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UN says all staff inside compound in Yemeni capital now free

Yemen's Houthi

“All fifteen UN international staff are now free to move inside the UN compound in Sana’a and are in contact with their respective UN entities and families,” the team announced in a written update on the situation in the capital.

The UN also confirmed the release of personnel detained by Houthis, saying: “The five national staff who had been detained since 18 October within the same UN compound have been released.”

“Security personnel of (Houthi group) Ansar Allah have vacated the UN compound in Sana’a,” it added.

The statement follows an incident on Saturday in which Houthi forces stormed a UN residential compound in Sanaa and detained UN staff.

Yemen remains mired in one of the world’s worst humanitarian and economic crises, fueled by nearly a decade of war between government forces and the Houthis.

The war in Yemen has claimed over 150,000 lives and has led to one of the worst humanitarian crises globally, resulting in tens of thousands of additional deaths.

 

Iraq says some US military personnel will stay due to Daesh threat in Syria

US Forces Syria

Washington and Baghdad agreed last year to wind down a US-led coalition fighting IS in Iraq by this September, with US forces departing some bases where they have been stationed.

Al-Sudani told journalists in Baghdad that US military advisers and support personnel are now stationed at the Ain al-Asad air base in western Iraq, a base adjacent to Baghdad airport and the al-Harir air base in northern Iraq.

The Iraqi PM noted that the agreement originally stipulated a full pullout of US forces from Ain al-Asad by September, but that “developments in Syria” since then required maintaining a “small unit” of between 250 and 350 advisers and security personnel at the base.

He said they would work to support counter-IS surveillance and coordination with the al-Tanf base in Syria.

He added that other US sites are witnessing “gradual reductions” in personnel and operations.

After the fall of Syria’s former long-time leader Bashar al-Assad in a rebel offensive in December, fears arose in Iraq of an IS resurgence taking advantage of the ensuing security vacuum and weapons abandoned by the former Syrian army.

Al-Sudani maintained that the extremist group, which seized wide swathes of territory in Iraq and Syria a decade ago, “no longer poses a significant threat inside Iraq.”

Iraq has sought to balance its relations with the United States and neighbouring Iran and to avoid being pulled into regional conflicts, a policy that the prime minister said he will continue.

“We put Iraq first and we do not wish to act as a proxy for anyone,” he said, adding, “Iraq will not be a battlefield for conflicts.”

At the same time, al-Sudani urged the US to return to negotiations with Iran, describing the Trump administration’s “maximum pressure” approach to curtail Iranian influence as “counterproductive.”

“Iran is an important and influential country that must be treated with respect and through direct dialogue,” he stated.

There have been tensions between Baghdad and Washington over the presence of Iran-backed militias in Iraq.

The Popular Mobilisation Forces (PMF), a coalition of militias that formed to fight IS, was formally placed under the control of the Iraqi military in 2016 but in practice still operates with significant autonomy.

The Iraqi parliament has been considering legislation that would solidify the relationship between the military and the PMF, drawing objections from Washington.

Al-Sudani did not directly address the proposed legislation but said his government’s programme “includes disarmament and national dialogue to remove any justification for carrying weapons.”

“We encourage all factions to either integrate into state institutions or engage in political life,” which could include becoming political parties and running for election, he added.

Iraq is preparing for parliamentary elections next month that will determine whether al-Sudani serves a second term.

“Armed factions that have transformed into political entities have the constitutional right to participate” in those elections, the prime minister continued.

 

Hamas hands over remains of another Israeli captive to Red Cross

Israel Hostages

A military statement said the coffin has been transferred to the Red Cross and is on its way to Israeli troops in the Gaza Strip.

Hamas earlier announced that it would hand over the body of another Israeli captive under the ceasefire deal after it was recovered from under the rubble.

Hamas has already released 20 living Israeli hostages and handed over the remains of 13 more captives in exchange for nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners under the ceasefire agreement which took effect between Israel and Hamas on Oct. 10, based on a phased plan presented by US President Donald Trump.

Since October 2023, Israel’s genocidal war has killed more than 68,000 people and injured more than 170,000, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.

 

Iranian security chief says IAEA proposals to be reviewed by National Security Council

Speaking at a joint press conference with his Iraqi counterpart Qasim al-Araji, Larijani also responded to recent remarks by IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi.

He said the latest agency reports on Iran no longer affect the country. Larijani stressed that national unity and military strength are Iran’s main defenses.

He also praised Russia’s clear legal stance on the snapback issue, calling Europe’s actions “a misuse of conditions”. The Iranian security chief further condemned US and Israeli misuse of Iraqi airspace during the 12-day war, noting that Iraq’s sovereignty is often undermined despite its independence.

