Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Sumud activists demand safe passage, accountability amid Israel’s illegal abductions

TEHRAN — Battered but entirely unbowed, a defiant contingent of the Global Sumud Flotilla continues its perilous voyage toward the Gaza Strip, surviving a harrowing, day-long assault by Israeli naval forces in the Mediterranean

As Israeli vessels illegally board and hijack portions of the civilian convoy in international waters, the remaining humanitarian boats are pushing eastward, determined to shatter a genocidal blockade that has starved millions.

Organizers confirmed that a core group of vessels successfully escaped an exhausting assault by Israeli commandos and remains steadfast on its approach to the besieged enclave.

In a statement released Tuesday afternoon, activists reported they were over a hundred nautical miles from Gaza’s devastated coastline.

In a powerful tribute, these remaining boats proudly carry the names of Palestinian villages destroyed during the Nakba, communities the occupation regime has violently sought to erase from history and memory. Flotilla organizers declared that just as the stories of those villages endure, so does their unbreakable will to break the siege.

The violence at sea began roughly seventy nautical miles off the coast of Cyprus, drawing immediate comparisons to previous acts of Israeli piracy.

The Israeli regime’s forces stormed civilian ships, forcefully abducting peaceful international participants. Among those kidnapped is Dr. Margaret Connolly, a veteran physician and the sister of Irish President Catherine Connolly.

Anticipating the brutal crackdown, Dr. Connolly pre-recorded a video that circulated across social media. In the footage, she stated that if her message was being viewed, it meant she had been kidnapped from her boat by occupying forces and was being held illegally in an Israeli prison.

She said she was speaking not only as a medical professional but as a mother and a human being, and expressed fierce pride in joining the largest civilian maritime mission to date, aimed at delivering life-saving supplies to a traumatized population.

The abduction of an Irish head of state’s sister, alongside hundreds of other global citizens, has ignited widespread political anger.

Human rights advocates and international legal observers have condemned the raids as a blatant violation of maritime law. The seizure of civilian vessels far beyond territorial waters highlights Israel’s absolute determination to weaponize famine and forcefully prevent civilian aid.

Despite the ongoing threat of military violence, the coalition, representing activists from dozens of nations, refuses to be intimidated.

Communications with the fleet have repeatedly been jammed, but distress messages broadcast earlier showed activists in life jackets holding their ground.

Shadows in the desert: How US treachery facilitated Israeli outposts on Iraqi soil

TEHRAN - A profound geopolitical scandal is unraveling in Baghdad following revelations that the United States weaponized its military presence to deceive Iraqi authorities, directly facilitating the establishment of at least two clandestine Israeli military outposts within Iraq’s borders.

The disclosures, brought to light by Maen al-Jubouri, a former adviser to the Iraqi Defense Ministry, expose a calculated breach of Iraq’s national sovereignty. By exploiting bilateral security agreements and Baghdad’s technical vulnerabilities, Washington effectively provided a "Trojan Horse" for Israeli military operations deep within Iraqi territory.

According to al-Jubouri, the recent discovery of a second alleged Israeli military base in Iraq’s vast desert regions has confirmed what many security analysts long feared: the first discovery was not an isolated incident, but part of a systemic, state-sanctioned deception by the United States.

While al-Jubouri noted that the second outpost was "less shocking" than the first, its existence underscores a deliberate pattern. These bases were strategically imposed on Iraq, capitalizing on the turbulent regional climate and leveraging Iraq’s complex military geography to grant Israeli forces unprecedented, unauthorized access to the heart of the Middle East.

The core of the scandal lies in the sophisticated cover provided by the U.S. military. Iraqi officials were led to believe that the personnel, hardware, and infrastructure in these desert zones belonged exclusively to American forces operating under the mandate of the international coalition.

"Those bases operated under American cover," al-Jubouri revealed. "The equipment, weapons, and cover were clearly American."

Washington systematically exploited its official channels with Baghdad to mask these violations:

Any U.S. military movements were permitted under the guise of specialized, high-level missions coordinated with the General Command of the Armed Forces.

Because these operations were classified as sensitive, top-tier U.S.-Iraqi joint ventures, lower and mid-level Iraqi security and military agencies were entirely locked out of the loop, preventing internal whistleblowers from raising early alarms.

Washington used the broader regional conflict between the U.S.-Israeli axis and Iran to justify high-intensity military movements, misleading Iraqi authorities into believing the operations were standard American defensive measures.

A flagrant breach of Iraqi sovereignty

The establishment of Israeli bases under the nose of the Iraqi government represents a catastrophic violation of sovereignty and international law. While Iraq’s diplomatic and military frameworks do allow for foreign troops under the strict umbrella of the anti-ISIS international coalition, Israel is explicitly excluded from any such agreements. Iraq does not recognize Israel, making the presence of IDF assets on its soil an existential security breach.

