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Sports May 21, 2026

Harry Maguire Shocked by Omission from England’s 2026 World Cup Squad

Manchester United centre‑back Harry Maguire confirmed on Instagram that he has been left out of Eng…
The Shock Exclusion: Maguire’s Instagram RevealHarry Maguire used his Instagram story on Thursday, 21 May 2026 to announce that he is not part of Thomas Tuchel’s England roster for the upcoming World Cup in the United States, Canada and Mexico. The 33‑year‑old centre‑back called the decision “shocked and gutted” and wished his teammates the best. Statistical Snapshot of Maguire’s International Career66 caps for England since his debut in 20177 international goalsParticipated in the 2018 World Cup (semi‑finals) and Euro 2020 (final)Last appearance: 1‑0 loss to Japan in March 2026Missed Euro 2024 due to injury Implications for England’s Defensive Options Ahead of the 2026 World CupThe omission opens a pathway for younger defenders such as Marc Guehi and Ezri Konsa, who have been edging Maguire out of the pecking order. Tuchel’s final squad, due on Friday, 22 May 2026, is expected to feature a blend of experience and emerging talent, potentially shifting England’s tactical setup from a traditional back‑four to a more versatile defensive line. What This Means for Maguire’s Club Future and England’s CampaignHaving helped revive Manchester United’s season after the departure of former coach Ruben Amorim, Maguire’s international snub could affect his confidence and market value. At United, he remains a key figure, but a prolonged absence from the national team may prompt discussions about his role under new management. For England, the decision signals a clear move away from the Southgate‑era core, emphasizing form and fitness over legacy.
#Harry Maguire #England national team #World Cup 2026
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Sports May 21, 2026

UK Police Deploy Only Three Officers to World Cup After Funding Shortfall

The UK Football Policing Unit will send just three officers to the 2026 World Cup after the United …
The UK Football Policing Unit will send only three officers to the 2026 World Cup after failing to secure additional funding from US authorities, raising questions about security resources for the expected influx of England supporters.Funding Gap Forces Minimal Police PresenceUK Football Policing Unit announced it will deploy a lead officer, Supt Gareth Parkin, supported by two football officers – a significant reduction from earlier tournaments. The decision reflects a lack of financial support from US states and a recent 10% cut in Home Office funding.Financial Constraints QuantifiedHome Office funding reduced by 10%.US states are not providing funds for mobile police delegations this time.Previous deployments: 40 officers sent to Euro 2024 in Germany with government backing; similar arrangements existed for the Qatar World Cup.Security Implications for England Fans in the USPolice stress they will act as “cultural interpreters” for local law enforcement and do not anticipate disorder among the estimated 15,000 England supporters per group‑stage match.Group‑stage venues: Dallas, Boston, East Rutherford (New Jersey).Ticket sales: 3,500 tickets per match through the FA travel club, plus 10,000‑11,000 purchases via the FIFA portal.Additional 1,000 friends and family expected to travel.Future Policing Strategies for International TournamentsThe UKFPU is working with the Football Supporters’ Association and the Foreign Office to deliver safety messages and cultural guidance. Scotland will send officers funded by its government, focusing on Boston, suggesting a patchwork of funding sources may become the norm for future events.
#UK Football Policing Unit #Mark Roberts #England fans
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Politics May 21, 2026

Trump's Potential Call with Taiwan's Leader: A Diplomatic Shift

President Donald Trump has suggested that he may speak with Taiwan's President William Lai Ching-te…
The Diplomatic Implication President Donald Trump has twice suggested, since his summit with China’s President Xi Jinping in Beijing last week, that he may speak with Taiwan’s President William Lai Ching-te. That would mark the first direct contact between leaders of the governments since the US switched diplomatic recognition from Taipei to Beijing in 1979. It remains committed, however, under the 1979 Taiwan Relations Act to supporting the defence of the self-governing democracy. Taiwan's Response In a foreign affairs ministry statement on Wednesday, Taiwan’s President responded to Trump’s comments, saying he would be “happy” to talk to him. Taiwan was committed to maintaining a stable status quo in the Taiwan Strait, he added, but “China is the disruptor of peace and stability”. Beijing regards Taiwan as part of Chinese territory. The Data Analysis The statement comes as the White House considers a $14bn arms deal with Taiwan. China’s foreign ministry responded saying it “firmly opposes official exchanges” between the US and Taiwan, as well as US arms sales to the island. The Impact Analysis Trump’s comments suggest he may be willing to break with decades of diplomatic protocol, which will likely jar with Beijing, say analysts. Based on past events, Beijing will not be happy if Trump does meet with or talk to Taiwan’s president. When the former US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited Taiwan in 2022, her two-day visit sparked heightened tensions between the two countries. The Prediction Analysts say that included in its response is an awareness in Beijing that Trump is unreliable and unpredictable. If Trump calls Lai and announces that the US will “continue to support Taiwan and provide a large arms package; all hell will break loose”. However, he said, the very fact that Trump even entertained the idea of speaking with Xi about whether the United States would sell weapons to certain countries was a win for Beijing.
#Donald Trump #Taiwan #China
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Sports May 21, 2026

