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Afghanistan
(Monday), 10/13/2025 Pakistani troops were on high alert on the border with Afghanistan today, after fierce fighting between the two sides at the weekend left dozens dead. The Pakistan military said that 23 of its soldiers were killed in the weekend clashes. The Taliban said nine of its fighters were killed. Border crossings for vehicles and pedestrians along the 2,600-km frontier are closed since Saturday following unprovoked attacks by the Afghan Taliban forces, a senior Pakistani security official told. Pakistan is the main source of goods and food supplies for landlocked, impoverished Afghanistan. Fighting between the two sides, who were once allies, erupted after Islamabad demanded the Taliban take action against militants who have stepped up attacks in Pakistan, saying they operate from havens in Afghanistan. Afghanistan did not wish to fight with anyone and all its other neighbours were happy with Kabul, Afghan Taliban Foreign Minister Muttaqi told in the Indian capital New Delhi, which he is visiting for the first time since 2021. The Taliban denies that Pakistani militants are present in Afghanistan. Kabul said yesterday that it had halted attacks at the request of Qatar and Saudi Arabia. The fighting has drawn the attention of Trump, as he flew from Washington to Israel on Sunday as part of his efforts to end the Gaza war. He said he would focus on it soon, because „I'm good at solving wars, I'm good at making peace," Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One. China, which borders Afghanistan and Pakistan in its western region and has sought to play a mediating role in calming hostilities between the two sides, said today it was very concerned about the latest clashes. (Source: MSN - U.S. / Reuters - United Kingdom)
China
October 15, 2025 Chinese Foreign Minister Wang toured Austria, Poland, and Slovenia between September 12 and 16. He underscored in Poland the country’s dual role as both a key NATO frontline state and a critical link in China’s Belt and Road rail corridor, particularly through the Małaszewicze logistics hub on the Belarus border, which is critical for trade by rail between China and Europe. (Source: The Council on Foreign Relations - U.S.)
2025.10.13 Beijing’s top religion regulator issued new rules banning unauthorized online preaching, as well as a broader crackdown on online content that expresses views contrary to the Chinese Communist Party’s goals. China arrests Christian underground church founder, pastors. (Source: Radio Free Asia - U.S.)
Gaza
October 14, 2025 7:23am EDT After Trump declares 'war is over," Hamas executes rivals in Gaza to reassert control. The war is over, but the question is whether peace will really begin. Gazans describe uncertainty as terrorist group reasserts control despite ceasefire agreement. While the guns have fallen silent, the next stage - Hamas’ disarmament and the arrival of a stabilization force - will determine whether Gaza finally begins rebuilding or slips back into chaos. (Source: Fox News - U.S.)
Indonesia
(October 14, 2025) The First Wap, the surveillance empire that tracked world leaders, a Vatican enemy, and maybe you. It has continued to develop Altamides, adding new capabilities. Now it can not only track locations, it can intercept calls and messages and crack accounts that rely on passcodes sent via text messages - including the encrypted messaging service WhatsApp, as Rudolph told Albert and Abdou, the Lighthouse reporters posing as potential buyers, at the ISS conference in June. The company steers clear of the spyware, highly regarded in the industry, that provides access to everything on a target’s device. It continues to exploit phone networks, which offers more limited surveillance possibilities, but allows First Wap to operate more freely and flexibly than its competitors, Rudolph said. (Source: Mother Jones - U.S.)