He appreciated Iraq’s stance during the conflict and in international forums, calling al-Araji’s visit to Tehran “an important step” toward strengthening ties.

In other remarks, Larijani spoke about his recent diplomatic visits, including to Russia.

He said each trip aims to find practical solutions to regional challenges. Larijani underlined Iran’s strategic relations with Russia and China, noting that discussions in Moscow focused on economic cooperation and regional stability.

Trump claims Ukraine won’t win the war with Russia

Russia Ukraine War

”I said they could win. Anything could happen. You know, war is a very strange thing. A lot of bad things happen. A lot of good things happen,” he said.

When asked about alleged Russian strikes on civilian areas in Ukraine, he replied that most of those killed were soldiers. Trump also claimed that around 5,000 to 7,000 servicemen on both sides die every week in the conflict.

Trump stated last month that Ukraine might be able to regain all territory it has lost to Russia over the course of the three-year war.

Following a phone call with Russian President Vladimir Putin last week, Trump again insisted that Ukraine is bound to lose some of its “property” to Russia in the aftermath of the enduring conflict.

While Kiev has repeatedly ruled out territorial concessions, Moscow has listed the withdrawal of Ukrainian troops from the new Russian regions among the key issues to be resolved in order to establish a lasting peace.

Since taking office, Trump has abandoned the Joe Biden administration’s approach of maintaining diplomatic distance from Moscow. In August, Trump met with Putin in Anchorage, Alaska, and last week the two leaders announced that they are preparing for another meeting in Budapest.

 

US threatens to ‘eradicate’ Hamas despite Gaza ceasefire

Hamas

“We made a deal with Hamas that they’re going to be very good, they’re going to behave,” Trump said.

“And if they’re not, we’re going to go and we’re going to eradicate them. If we have to, they’ll be eradicated.”

“They got very rambunctious, and they did things that they shouldn’t be doing. And if they keep doing it, then we’re going to go in and straighten it out. And it’ll happen very quickly and pretty violently, unfortunately,” he added.

Israel and the Palestinian group agreed to a ceasefire in early October under Trump’s 20-point peace plan. On Sunday, however, violence flared again as a Palestinian attack that killed two Israeli soldiers triggered Israeli airstrikes that killed dozens of people in Gaza. Israel and Hamas both recommitted to the ceasefire plan after that.

Internal clashes in Gaza have also created a volatile security situation in the battered enclave, with violence erupting between Hamas and rival groups. According to media outlets, the group killed at least 32 men over the weekend.

After that, Trump threatened to “go in and kill” Hamas. Under the peace plan, the group is to disarm and give up control of Gaza. However, they are acting as a security force in the enclave “for a period of time.”

 

Zelensky refutes Trump-backed territory concession plan

Russia Ukraine War

Speaking to journalists on Monday, Zelensky reiterated his position, saying Ukrainian troops “will not withdraw from Donbass – period.” He repeated his claim on the Donetsk and Lugansk People’s Republics, former Ukrainian territories that voted to join Russia in 2022.

Russian President Vladimir Putin recently asserted that Moscow’s troops “are consistently moving forward along virtually the entire front line” despite all of NATO backing Ukraine.

Reports over the weekend suggested that Trump, during his meeting with Zelensky on Friday, urged the Ukrainian leader to accept a land swap. The American leader’s message was, “Your country will freeze, and your country will be destroyed” unless a peace deal is reached, according to a source quoted by Reuters.

The Financial Times reproted Trump expressed frustration with the stalemate, tossing aside a map of the front lines and remarking that he was “sick” of seeing the same situation persist. Publicly, however, Trump has advocated a freeze in hostilities along the current lines.

Trump has also denied reports that he pressured Zelensky to surrender the entire Donbass region to Russia, saying instead that hostilities should be frozen along the current front lines.

Trump and Zelensky met at the White House last week to discuss the Ukraine conflict as Kiev had sought to obtain long-range Tomahawk missiles from the US. Despite failing to secure the weapons, Zelensky described the talks as “good.”

 

Planned meeting between top Russian, US diplomats postponed indefinitely: CNN

According to the TV channel, the planned meeting has been postponed for the time being. However, CNN noted that it is unclear why the meeting will not take place this week.

According to CNN sources, Lavrov and Rubio disagree on how to peacefully settle the Ukrainian conflict. In addition, CNN stated that the impact of postponing their meeting indefinitely on the talks between Russian President Vladimir Putin and his US counterpart Donald Trump in Budapest is still unclear.