The U.S. successfully pulled off this treachery by exploiting a severe technological asymmetry. Iraq’s current lack of advanced radar and airspace surveillance capabilities left the country blind to what was actually being transported into its western deserts. Washington took full advantage of this blind spot, smuggling Israeli assets, weapons, and personnel into the country under the star-spangled banner.

The revelation has sent shockwaves through the political establishment in Baghdad, creating an acute crisis of confidence. Al-Jubouri did not mince words regarding the domestic fallout, stating that the situation has caused severe embarrassment across every tier of the Iraqi state:

It exposes Baghdad as seemingly incapable of policing its own territory or holding its strategic partners accountable, severely weakening its diplomatic standing in the region.

It reveals a critical intelligence failure, showing that the military command structure was effectively blindsided and manipulated by its primary international ally.

By using its military agreements as a shield to establish Israeli outposts, the United States has not only violated the trust of the Iraqi government but has also turned Iraq's desert geography into a launchpad for unauthorized regional shadow warfare.

Eurovision faces existential crisis over historic boycotts

TEHRAN — As the 70th anniversary of the Eurovision Song Contest reaches its grand final in Vienna, the high-gloss television spectacle has been thoroughly consumed by an unprecedented wave of global boycotts and massive street protests.

Five nations, Spain, Ireland, the Netherlands, Iceland, and Slovenia, have pulled out of the competition entirely, delivering a historic rebuke to organizers and shattering the event’s manufactured image of political neutrality.

The synchronized withdrawals represent the largest organized walkout in the contest’s history, driven by intense international revulsion toward Israel’s genocidal military campaign in the Gaza Strip.

While the death toll in Gaza has surpassed 72,000, broadcasters from the boycotting countries made it clear that taking the stage alongside Israel was morally unconscionable.

Defending his country’s decision to skip the event, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez delivered a scathing critique of Western complacency.

Sánchez declared that Spain would not stay silent in the face of an “illegal war and genocide,” emphasizing that the principles used to bar Russia following the Ukraine war must apply equally to Israel. “There can be no double standards,” Sánchez stated, asserting that Spain’s absence reflects a deep commitment to human rights.

This profound outrage has reverberated far beyond Vienna, where audience booing heavily disrupted live broadcasts inside the arena.

Over the weekend, the backlash converged with massive Nakba Day solidarity demonstrations in major global centers.

In central London, tens of thousands of marchers flooded the streets. Among them, a bloc organized by activists explicitly urged a total boycott of the broadcast, denouncing the European Broadcasting Union for allowing Israel to use the cultural platform to launder the reputation of a regime accused of mass atrocities through the language of diversity.

This artistic resistance was amplified by the “No Music for Genocide” campaign, backed by over 2,100 prominent figures such as Brian Eno and Massive Attack.

Meanwhile, in New York City, massive crowds blocked major thoroughfares and staged emotional rallies near the United Nations headquarters.

Activists linked the Eurovision stage to broader Western complicity in ongoing atrocities that have expanded into Lebanon and Iran.

By treating a regime accused of systematic ethnic cleansing as a standard participant, critics argue that Eurovision has transformed a celebration of unity into a grim testament to institutional hypocrisy, proving that music cannot be separated from the blood on the stage.

MEP Milan Uhrík: EU Credibility eroded by double standards after US strike on Minab schoolchildren

 By Shahrokh Saei 

TEHRAN - More than two months have passed since a US Tomahawk missile struck the Shajareh Tayyebeh primary school in the southern Iranian city of Minab. The strike occurred on February 28, during the opening phase of the US–Israeli war, and claimed the lives of 168 people, most of them schoolchildren. The attack has been widely condemned as one of the deadliest incidents involving children in modern warfare and has intensified calls for accountability.

Last week in Brussels, dozens of activists and protesters gathered outside the Iranian Embassy to commemorate the victims, holding placards reading “The Angels of Minab — Children Who Never Returned Home from School” and “Europe Mourns with Iran,” while calling for an end to the killing of children and greater respect for international humanitarian law.

Speaking outside the embassy, Slovak Member of the European Parliament Milan Uhrík denounced the attack. In an exclusive interview with the Tehran Times this week, Uhrík reiterated his condemnation of the tragedy. The European parliamentarian said attacks on innocent schoolchildren must be unequivocally condemned and that civilian deaths demand international attention. He also stressed that the European Union’s credibility depends on the consistent and non-selective application of international humanitarian law, particularly in the protection of children. The full interview follows below.