PWHL Expands to San Jose as Montreal Wins First Walter Cup

The Montreal Victoire have won the first Walter Cup in the Professional Women's Hockey League (PWHL…
The Montreal Victoire's Historic Win For the first time in the short history of the Professional Women’s Hockey League (PWHL), the Walter Cup is leaving the United States. The Montreal Victoire beat the Ottawa Charge in an all-Canadian final that wrapped up on Wednesday night in four games. Expansion and Growth The day before Montreal won the Walter Cup, the PWHL announced the league is expanding to San Jose for next season. It was the fourth such expansion announcement in the three weeks. With Detroit, Las Vegas and Hamilton, Ontario, receiving the other three expansion franchises, the young league will head into the 2026/27 season with an imbalance in franchises between Canada and the US for the first time. The Data Analysis The PWHL will enter its fourth campaign with seven US franchises and five Canadian. The league saw a 77% season-over-season increase in viewership on YouTube. At the box office, the PWHL sold out Seattle’s Climate Pledge Arena, Boston’s TD Garden and New York City’s Madison Square Garden. The MSG attendance of 18,006 now sits as the US professional women’s hockey attendance record. The Impact Analysis The PWHL is riding record attendance in venues across the US and is hoping to arrive at a league-wide national US broadcasting deal. Coupled with the fact that the PWHL increased its league and team partnership portfolio by 35% season-over-season to 81 corporate partners, saw in-arena merchandise sales double and online merchandise sales increase more than 50%, business is booming for the PWHL. The Prediction With the expansion to San Jose and the success of women’s ice hockey in America, the PWHL is poised for continued growth. The league’s move to California makes sense given the state’s ties to the PWHL itself, with Mark Walter, the owner of MLB’s Los Angeles Dodgers, the NBA’s Los Angeles Lakers and the WNBA’s Los Angeles Sparks, owning the league.
#PWHL #Montreal Victoire #San Jose
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World Wide May 21, 2026

Putin and Lukashenko Directly Oversee Joint Nuclear Exercises Amid Rising Tensions

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko have directly partic…
The Lead: First Presidential-Level Nuclear Monitoring Russian President Vladimir Putin and Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko have taken part via video conference in a joint nuclear forces exercise, marking the first time the two leaders have directly participated in such a training event. While senior military officials from both countries have conducted similar exercises quarterly, this direct presidential involvement signals heightened attention to the nuclear capabilities of the Russia-Belarus alliance. The Strategic Exercise: Expanding Nuclear Capabilities Opening the meeting held via videolink and broadcast live on the Kremlin's website, Putin stressed that the use of nuclear weapons remains "an extreme and exceptional measure for ensuring the national security" of the two countries. "Today, as part of the exercises, we are conducting the first joint training of the armies of Russia and Belarus on managing strategic and tactical nuclear forces," he said. At the same time, the Russian leader said the Russian-Belarusian nuclear triad – which are nuclear weapons capable of being deployed by land, sea and air – must continue to serve as "a reliable guarantor of the sovereignty of the Union State of Russia and Belarus" amid rising global tensions and emerging threats. According to Putin, the drills are aimed at practising coordination and interaction between military officials in the event of nuclear weapons use, including weapons deployed on the territory of Belarus. The Military Capabilities: Advanced Weapon Systems Demonstrated Russia's Ministry of Defence said in a statement that its forces launched a Yars ballistic missile and a Zircon hypersonic missile as part of missile tests during the nuclear drills. According to the ministry, the crew of a nuclear-powered submarine launched a Sineva intercontinental ballistic missile from a submerged position as part of the drills. The Russian military also conducted a launch of a Yars intercontinental ballistic missile from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome towards a testing range in Russia's Kamchatka region. In Belarus, a combat crew of the Belarusian armed forces carried out a practical launch of a ballistic missile from an Iskander-M missile system at the Kapustin Yar testing range, the ministry said. The exercises also involved Tu-95MS strategic bombers, which launched hypersonic air-launched cruise missiles, while a MiG-31 aircraft carried out a launch of a Kinzhal hypersonic missile, according to the statement. The Regional Impact: Heightened Security Measures The joint drills held from Tuesday to Thursday were met with concern from Ukraine and its NATO allies. Kyiv has repeatedly accused Moscow of planning to launch a new attack from Belarus, either on its territory or one of its NATO allies, such as neighbouring Baltic states. Ukraine's Security Service (SBU) said on Thursday that its units and the army were "carrying out a comprehensive set of enhanced security measures in the northern regions of our country" bordering Belarus. The measures – including stepped up checks of individuals and properties – "will serve as an effective deterrent to any aggressive actions or operations by the enemy and its ally", the SBU said in a statement. Separately on Thursday, a Ukrainian drone attack on a town in Russia's Bryansk border region killed three rail workers when it hit a locomotive at a station, Russia's state RZhD rail network said. Russian border towns and villages regularly come under Ukrainian fire as Moscow's offensive against Ukraine has dragged on into a fifth year. The International Response: NATO Convenes Amid Tensions NATO foreign ministers were scheduled to meet in Helsingborg, Sweden, on Thursday and Friday to discuss how to ensure that support for Ukraine remains substantial and sustainable for the long term. The meeting comes as Russia's military actions in Ukraine continue and as concerns grow about the expansion of military exercises involving nuclear capabilities. Earlier this week, Ukraine launched what Russian officials described as one of the largest drone barrages of the war towards Moscow, killing at least five people. These reciprocal military actions demonstrate the escalating tensions in the region and the increasing risk of broader conflict.
#Russia #Belarus #Nuclear Weapons
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Economy May 21, 2026

