes, Low Returns

While 80% of operators believe tech gives a hiring edge, just 15% see a measurable hiring improvement. Automation integration is one of the tech solutions that work in practice, allowing for a faster hiring process and better employee retention.

Upskilling and Education

Though 65% of applicants rank career development as critical, less than half of employers match those terms. Only 47% are reported to offer education perks. At the same time, 93% of employees use tuition assistance, and 76% reported that it influenced their decision to accept a job. Offering education support could cut turnover by 20–40%, against a current turnover rate of ~70–80%.

The above data suggests that as the hospitality industry continues facing staffing and retention challenges in 2025, operators must think strategically about how to stand out to job seekers. This includes thinking about what job candidates want, including flexible, career-building opportunities.
US  Scientists deploy deep learning to predict flooding this hurricane season


By Dr. Tim Sandle
July 13, 2025


Hurricane Lisa is headed towards Central America with maximum sustained winds of 120 kilometers (75 miles) per hour and even higher gusts - Copyright AFP Tony KARUMBA

The 2025 hurricane season officially began on June 1, and, as of July, it is set to be more active than ever, with potentially devastating storms whose heavy rainfall and powerful storm surges cause dangerous coastal flooding.

Extreme water levels can be difficult to predict without complex, data-intensive computer models that areas with limited resources cannot support. Researchers have made a new attempt to assess the potential impact using a deep learning framework to predict the rise and fall of water levels during storms — even in places where tide gauges fail or data is scarce — through a technique known as “transfer learning.”

The framework, called Long Short-Term Memory Station Approximated Models (LSTM-SAM), offers faster and more affordable predictions that enable smarter decisions about when to evacuate, where to place emergency resources, and how to protect infrastructure when hurricanes approach. For emergency planners, local governments, and disaster response teams, it could be a game-changer — and could save lives.

Predicting when and where extreme water levels will strike — especially during compound floods, when multiple flooding sources, like rain and storm surge, combine to intensify flooding — is important for protecting vulnerable communities.

LSTM-SAM is a deep-learning framework that analyses patterns from past storms to predict water level rise during future storms. What makes this model especially useful is its ability to extrapolate from one geographic area’s data to make predictions for another locale that doesn’t have a lot of its own data. By borrowing knowledge and applying it locally, it makes accurate flood prediction more widely available.

The researchers tested LSTM-SAM at tide gauge stations along the Atlantic coast of the United States, a region frequently impacted by hurricanes and other major storms. They found that the model was able to accurately predict the onset, peak, and decline of storm-driven water levels. The model was even able to reconstruct water levels for tide-gauge stations damaged by hurricanes, such as the station in Sandy Hook, New Jersey, which failed during Hurricane Sandy in 2012.

Hurricane Ernesto made landfall in Bermuda with maximum sustained winds of 85 miles (137 kilometers) per hour – Copyright NOAA/GOES/AFP Handout

Researchers plan on using the LSTM-SAM framework during the upcoming hurricane season, where they can test it as storms roll in nearly in real time. They’ve also made the code available in the GitHub repository of the CoRAL Lab, where scientists, emergency planners, and government leaders can download it for free. The program runs on a laptop in a matter of minutes and could be especially helpful for smaller towns or regions in developing countries where access to high-end computing tools or detailed environmental data is limited.

As the frequency of hurricane events and their socioeconomic impact is likely to increase in the future, the need for reliable flood prediction frameworks is of paramount importance. Advanced deep learning tools like LSTM-SAM could become essential in helping coastal communities prepare for the new normal, opening the door to smarter, faster, and more accessible flood predictions associated with tropical cyclones.

The study appears in the journal Water Resources Research, titled “Predicting the Evolution of Extreme Water Levels With Long Short-Term Memory Station-Based Approximated Models and Transfer Learning Techniques.”

 

US & UK Arming Israel’s Genocidal Destruction of Gaza – Stop the War

“They are all complicit in the war crimes and ethnic cleansing carried out every day – and a growing part of our campaigning must be to hold our own governments, as well as Israel, to account.”