Israel
(14 October 2025) In the chamber of the Knesset, or Israeli parliament, the mood was altogether more raucous than that in the streets. Emblazoned on the red baseball caps handed out by staff, and worn by some of the audience, were the words: "The president of peace". Spectators shouted from the gallery behind me: "Thank you Trump." Lawmakers hammered their desks. Trump hailed a "historic dawn of a new Middle East". He also wanted to leave little doubt the war was over, and it seemed he expected it to stay that way: Israel, he said, with America's help, had won all that it could by force of arms. His speech meandered into extensive attacks on his political opponents in the US. He praised a major donor to his election campaign seated in the gallery. And he even appealed to Israel's president, Herzog, seating next to him, to pardon Netanyahu, who is on trial for corruption – charges that the Israeli PM denies. Cigars and champagne, who the hell cares about that? Trump exclaimed, referencing the allegation that Netanyahu accepted pricy gifts. (Source: BBC - United Kingdom)
by Bateman, State department correspondent travelling on Air Force
Oct 13, 2025 11:30 AM EDT Today, Hamas released these 20 living hostages into the custody of the Red Cross, which then brought them to Israel as part of a new ceasefire deal that many hope will signal an end to two years of war in the devastated Gaza Strip. Under the agreement, all living hostages were to be released, as well as the bodies of the deceased. A look at the 20 hostages released today. (Source: PBS - U.S.)
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11:17 PM EDT, Sun October 12, 2025 US President Trump is heading to Israel ahead of the expected release early Monday of the 20 Israeli hostages thought to be alive in Gaza. Nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and detainees in Israel will also be freed as part of the first phase of the US-brokered ceasefire deal. Trump will address Israel’s parliament and meet Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the families of the hostages. Later on Monday, leaders from more than 20 countries will join Trump in Egypt for a summit on Gaza’s future. “The reason why we’re at this moment … is because the president of the United States. He gave unusual authorities to people who had never been in diplomacy before, he actually broke the mold,” VP Vance said. “Instead of doing diplomacy the same old way that it had failed for the past 30 or 40 years. He gave Witkoff and Kushner a remarkable amount of authority to go and get a peace deal done.” The UN said Israel had approved more aid shipments, now totalling 190,000 metric tons, in what it hopes is just the beginning in getting crucial supplies to the enclave. (Source: CNN - U.S.)
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Friday 10 October 2025 10:25 EDT The United States is sending up to 200 troops to Israel to monitor the ceasefire transition process with Gaza and ensure the terms of phase one of the 20-point deal are implemented. They are from U.S. Central Command, the military organization responsible for defending and promoting U.S. interests across the globe. The American troops, led by Admiral Cooper, will join soldiers from neighboring countries in the region, including Egypt, Qatar, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates. The goal of the Civil Military Coordination Center is to establish a hub for military and political officials, as well as aid experts, to coordinate while implementing the ceasefire deal. That means everything from security support to humanitarian aid. An official confirmed no U.S. troops would be sent to Gaza. (Source: The Independent - United Kingdom)
Pakistan
(Saturday), 11.10.25 Radical Islamist party Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) today claimed that police shot dead 11 of its supporters as they attempted to march towards Islamabad to stage a demonstration outside the US embassy against Israel's military actions in Gaza. Authorities in Punjab, however, said that at least 40 policemen were injured in clashes with the TLP that began two days ago amid the group’s call for anti-Israel demonstrations. (The Telegraph - India)
Persian Gulf
October 11, 2025 Over the past three years, facilitated by the United States, Arab states quietly expanded security cooperation with the Israeli military, leaked U.S. documents reveal. Senior military officials from Israel and six key Arab countries came together for a series of planning meetings in Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan and Qatar. Even as security cooperation with Israel expanded behind closed doors, Arab leaders denounced its war in Gaza. The leaders of Egypt, Jordan, Qatar and Saudi Arabia said the Israeli campaign amounted to a genocide. The documents state that the partnership does not form a new alliance. and that all meetings would be “held in confidence.” Five Centcom PowerPoint presentations detail the creation of what the U.S. military describes as the “Regional Security Construct.” In addition to Israel and Qatar, the construct includes Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. Those military ties could now