The Economics of Hormuz: Calculating the Cost of Iran's Transit Toll

As the Strait of Hormuz remains closed eleven weeks into the Iran war, this analysis examines wheth…
The LeadEleven weeks after the start of the Iran war, the Strait of Hormuz has remained closed to naval traffic, bleeding the global economy far beyond the Gulf. Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) maintains an iron grip over this narrow, strategic waterway, while a corresponding United States naval blockade on Iranian ports has failed to reopen it.Before the war began, between 120 and 140 ships travelled through the strait each day, about half of them oil tankers carrying some 20 million barrels of oil between them. Now, only a few vessels whose owners have negotiated with the IRGC are permitted to pass.The Strategic Control of HormuzOn Wednesday, Iran said it coordinated the transit of 26 vessels through the Strait of Hormuz in 24 hours, two days after announcing the formation of the Persian Gulf Strait Authority (PGSA), a new body to provide "real-time updates" on operations in the strait.Since the announcement of a temporary ceasefire between the US and Iran in April, Iran has been working on formalising a mechanism to charge a transit fee from ships crossing the critical chokepoint, through which 20 percent of the world's oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) are shipped during peacetime.Tehran has reportedly already charged fees as high as $2m per ship for transit since the war started. Even though countries opposing Tehran say this is illegal, it may still be less expensive than the overall cost of the closure of the strait each day.The Economic Cost of BlockadeNearly one-fifth of global oil and LNG exports were shipped by Gulf producers through the Strait of Hormuz before the US and Israel bombed Iran on February 28, triggering the Iranian closure of the waterway. The strait is the only waterway linking Gulf producers to the open ocean – there is no other route through which they can ship exports.About 20.3 million barrels per day of oil passed through the Strait of Hormuz in peacetime – nearly 27 percent of global maritime oil trade. The lion's share of that crude went to Asian markets.Global LNG trade has been similarly hard hit. On the day before the war broke out, Brent crude – the global benchmark for oil prices – closed at $72.48 per barrel. After Iran closed the waterway on March 4 and began attacks on vessels attempting to sail through, traffic came to a standstill, stranding about 2,000 ships on either side of the strait.In terms of lost oil revenues, this amounts to $114.8bn of losses per day. About 10 billion cubic feet of LNG per day also used to pass through the strait, worth a further $7.8bn.The Cost-Benefit Analysis of Transit FeesFor hundreds of ships stranded in the Gulf with thousands of sailors on board, the cost of remaining anchored is steep, including crew wages, loan repayments, repair and management, coupled with inflated war risk premiums.In turn, Iran has reportedly been charging up to $2m for authorisation to pass. Experts say many will see this as worthwhile purely in terms of monetary cost."There is no doubt that paying Iran is cheaper than a continuous blockade because a sitting tanker bleeds money," said Nader Habibi, an Iranian American economist."It makes sense from an economic point of view, but it is not politically feasible," he added. "The companies are under pressure from the US sanctions and not to make arrangements with Iran. This is not just a purely economic cost-benefit analysis, but long-term considerations that are taken into account."International Legal PerspectivesInternational law protects free transit through strategic waters such as natural straits like Hormuz, barring countries from imposing passage tolls even where the waterways fall entirely into territorial waters, like in the case of Hormuz.However, services such as security controls, inspections and insurance regimes can be charged for. Chargeable fees also partly depend on whether a waterway is a man-made passageway or a natural one.These are three different precedents in maritime traffic flow:Panama Canal: An artificial waterway connecting the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. Vessels pass through a unique system of locks that raise and lower vessels across elevated terrain. Since Panama built, maintains and operates the canal, it can charge transit fees based on vessel size, cargo capacity and booking priority. These range from several hundred thousand dollars per transit to some slots sold for millions of dollars.Suez Canal: Another artificial canal, linking the Mediterranean and Red seas. Egypt charges transit fees for the use of canal infrastructure, maintenance and traffic management services through the narrow