Lindsey German, Stop the war, on the astonishing figures that reveal the extent of the US funding of the Gaza genocide.

The economist Michael Roberts has some astonishing figures on his blog about how the US is bankrolling Israel’s merciless assault on the Palestinians. He writes that, according to Brown University’s Costs of War project, published in October 2024, Washington has shouldered 70 per cent of Israel’s military costs since 7 October 2023. 

US spending on Israel’s military operations and related US operations in the region totalled, then, at least $22.76 billion – even before the US expanded its presence in the region in late September/early October 2024. This included $17.9 billion in direct aid, $20.3b in deferred arms deals, $4.86b (and climbing) in Pentagon regional operations, $2.1b in trade losses and billions more in shipping losses, stockpile transfers and corporate handouts.

That’s a cool $124m a day spent on Israel’s military operations in the 12 months since October 2023 alone funnelled, as Roberts says, from American households (who are in desperate need of decent jobs and support at home) to a foreign military and a handful of weapons conglomerates that treat the US Treasury like an “open vein”.

But of course it should come as no surprise. According to another Brown University report on the top beneficiaries of Pentagon spending between 2020 and 2024, private firms received $2.4 trillion in contracts from the Pentagon, approximately 54 percent of the department’s discretionary spending of $4.4 trillion over that period.

During these five years, the report reveals, the US government invested over twice as much money in five weapons companies as in diplomacy and international assistance. Between 2020 and 2024, $771 billion in Pentagon contracts went to just five firms: Lockheed Martin ($313 billion), RTX (formerly Raytheon, $145 billion), Boeing ($115 billion), General Dynamics ($116 billion), and Northrop Grumman ($81 billion). 

That’s $2.4 trillion in taxpayer dollars handed to weapons companies. They call it “defence spending”, but, as the Quincy Institute, which collaborated with the Costs of War project put it, it’s one of the biggest corporate welfare programmes in history.

By comparison, the total diplomacy, development, and humanitarian aid budget, excluding military aid, was $356 billion.

So much for President Trump’s February directive to the Pentagon to cut military spending by eight percent. US defence spending had already risen from $531b in 2000 to $899 in 2025 and legislation approved in July added $156b to this, taking the total annual spend to over $1 trillion. The demands of the weapons contractors will, it is clear, always out.

Which brings us to the UK, which supplies millions of pounds worth of arms to Israel. Not on the US scale maybe, but significant and devastating nonetheless. It includes spare parts for the F-35 jets that regularly drop bombs on women and children in Gaza and which the High Court ruled recently it was legal to continue to do so.

The UK is also significantly increasing its investment in defence and weapons companies, both through domestic spending and arms exports. The recent strategic defence review included £1.5bn for an ‘always on’ pipeline for munitions and building at least six new energetics and munitions factories. There’s also the procurement of up to 7,000 UK-built long-range weapons, £4 billion for autonomous systems and nearly £1 billion for directed energy weapons. 

As Stop the War said at the time, these pledges are grotesque enough, but even more so given the eye-watering record profits being made by the arms manufacturers and their shareholders as a result of the endless conflicts which are only perpetuated by these levels of increased military spending justified by the talked up picture of the most heightened military and security threat since the end of the cold war, and paid for with our tax pounds and by slashing the welfare budget.

The Ministry of Defence may claim it’s generating over 1,000 jobs and boosting export potential, but these new factories aren’t going to somehow be built by the state or some sort of nationally-owned company. It’s the shareholders of the private sector firms who will be paid vast sums, which could instead build houses, hospitals and schools, who will be the winners.

As the Alternative Defence Review explains, military spending generates a smaller economic multiplier than any other public investments, meaning it generates less overall economic activity and fewer secondary benefits than spending on essential services and infrastructure.