play a key role in overseeing the nascent ceasefire in Gaza. The documents refer to Kuwait and Oman as “potential partners” that were briefed on all meetings. They were written between 2022 and 2025, before and after the launch of Israel’s war in Gaza in October 2023. Israel and the Arab countries signed on to the plan at a 2022 security conference, agreeing to coordinate military exercises and procure the equipment to make it possible. By 2024, Centcom successfully linked many of the partner states to its systems, allowing them to provide radar and sensor data to the U.S. military and, in turn, to view the combined data of the partners. A briefing document stated that six of the seven partner nations were receiving a partial air picture of the region through Defense Department systems, and that two countries were sharing their own radar data through a U.S. Air Force squadron. Partner nations were also being onboarded to a U.S.-run secure chat system so that they could communicate with each other and the U.S. military. While Qatar and Saudi Arabia do not have formal diplomatic relationships with Israel, the Centcom documents show the important behind-the-scenes role that both powerful gulf states played in the nascent partnership. The May 2024 security conference at al-Udeid Air Base underscored the increased cooperation, with Israeli officials holding bilateral discussions with representatives from each of the attending Arab countries. Saudi Arabia played an active role in this collaboration, sharing intelligence with Israel and Arab partners on a broad range of security issues. In a 2025 meeting, a Saudi official and a U.S. intelligence official provided an intelligence overview to partners on political developments in Syria, including the role played by Russia, Turkey and Kurdish forces in the country. The briefing also covered the threats posed by the Iran-backed Houthi militant group in Yemen and the islamic state’s operations in Syria and Iraq. A 2024 briefing document envisioned the creation of a “Combined Middle East Cyber Center” by the end of 2026 to serve as a headquarters for education and exercises on defensive cyber operations. Another document advocated for the creation of an “Information Fusion Center” for partners to “rapidly plan, execute, and assess operations in the information environment.” These engagements reflected the Gulf Arab states’ pragmatic ties with Israel - and their respect for its military prowess. The centerpiece of the agreement establishing diplomatic ties between Israel and Morocco, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain - an air-defense plan to combat Iran’s missiles and drones - moved from theory to reality over the past three years. The air-defense system, however, did nothing to protect Qatar against Israel’s Sept. 9 strike on its capital. U.S. satellite and radar systems did not provide an early warning of the strike, U.S. Air Force Lt. Gen. France told. Those systems “are typically focused on Iran and other [areas] where we expect an attack to come from.” Tensions between the parties were now on full display after the Israeli strike in Qatar. A key member of the American effort has attacked another, with America seen as complacent, complicit or blind. 200 U.S. troops would be sent to Israel to provide support to the ceasefire agreement, and would be joined by soldiers from several of the Arab countries that participated in this long-standing security cooperation. Even before that announcement, the Arab countries involved in this security collaboration had all signaled their support for Trump’s 20-point plan to end the Gaza war. The plan calls for Arab states to participate in the deployment of an international force to Gaza that would train a new Palestinian police force in the region. Security analysts said gulf states could provide financial and diplomatic support for an international force in Gaza but would probably refrain from committing their own military forces to the complex and dangerous mission. In a joint statement, five of the six Arab countries said that they supported the establishment of a mechanism that “guarantees the security of all sides,” but they have stopped short of publicly committing to deploy military forces. There’s a lot of concern in gulf states about what an unshackled Israel is going to do. At the same time, they are reliant on the U.S. as the guarantor of their security. They are also very concerned about Iran. (Source: The Washington Post - U.S.)
South Korea
Oct 14, 2025 Major General “Hank” Taylor, commander of the 8th Field Army in South Korea, told reporters that he’s using ChatGPT to help make military and personal decisions affecting the soldiers under his command. This includes the joint United Nations Command in South Korea, which Taylor currently leads as chief of staff. As a commander, I want to make better decisions, Taylor reportedly said. 'I want to make sure that I make decisions at the right time to give me the advantage.' (Source: Futurism - U.S.)
West Bank
13 October 2025 14:47 Palestinian prisoniers are released in Israeli-occupied West Bank. (Source: Sky News - United Kingdom)
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