At the memorial outside the Iranian Embassy in Brussels, you strongly condemned the Minab school attack. What did you observe at that gathering that shaped your understanding of the tragedy and its emotional impact on Europe?

The memorial was marked by deep grief, solidarity, and a strong sense of urgency. There were families, activists, and members of the diaspora standing together in silence, many visibly shaken by the attack on innocent schoolchildren. It was a powerful reminder of the need to condemn terror and defend human dignity. Regardless of any politics or geopolitics, such attacks need to be condemned, and the lives of children need to be protected all around the world.

Dozens of activists attended the memorial with messages such as “Europe Mourns with Iran.” How do you assess the role of these activists in exposing the Minab tragedy and pushing European institutions to take the issue seriously?

The tragedy in Minab should not be ignored or reduced just to headlines. The presence of these people, testimonies, and symbolic gestures gave a human face to the suffering of the victims. It reminded European institutions that civilian deaths, especially those of children, demand international attention.

What message do you hope the memorial sends to the families of the victims in Iran, especially the parents of the schoolgirls who never returned home?

No parent should ever have to bury a daughter who left for school and never returned home. Beyond politics, this is a human tragedy, and every victim deserves remembrance, dignity, and a credible search for truth and accountability.

Field reports mention missile debris with American markings. What obligations would this place on the European Union regarding accountability and transparency?

MEP Milan Uhrík: EU Credibility eroded by double standards after US strike on Minab schoolchildren

Students at the University of California, Berkeley, hold a candlelight vigil for the schoolchildren killed in the US airstrike on Shajareh Tayyebeh elementary school 

If credible investigations confirm the presence of missile debris with these markings, it would raise questions about the chain of supply, oversight, and compliance with international law. If weapons linked to this production were used in an unlawful strike against civilians, institutions should demand clarity, ensure proper scrutiny of arms transfers, and reaffirm that humanitarian law applies equally to everyone.

You have compared the Minab attack to patterns of civilian targeting in Gaza, Lebanon, and Beirut. How does this incident fit into that broader pattern of military behavior?

The tragedy reflects a deeply troubling pattern we have witnessed in several recent conflicts, where civilian areas, including schools, hospitals, residential neighborhoods, and critical infrastructure, have repeatedly become sites of mass casualties. These incidents raise urgent concerns about proportionality, distinction between civilian and military targets, and the protection of noncombatants under international law.

You have criticized the EU for “passivity” and “double standards.” What prevents European institutions from applying the same human rights standards to all conflicts, including those involving US or Israeli actions?

Too often, the credibility of European human rights policy is weakened by geopolitical considerations and selective political courage. These principles must be applied consistently, regardless of whether violations are committed by adversaries, allies or strategic partners. Otherwise, it creates the perception of the mentioned double standards.

Do you believe the EU’s reluctance to confront Washington and Tel Aviv undermines Europe’s credibility when it speaks about protecting civilians and international law?

The credibility of the EU is weakened when its commitment to international law appears selective or inconsistent. Consistency is essential for maintaining trust in the international legal order and in Europe’s own declared values.

One of the Tehran Times’ most viral headlines was “Trump: Look Them in the Eye,” accompanied by a front-page photo of the children killed in the Minab school attack. Do you believe European media have failed to give adequate attention to the deaths of the schoolgirls? If so, what explains this silence?

MEP Milan Uhrík: EU Credibility eroded by double standards after US strike on Minab schoolchildren

I do believe that many media outlets have not devoted the same level of sustained attention to the deaths of these schoolgirls as they would to comparable tragedies elsewhere. Part of the reason is geopolitical sensitivity and the tendency to view conflicts through strategic narratives. Most of the media space here in Europe is also shaped by political priorities, editorial caution, and concerns about challenging dominant international actors.

What reforms do you believe are urgently needed in Europe’s approach to protecting children in conflict zones?

The European Union needs structural and institutional reforms. In the manner of foreign policy and diplomacy, the bloc needs a more consistent framework without double standards, with more concentration on the protection of children, oversight of arms transfers, and humanitarian monitoring. As we say about the protection of children, this topic should be a non-negotiable principle of human approach applied to all conflicts without exception.

Direct talks with Israel can’t guarantee Lebanon’s security: senior journalist

Al-Mayadeen’s deputy chief says Israel is using the truce for normalizing selective violence

TEHRAN - Bahia Halawi, the deputy general manager at Al-Mayadeen, believe that direct negotiations between Lebanon and Israel with the mediation of the U.S. cannot guarantee Lebanon’s long-term security as Israel maintains occupation, pressure, and repeated violations of ceasefire.

“When one side continues military operations while simultaneously demanding political concessions, the process risks becoming coercive rather than genuinely diplomatic,” Halawi tells the Tehran Times.