Anyone who has ever left a national Palestine demonstration at Whitehall, calls for the UK to stop arming Israel still ringing in their ears, cannot have missed the giant BAE Systems advertisement over the escalators down to the Jubilee Line. That Transport for London continues to take money from defence companies involved in arming a genocide is a disgrace, especially since it has refused to accept adverts from anti-arms organisations such as CND and, just last week banned the Irish rap band Kneecap’s ad for its September concert at Wembley Arena.

It is quite right that the Palestine movement continues with its key demand that states stop arming Israel, especially so with every new revelation of how the Trump government is doing the exact opposite – as Biden did before him – and the British government is eagerly ensuring it remains in on the action. They are all complicit in the war crimes and ethnic cleansing carried out every day – and a growing part of our campaigning must be to hold our own governments, as well as Israel, to account. 



Let’s Keep Our Focus on Palestine – Louise Regan

“In the last two months, over 770 Palestinians have been slaughtered and nearly 5,000 wounded by Israeli fire queuing for food for their starving families.”

By Louise Regan

It is beyond comprehension that we are now well over 600 days into a genocide which has slaughtered well over 58,000 Palestinians, including more than 15,000 children, destroying over 90% of housing, and damaging or destroying over 90% of hospitals.

Even after all this, Israel is unleashing new horrors, new levels of barbarity that still do not create a red line for our political leaders to end their support, including military co-operation. Having starved the population of Gaza for 3 months during which no food, water or medical aid was allowed in, Israel has now set up a fake humanitarian agency with none of the relevant expertise to deliver meagre amounts of aid.

In the last two months, over 770 Palestinians have been slaughtered and nearly 5,000 wounded by Israeli fire queuing for food for their starving families and in the last week, another horror that has still not been condemned by our government, Israel slaughtered 15 Palestinians including 10 young children queuing at a clinic for nutritional supplements. 

And now openly without shame, Israel unveils plans to corral all of the Palestinians in Gaza into what, it is not possible to describe in any other way than a concentration camp built on the ruins of destroyed Rafah, making clear that this is a holding zone before a planned forced expulsion. The response of our Government – David Lammy described it as a sticking point – building a 21st-century mass concentration camp is a sticking point, planning mass ethnic cleansing on a historically unparalleled scale is a sticking point.

From the beginning of our protests we have always been clear, our demands are for an immediate and permanent ceasefire and for our government to stop arming Israel. Throughout the last 18 months the government has done all it can to silence our movement, calling us hate marches, attempting to disrupt national demonstrations and stop us marching, arresting and attempting to intimidate those leading our movement.

And now they are threatening all of our freedoms and democratic rights. The government has chosen to redefine the meaning of terrorism in a way that serves to criminalise dissent.

Throughout history, every solidarity movement and struggle against colonialism has used a diversity of tactics. Unable to politically defeat the movement against Britain’s complicity in Israel’s genocide in Gaza, the government is turning to repression. Journalists, academics, and artists have been targeted, MPs and an 87-year-old Holocaust survivor have been hauled in for questioning, and PSC Director, Ben Jamal and Vice-chair of Stop the War, Chris Nineham facing charges simply for organising an entirely peaceful protest. And now CND General Secretary, Sophie Bolt and Stop the War Chair, Alex Kenny are also facing charges. These are the actions of a government that has thoroughly lost the moral argument.

Every struggle against racism and colonialism has faced attempts to demonise, divide and suppress it. There are few causes where this is more acute than the struggle for the rights of the Palestinian people. We know, and must not forget, that it is Palestinians who are at the sharpest end of oppression. They are the people who, on a daily basis, are subject to Israel’s genocidal violence and apartheid, aided and assisted by Western governments, including Britain.

Our responsibility has to be to them, we have to maintain our focus on the issue – genocide in Gaza is what we must continue to speak out about. Israel’s regime of apartheid across all of historic Palestine and 77 years of an ongoing Nakba is what we must continue to speak out about. In the face of these attacks, we must not allow our movement to be silenced or divided. Nor can we allow this government to drive us off the streets. In our workplaces and trade unions, towns and cities, universities and communities, all of us must continue to resist.