After a telephone conversation between the top diplomats, CNN noted that US officials concluded Russia’s position on Ukraine had not changed. At this point, Rubio is unlikely to recommend that Putin and Trump meet next week. However, he and Lavrov may speak by phone again this week.

The Russian Foreign Ministry previously stated that Lavrov and Rubio discussed potential concrete steps to implement the understandings reached during Putin’s October 16 telephone conversation with Trump. Following his conversation with Putin, Trump stated they had agreed to meet soon in Budapest. Kremlin aide Yury Ushakov noted that Moscow and Washington would immediately begin preparations for a new meeting between the leaders, which could be held in the Hungarian capital.

EU bans transit of Russian gas through the bloc

Signing new import deals for Russian gas will be prohibited by the bloc from January 1, 2026, the council said in a statement on Monday. Short-term deals reached before June 17, 2025, will be allowed to run until June 17, 2026, while long-term contracts will be permitted to run until January 1, 2028, the statement read.

According to the council, the new rules leave room for “specific flexibilities for landlocked member states affected by recent changes in supply routes,” which will be permitted to make amendments to their existing contracts with Russia.

Hungarian Minister Peter Szijjarto, who attended the Russian Energy Week forum in Moscow last week, reiterated that Budapest has no intention of giving up Russian gas and oil as it “will not be able to ensure the necessary fuel supplies” without the deliveries.

Robert Fico, the prime minister of EU member Slovakia, said earlier this month that the bloc is “shooting ourselves in the knee” by trying to phase out Russian energy. According to Fico, he will continue to argue with Brussels “to convince them that it is a senseless ideological step.”

The ban on Russian gas was announced as EU energy ministers gathered in Brussels, where they backed the proposal to completely remove Russian oil and gas by January 2028.

Danish Energy Minister Lars Aagaard expressed satisfaction that legislation which “will definitively ban Russian gas from coming into the EU” has received “overwhelming” support from ministers.

“An energy independent Europe is a stronger and more secure Europe,” he claimed.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova warned earlier this month that the US and UK have increased pressure on the EU in order to deprive it of its energy sovereignty and subdue the bloc.

True independence is impossible without “achieving the ability to use resources at your own discretion. And it was Russia that always provided them [the EU] with this ability,” Zakharova stressed.

The bloc drastically reduced deliveries of Russian energy following the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in February 2022. Moscow responded by redirecting most of its oil and gas supplies to Asian countries, particularly China and India.

 

Zelensky announces readiness to join Putin, Trump at Budapest summit if invited

Putin Trump Zelensky

“If I am invited to Budapest, if it is an invitation in a format where we meet as three, or as it’s called, shuttle diplomacy, President Trump meets with Putin and President Trump meets with me, then in one format or another, we will agree,” Zelensky told reporters in remarks released Monday.

Trump and Putin said they would meet in the Hungarian capital, possibly in a matter of weeks, as the US leader continues to try to broker a peace deal to end the three-and-a-half-year war, triggered by Russia’s 2022 invasion.

The Russian Foreign Ministry has announced that the EU is doing everything in its power to undermine the upcoming summit between Putin and Trump.

Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova told TASS on Monday that the bloc is carrying out “active subversive actions” ahead of the planned meeting in the Hungarian capital, Budapest.

Her comments followed a report by Spanish outlet El Pais, which said Brussels viewed the talks as “a political nightmare.” Citing diplomatic sources, the newspaper reported that the summit put the EU “in an awkward and unpleasant position” because Putin and Trump would discuss a potential settlement to the Ukraine conflict in an EU country without the bloc’s participation.

Zakharova stated that the “aggressive Western European community” wants to “derail any peaceful aspirations” related to the conflict.

“We are seeing statements, threats being made,” she added.

The Western Europeans are “obviously, doing everything to escalate the conflict” between Moscow and Kiev, the spokeswoman stressed. They have been acting this way since 2022 when they “thwarted” the peace talks between the sides in Istanbul, she continued.

According to former Ukrainian head negotiator David Arakhamia, Ukraine withdrew from dialogue with Russia after then-British Prime Minister Boris Johnson arrived in Kiev and urged Vladimir Zelensky to keep fighting. The former UK prime minister has denied the claims.

Zakharova said sporadic statements about the need for peace coming from EU capitals and London are just “camouflage.”

“In reality, they are doing everything they can to achieve escalation. It is difficult to say if they actually understand what they are doing, given how many non-professionals there are at the helms of all these Western European countries,” she noted.

The announcement that Putin and Trump plan to meet in Budapest was made after the two leaders spoke by phone for nearly two and a half hours on Thursday.

According to Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, the venue was proposed by Trump, with Putin “instantly supporting” the idea. The summit could take place within the next two weeks or slightly later, Peskov added.