Monday, December 29, 2025
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Russia unveils new nuclear submarine

The ceremony took place in Severodvinsk, and was attended by Russian Defense Minister Andrey Belousov and other top brass.

“Today is a significant event for us: the heavy nuclear-powered missile cruiser Khabarovsk is being launched from the slipway of the renowned Sevmash shipyard,” Belousov stated.

“Carrying underwater weapons and robotic systems, it will enable us to successfully accomplish missions related to ensuring the security of Russia’s maritime borders and protecting its national interests in various parts of the world’s oceans,” he said.

The minister added that the submarine still has to complete a series of sea tests, and wished its crew and builders further success.

The ‘Khabarovsk’ “was specifically designed and built for the Poseidon,” former Chief of the Russian Navy’s General Staff, Admiral Viktor Kravchenko, told RIA Novosti on Saturday.

The Poseidon cannot currently be intercepted by any means, according to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Earlier this week, Russia successfully carried out tests involving the state-of-the-art drone, as well as the unlimited-range Burevestnik cruise missile, Putin announced on Wednesday.

The announcement came amid a stall in Ukraine peace talks, and discussions of potential US Tomahawk supplies to Kiev.

US President Donald Trump announced on Thursday that he had instructed the Department of War to start testing nuclear weapons, citing strategic competition with Russia and China.

However, Russia is “still not” in an arms race with the US, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Thursday, when asked to comment on the recent arms tests.

 

Two local Basij members killed in terrorist attack in southeastern Iran

Crime Scene

According to a statement, the attack occurred near Eskelabad when armed members of terrorist groups ambushed the vehicle of Mohammadreza Shahouzehi, a local tribal leader, during a patrol of the security zone.

The two Basij volunteers, identified as Esmaeil Shavarzi and Mokhtar Shahouzehi, both Sunni locals participating in the regional security plan, sustained severe injuries during the assault and later succumbed to their wounds despite extensive medical efforts.

The Quds Headquarters condemned the attack and emphasized that such “terrorist acts will not weaken the determination of local security forces and the people of the region to preserve peace and stability.”

The border province of Sistan and Baluchestan has in recent years witnessed sporadic attacks by militant groups, mostly based in neighboring Pakistan, targeting security personnel involved in maintaining regional security as well as civilians.

Syrian president to visit Washington in November: US Envoy

Asked by reporters on the sidelines of the Manama Dialogue in Bahrain whether Sharaa would head to Washington this month, Tom Barrack said “yes”, adding that Sharaa would “hopefully” sign up to the Global Coalition to Defeat Daesh.

It would be the Syrian leader’s first visit to Washington and his second visit to the US after a landmark UN trip in September where the former militant became the first Syrian president in decades to address the General Assembly in New York.

Formerly affiliated with Al-Qaeda, Sharaa’s group, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), was delisted as a terrorist group by Washington as recently as July.

Since taking power, Syria’s new leaders have sought to break from their own radical past and present a moderate image more tolerable to ordinary Syrians and foreign powers.

The United States had already been collaborating with the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) to fight Daesh in Syria.

 

Ukraine claims has hit nearly 160 Russian oil facilities in 2025

Maliuk said that at least 20 of those strikes were conducted in September and October alone, targeting six oil refineries, two oil terminals, three fuel depots, and nine pumping stations.

“These are legitimate military targets. Oil extraction and refining make up around 90% of Russia’s defense budget. These are the dirty petro-rubles funding the war against us,” he added.

Maliuk claimed that Russian domestic fuel shortages have reached up to 20%, with 37% of its refining capacity forced to shut down. Fuel deficits were reported in 57 Russian regions, prompting Moscow to ban gasoline exports until the end of the year.

Strikes on Russian oil infrastructure and military-industrial sites are part of an ongoing campaign carried out primarily by domestically produced Ukrainian drones.

The operations are designed to disrupt Russia’s war economy and its military capabilities.

Russian missile attacks on Ukraine hit 2.5-year high: AFP

Russian strikes have caused sweeping blackouts affecting tens of thousands of people, with Moscow targeting Ukraine’s power grid for the fourth winter running in what Kyiv and its backers say is a deliberate and cynical strategy to wear down Ukraine’s civilian population.

Russia’s army fired 270 missiles over October, up 46 percent on the previous month, according to an AFP analysis of daily data published by Ukraine’s air force.

That was the highest one-month tally since Kyiv started routinely publishing statistics at the beginning of 2023.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has accused Russia of wanting to sow “chaos” by striking the country’s energy grid so intensely.

“Russia’s task is to create chaos and apply psychological pressure on the population through strikes on energy facilities and railways,” Zelensky told journalists at a briefing last month.

As in previous winters, rolling blackouts have been introduced in every region of the country, including Kyiv, throughout October to deal with shortfalls in power.

The International Criminal Court (ICC) in the Hague last year issued arrest warrants for top Russian army officials for the “war crime of causing excessive” harm to civilians by striking Ukrainian energy sites.

Russia also fired 5,298 long-range drones at Ukraine in October, the same data showed — down by around six percent on the number it fired in September but still close to record highs.

Russia fires drones at Ukrainian cities and energy sites on a daily basis.