We need our government to end all arms sales to Israel and to impose sanctions. Starmer has lost the country on the question of Palestine. That is the power of our collective action!

The question now is can we do more?

Our government continue to export weapons and military technology used by Israel to carry out its genocide and enforce its blockade on Gaza, including parts for Israel’s F-35 fighter jets. Recently in court, the government argued that ensuring the integrity of the F-35 supply chain was more important than stopping Israel’s genocide. Shame on them.

We will never forget the tens of thousands of Palestinians killed women, children, doctors, teachers, journalists and those trying to get aid for their starving families. The destruction of the entire infrastructure of Gaza. The increased attacks and killings across the occupied West Bank, the escalation of land grab, the restriction of movement and rights and the destruction of refugee camps.

And we will never forgive those in power who have remained silent, who have stood by and allowed this to happen.

We know that history did not begin on October 7th, Palestinians have suffered decades of oppression and dispossession. This genocide is built on the foundations of more than 77 years of colonisation, military occupation and apartheid.

 Our solidarity is needed now more than ever, not just in our words but in our actions too. We cannot allow our movement to be silenced. We must continue to march, to protest, to boycott and to raise our voices until all Palestinians from the river to the sea are finally free.


UK Right-wing media watch – When will they get over a minor band and start acknowledging Palestinian deaths?


13 July, 2025 
Left Foot Forward


While the British right-wing press continues its obsession with punk bands and protest chants, it remains astonishingly quiet about the devastating human toll in Gaza. Each day, Haaretz, a liberal Israeli newspaper, reports the growing death toll of Palestinian civilians, figures that rarely make it into the headlines of the Mail or the Sun.




News tends to move in cycles; what’s front-page outrage one day becomes chip paper the next. Unless, of course, the right-wing media smells ideological blood. Then the headlines can drone on endlessly, often with disproportionate fury.

That’s exactly what’s happened in the wake of this year’s Glastonbury, where a handful of musical acts dared to speak politically, most notably Kneecap and Bob Vylan. Weeks later, right-wing outlets are still hammering away.

Take the Sun, which ran with this headline this week:

“VILE CHANT: Kneecap chants ‘f*** Keir Starmer’ in another foul rant just days after sparking police probe at Glastonbury.”

The hip-hop group from Northern Ireland had appeared at Finsbury Park and the Sun was quick to remind readers that this was “less than a week after police launched a probe into their Glastonbury set.”

The Mail on Sunday has been similarly relentless. Its recent front-page read: “Jewish music bosses who called for Kneecap ban at Glastonbury targeted after names are leaked.”

The article continued: “More than 30 of Britain’s top music industry moguls have been targeted in a vicious online campaign that falsely brands them ‘supporters of genocide’ in the Middle East, The Mail on Sunday can reveal.”

Another of the Mail’s headlines thundered: “BBC chiefs ‘should face charges’ over Glastonbury… Outrage led by Keir Starmer grows after broadcast of vile ‘death to Israeli soldiers’ chants.”

The suggestion, of course, is that Glastonbury artists crossed a line into incitement or antisemitism. But the truth is more complicated, and less headline-grabbing.

The chant in question was not “death to Israelis,” as the Mail’s front page claimed, but “death to the IDF” – the Israeli Defense Forces. Whatever your view is on it, the distinction is not trivial.

In a statement responding to the backlash, Bob Vylan clarified: “We are not for the death of Jews, Arabs, or any other race or group of people. We are for the dismantling of a violent military machine — a machine whose own soldiers were told to use ‘unnecessary lethal force’ against innocent civilians waiting for aid. A machine that has destroyed much of Gaza.”

And the rappers aren’t alone in calling out the media’s glaring imbalance. Journalist Adam Bienkov summed it up on X: “If only there were half the outrage over Israeli soldiers shooting starving people queuing for food as there has been towards some rappers mouthing off at Glastonbury, we’d be in a very different place.”