waterway. Container ships and oil tankers pay from several hundred thousand dollars to more than one million dollars per voyage.Turkiye's Bosporus Strait and Dardanelles: These are different because they are natural straits, rather than man-made canals. Turkiye charges for navigation-related services such as lighthouse operations, rescue readiness, medical support and traffic management – and tightly controls ship scheduling and navigation.Regional Cooperation PossibilitiesIran's newly-formed PGSA published a new map of Hormuz, stretching from Kuh-e Mubarak in Iran to south of Fujairah, in the UAE, at the eastern entrance of the strait, and from the tip of Qeshm Island to Umm al-Quwain at the western entrance.Given how the Iran war has spilled over into the Gulf region – with the UAE taking the brunt of Iranian strikes – economist Mohammad Reza Farzanegan said "regional cooperation with Iran is the most realistic path to stable transit through the Strait of Hormuz."The UAE, Oman, Qatar and Iran will have to work together because their economies require it, he argued. A workable arrangement could include a joint maritime authority, shared monitoring, emergency coordination, environmental protection and service-based contributions for maintaining safe passage."This would give Iran a recognised role in the security of the waterway while giving Persian Gulf economies more predictability," Farzanegan added. "Such a framework is also more realistic than relying on external military enforcement, which has been more a source of trouble for these states."The Future OutlookWhile it may seem that the economics of the closure of the strait are currently skewed towards Iran, Aniseh Tabrizi, an associate fellow on the Middle East and North Africa Programme at think tank Chatham House, noted that "the economics by itself is not going to be the driver to change calculation or move from the current standpoint."She emphasized that Iran and the US need to reach a "diplomatic compromise, with other calculations linked in to the economic factor", before there can be an end to the energy supply crisis.Farzanegan added that if the world expects stable access to the Strait of Hormuz, then paying Iran could well be accepted as the price of keeping the vital waterway predictable. "From an economic perspective, a negotiated transit arrangement [with Iran] now makes more sense than continued closure," he concluded.
#Iran #Strait of Hormuz #Oil Prices
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World Wide May 21, 2026

Ebola Spreads to Conflict Zones: The Postponement of the India-Africa Forum Summit

The Indian government and the African Union have postponed the upcoming India-Africa Forum Summit d…
The upcoming India-Africa Forum Summit has been officially postponed by the African Union and India, marking a significant shift in diplomatic priorities as the Democratic Republic of the Congo battles a resurgence of the Ebola virus.Conflict Zones Complicate the Ebola ResponseThe outbreak has reached South Kivu province, a region currently under the control of the M23 rebels. This development is critical because the area, including the provincial capital Bukavu, is densely populated and difficult to access due to ongoing military conflict. The M23 group, backed by Rwanda, has stated their commitment to working with international partners, yet the presence of the virus in their territory poses a severe logistical challenge for health workers.Alarming Statistics from the WHOAccording to the World Health Organization, this is the 17th outbreak in the DRC. Current figures indicate 600 suspected cases and 139 deaths. The virus has also crossed borders into Uganda, raising the stakes for regional containment. The WHO has declared this an international emergency, signaling that the virus is no longer just a local health crisis but a global threat.Geopolitical Fallout and Aid ShortagesThe postponement highlights the fragility of international cooperation when health crises intersect with political instability. Furthermore, the response is hampered by a sharp decline in foreign aid, particularly from the United States, which has led to shortages of essential supplies for first responders. The decision to delay the summit reflects a recognition that diplomatic engagement is less effective when the health security of the participating nations is compromised.A Long Road to ContainmentThe presence of the virus in rebel-controlled territories suggests that the outbreak will be difficult to contain without a ceasefire. The rescheduling of the India-Africa Summit underscores that public health emergencies often supersede diplomatic agendas, potentially delaying economic cooperation until the crisis stabilizes.
#India #Africa #Ebola
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World Wide May 21, 2026