Kyiv has retaliated with strikes on Russian oil depots and refineries, seeking to cut off Moscow’s vital energy exports and trigger fuel shortages across the country.

 

Iranian actress Mojdeh Daei passes away

The news was confirmed by theater director Maziar Seyedi, who had worked with her in the play On the Wave of Sundays. According to Seyedi, Daei died in Esfahan, where she was living with her family.

Born in 1987, Daei held a Master’s degree in Dramatic Literature from the University of Tehran and had performed in several notable plays, including In the Depths, Everyone with Their Loneliness, The Kitchen, The Story of Metronpazh, Cold Things, I Wanted to Be a Horse, and On the Wave of Sundays.

Details regarding her funeral and burial ceremony have not yet been announced.

Vital wound dressings for Iran’s EB patients listed under US sanctions

“Dressings are a major necessity for individuals with EB”, the director stated, noting that Mepilex dressings that are made in Sweden and used in more than 150 countries are the standard care for these patients.

However, he explained that Mepilex has been classified as a sanctioned product, making its importation into Iran extremely difficult.

“Other dressings available on the market do not meet the required quality standards”, he added.

The foundation currently provides patients with a monthly allowance of 700,000 tomans as financial assistance, and emphasizes that no child with EB should be deprived of education due to their condition.

The US claims its sanctions exempt humanitarian goods, but in practice the bans have inflicted serious damage on Iranian citizens, including financial strain and medical shortages. Meanwhile, restrictions on banking and international transactions have severely limited access to essential medicines, medical equipment, and specialized supplies such as EB wound dressings. This has left many patients in Iran to bear the cost of policies far beyond their control.

US backs repeal of Caesar Act sanctions on Syria

The US State Department

“The administration supports repealing the Caesar Act. Congress should include the repeal in the NDAA,” a State Department spokesperson told Anadolu.

The spokesperson added that the “cessation of sanctions against Syria preserves the integrity of our primary objective – the enduring defeat of Daesh – and will give the people of Syria a chance for a better future.”

“The United States is in regular communication with regional partners and welcomes any investment or engagement in Syria that supports the chance for all Syrians to have a peaceful and prosperous country,” the spokesperson continued.

It follows Trump’s May 2025 announcement to lift most US sanctions on Syria after meeting with Syrian President Ahmad al-Sharaa in Saudi Arabia—the first between US and Syrian leaders in 25 years. At the time, Trump described the sanctions as “brutal and crippling,” and added that lifting them would “give Syria a chance at greatness.”

On June 30, Trump signed an executive order to end US sanctions against Syria, though the 2019 Caesar Act authorizing such measures remains in force. Syria’s new government considers the Caesar Act sanctions an obstacle to the country’s recovery after nearly 14 years of war that devastated Syria’s economy and infrastructure.

Bashar al-Assad, who ruled Syria for nearly a quarter century, fled to Russia on Dec. 8, 2024, marking the end of the Baath Party’s decades-long rule, which began in 1963.

Al-Sharaa, who led anti-government forces that ousted Assad, was declared president for a transitional period in late January, pledging to rebuild the country and restore stability.

 

Remains returned by Hamas from Gaza not those of Israeli hostages: Report

Israel Hostages

Israel’s public broadcaster KAN, citing an unnamed Israeli source, reported that the remains “do not belong to any of the Israeli abductees.”

Army Radio confirmed that none of the remains “belonged to any of the hostages.”

The Red Cross transferred on Friday the remains of the three bodies to the National Forensic Institute in Tel Aviv for examination.

No details were provided about the circumstances or conditions under which the handover took place.

Since the first phase of a Gaza ceasefire agreement began on Oct. 10, Hamas has released 20 Israeli captives alive and handed over the remains of 19 out of 28, most of them Israelis. However, Israel claimed that one of the received bodies did not match any of its listed captives.

Israel has killed 211 Palestinians and injured 597 others since the ceasefire, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.

Israel has tied the start of negotiations for the second phase of the ceasefire to the handover of all the hostage remains. Hamas says the process requires time due to the massive destruction in Gaza.

Phase one of the deal includes the release of Israeli hostages in exchange for nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners. The plan also envisages the rebuilding of Gaza and the establishment of a new governing mechanism without Hamas.

Israel has killed more than 68,500 people, mostly women and children, and injured over 170,600 others in attacks in Gaza since October 2023.

 

‘Secret’ Ukraine meeting set for Spain: El Mundo

The organizers are reportedly maintaining “utmost secrecy” for the event planned for November 4, instructing delegates from 35 countries to leave their cell phones in a designated room and refrain from posting about the gathering on social media, according to a government document cited by the outlet.

Participants are expected to discuss ways to increase military and financial aid for Kiev, as well as possible security guarantees. They will also coordinate additional pressure on Russia. Spanish Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Albares is set to attend, El Mundo reported.

The Kremlin argued earlier this month that Ukrainian forces could not have conducted strikes on energy facilities deep inside Russia without direct support from Western intelligence services. Moscow has said that Western military assistance will only serve to escalate the conflict without altering the situation on the battlefield.

US President Donald Trump has recently declined to provide Tomahawk long-range cruise missiles to Ukraine, warning against depleting the US arsenal. He also indefinitely postponed his planned in-person summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Budapest, Hungary.