Indeed. While the British right-wing press continues its obsession with punk bands and protest chants, it remains astonishingly quiet about the devastating human toll in Gaza. Each day, Haaretz, a liberal Israeli newspaper, reports the growing death toll of Palestinian civilians, figures that rarely make it into the headlines of the Mail or the Sun.

And let’s be honest: if more of that journalistic energy were directed toward the mass suffering in Gaza rather than chasing clickbait outrage over artists and expletives, public discourse, and public awareness, might look very different.

 

Climate Collapse Is Here, and Capitalism Is Fuelling It – The Red Weekly Column

“It is crystal clear that destruction of the environment is profitable, and that suffering and death caused by the collapse of ecosystems are justified in the minds of the global ruling class if it means profits continue to roll in.”

In our Red Weekly ColumnFraser McGuire writes on corporate drivers of the climate crisis and building a unified response to the threat of climate breakdown.

On July 3 2025, the average sea surface temperature in the North West Mediterranean hit 6.2 degrees above the 1982-2015 average. The collapse of climatic systems is occurring at a rate faster than some of the ‘worst case scenario’ predictions of the early 2000s, yet every year millions are spent by the ultra-rich and multinational corporations on lobbying against regulations and for greenwashing and false, market-based solutions.

The drive for profit is choking the planet. The level of profit for fossil fuel companies is near unparalleled. Global oil and gas companies earned $2.4tn in 2023, and coal companies pocketed $2.5tn in the same year. The top 1 percent of global income earners were responsible for more than twice the emissions of the poorest 50 percent between 1990 to 2015. 

It is crystal clear that destruction of the environment is profitable, and that suffering and death caused by the collapse of ecosystems are justified in the minds of the global ruling class if it means profits continue to roll in.

A recent report to the United Nations, ahead of the fifty-ninth session of the Human Rights Council, lays bare the scale of the calamity we face. It highlights how instances of extreme weather are increasing in frequency and severity, and links the rise of deadly floods, extreme heat, and drought to ever growing horrors of mass displacement, food scarcity, and resource shortages in the Global South. 

The report urges that serious action to be taken, including criminal penalties for those complicit in the climate crisis, a complete ban on fossil fuel industry lobbying and advertisement, the compensation of communities harmed by climate breakdown, and crucially – for the full phasing out of oil, gas and coal by 2030 in wealthy fossil fuel nations.

Hope lies in the Global South. China, often demonised for having high emissions (despite being the most populous nation and producing goods for many other countries) has hit its 2030 targets for renewable energy six years ahead of schedule.

By 2026, solar capacity alone is projected to overtake coal as China’s leading energy source and in 2024, China led the world in energy transition investment, accounting for two-thirds of the $2.1 trillion spent globally, and making up a majority of the world’s new installations of solar and onshore wind power generation. 

Other nations in the Global South have taken greater steps on emissions and nature than their wealthier Global North counterparts, including Bolivia and Ecuador, which have enshrined the Rights of Nature in their constitutions, providing a real alternative to extractivist, profit-driven development.

Gustavo Petro, President of Colombia, drew parallels between the genocide in Gaza and the suffering on the horizon as a result of extreme weather and climate instability. Speaking at the UN COP28 climate summit, he said “Genocide and barbaric acts unleashed against the Palestinian people is what awaits those who are fleeing the south because of the climate crisis”. It is clear that the double standards and censorship from Western media throughout the genocide in Gaza, will be replicated in the future, as the human cost of climate breakdown continues.

The bringing together of our trade unions with community organisations and climate campaigns will be central to having a unified and worker-led response to the threat of climate breakdown. Trade unions have the resources and the strategic position to make the threat of climate collapse impossible to ignore, because it is the workers in energy, transport, construction, and logistics who have their hands on the levers of the carbon intensive economy. 

A workers’ economy, a comprehensive platform of policies for a green, socialist future, can guarantee both the protection of jobs and communities based around industry, and the safeguarding of our environment and planet.