Iran World Cup Squad Applies for US and Canada Visas in Turkey

Iran's football team has applied for US and Canadian visas in Turkey ahead of the World Cup, which …
Visa Applications Ahead of the World Cup Iran's football team have attended visa appointments in Turkiye ahead of the World Cup, with the whole squad applying for Canadian visas and some players also submitting applications for entry into the United States. Details of the Visa Applications A number of players submitted applications in the Turkish capital Ankara on Thursday, an Iranian football federation official told Reuters news agency. The whole squad attended appointments for Canadian visas, while some players who had not applied for American visas before the US and Israel attacked Iran in February also submitted their visa applications in person at the embassy. World Cup Preparation The World Cup will ⁠⁠be cohosted by the US, Canada and Mexico, with Iran due to play all three of their group-stage matches on the US West Coast. Iran are scheduled to face New Zealand on June 15 and Belgium on June 21 in Los Angeles before taking on Egypt in Seattle five days later. They would require access to Canada if they progress to the knockout rounds. Impact on Team Preparation Iran is holding a pre-tournament camp in Turkiye following the suspension of the Iranian domestic league in March, leaving many players short of match fitness. The team trained in Antalya earlier this week as coach Amir Ghalenoei attempted to prepare his squad after most domestic-based players went seven weeks without competitive football during the suspension of the Iranian league. Future Outlook Iran qualified early for the expanded 48-team World Cup, but preparations have been overshadowed by uncertainty over travel and security arrangements following the US-Israeli war on Iran. Iran are due to play Gambia in a friendly on May 29 before Ghalenoei names his final 26-man World Cup squad by FIFA's June 1 deadline.
#Iran #World Cup #US
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Politics May 21, 2026

Ben-Gvir's Flotilla Video Destroys Israel's Multimillion-Dollar 'Hasbara' Campaign

A video posted by Israel's far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, taunting abducted …
The Lead A video posted by Israel's far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, in which he is seen taunting abducted flotilla activists who sought to break the siege on Gaza, has triggered a backlash and dealt a huge blow to Israel's multimillion-dollar public relations campaign, known as 'Hasbara'. The Event Details The footage, posted on the social media platform X, showed Ben-Gvir gloating as activists from the Global Sumud Flotilla knelt on the floor, blindfolded, with their hands bound at the Port of Ashdod. Israeli naval forces had intercepted the flotilla's vessels in international waters off the coast of Cyprus, illegally abducting 430 participants. Among them, at least 87 have launched a hunger strike in solidarity with the more than 9,500 Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails. The Diplomatic Fallout The images of activists being dragged across the floor prompted several countries – including Italy, France, the Netherlands, Canada, and Spain – to summon Israeli ambassadors, condemning the 'unacceptable' treatment and violation of human dignity. The Collapse of the 'Hasbara' Illusion Experts argue that the frantic damage control by Israeli officials, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who ordered the rapid deportation of the activists, stems not from moral outrage over the abuses, but from the catastrophic damage done to Israel's global image. For decades, Israel has relied on 'Hasbara' – a Hebrew term translating to 'explanation' – a propaganda campaign to justify its policies and military actions against Palestinians to the international community. US Double Standards and 'Pro-Terror' Sanctions The diplomatic fallout also laid bare the glaring contradictions in United States policy. Following the video's release, US ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee criticised Ben-Gvir, stating the minister had 'betrayed the dignity of his nation'. However, critics were quick to point out that Huckabee's condemnation rang hollow, as it focused entirely on the indignity of the broadcast rather than the human rights violations committed. A Microcosm of Palestinian Suffering For Palestinians, the humiliation endured by the European and international activists is merely a glimpse into a much darker, systemic reality. Mustafa Barghouti, secretary-general of the Palestinian National Initiative, said the bound and blindfolded activists represent a 'microcosm' of what Palestinian prisoners endure daily. The Hammer and the Flotillas Despite the military interceptions and the US sanctions, activists and analysts agree that the flotilla campaigns, which began in 2009 in response to Israeli land, sea and air blockades, have succeeded in exposing the limits of Israeli force.
#Itamar Ben-Gvir #Israel #Gaza Flotilla
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