She says, “Lebanon’s long-term security depends not only on talks, but on enforceable guarantees.” 

Recently, the U.S. has hosted two rounds of ambassador-level talks between Israel and Lebanon, with a third round scheduled for May 14–15 in Washington.  The first round took place on April 14, and the second on April 23. Both were held in Washington and involved the U.S. facilitating direct discussions between the two countries.

Halawi says the U.S., which is Israel’s closest ally, cannot serve as a neutral mediator, saying Washington “fails to address the structural causes of instability or to establish a genuinely balanced framework rooted in international law, sovereignty, and equal accountability.”


The following is the full text of the interview:

In your assessment, how have Western and mainstream international media framed the recent Israeli attacks on Lebanon, particularly those that resulted in the deaths of hundreds of civilians? What key elements of the story do you believe are underreported or systematically omitted?

Western and mainstream international media often frame Israeli attacks on Lebanon through a security-first lens: Israel “responds,” “targets Hezbollah,” or “acts against threats,” while Lebanese civilian deaths appear as secondary consequences rather than the central story, often portrayed merely as collateral damage. It is also important to note the repeated emphasis on Israeli military “warnings” and “alerts,” even though many attacks affecting civilians occurred without meaningful or effective warning mechanisms.

This framing tends to underreport the human scale of the attacks, the destruction of civilian infrastructure, the repeated displacement of communities, and the continuation of strikes even after ceasefire announcements. The overall coverage frequently fails to convey the scale of destruction taking place on the ground, reducing widespread devastation to fragmented security updates. Add to that the terminology and language used when reporting on Lebanese victims. The framing adopted by much of the Western and international media often follows the same formula: “two Lebanese killed,” “a score of casualties,” or “several dead.” But killed by whom? Who carried out these actions? Why is the perpetrator so often absent from the headline, forcing readers to dig into the second or third line of the piece to discover that it was Israel?

Yet when the situation is reversed, the language suddenly becomes direct and explicit. This discrepancy is neither arbitrary nor accidental. This is a deliberate editorial framing to shape how audiences perceive whose lives are considered politically or emotionally significant. We don't get to read stories about Lebanese casualties. Their lives are not viewed as worthy. There is also a systematic omission of the broader context: the history of Israeli violations, the asymmetry of military power, the long-term impact on Lebanese society, and the legal and ethical questions surrounding proportionality and collective punishment. 

In addition, there is a historical and cultural dimension that receives very little attention internationally, particularly regarding repeated attacks on southern Lebanese towns with deep Christian historical and religious significance. Churches, monasteries, shrines, cemeteries, and family homes in these regions are tied to generations of collective identity and spiritual life, clearly absent in the Western media.


The killing of Lebanese journalist Amal Khalil has drawn attention to the risks faced by media professionals in conflict zones. Based on your experience, does this incident reflect a broader pattern of targeting journalists, or is it treated internationally as an isolated case?

Israel has been systematically targeting journalists and media outlets in Lebanon and Palestine, thus the killing of Amal Khalil should not be treated as an isolated tragedy. Journalists covering Israeli military actions are exposed not only to the dangers of Israeli aggression but also to direct and deliberate targeting. Reports stated that Amal Khalil’s killing was a “double-tap” strike, while press freedom organizations highlighted her long record of field reporting from southern Lebanon.

Internationally, however, such cases are often individualized: one journalist, one incident, one investigation. This fragmented treatment prevents the broader pattern from being fully acknowledged. The real question is not only why Amal Khalil was killed, but why journalists in Lebanon and Gaza repeatedly become part of the battlefield itself.

At Al Mayadeen, we have experienced this reality first-hand. We lost colleagues who were carrying out their journalistic duty, including two young females, Farah Omar and Fatima Ftouni, who were killed by Israel while reporting from southern Lebanon.

We also witnessed the injury and targeting of other journalists in the field. These are not isolated episodes detached from one another; they point to an environment in which the protections theoretically granted to journalists in conflict zones are repeatedly failing in practice whenever we are dealing with Israel.

What becomes especially dangerous is the normalization of this reality. When the killing of journalists generates temporary outrage but little accountability, it creates a new reality where media workers operating in these regions can be targeted without meaningful consequences.

There have been previous documented cases of journalists being killed in Israeli strikes in Lebanon. How do you assess the level of accountability in such cases?

Accountability has been extremely weak. The case of Reuters journalist Issam Abdallah is a clear example. Human Rights Watch said the Israeli strike that killed him and wounded six other journalists was a deliberate attack on civilians and therefore a war crime; UNIFIL also found that an Israeli tank fired at clearly identifiable journalists. 

Yet, despite investigations by Reuters, Amnesty, HRW, and press freedom groups, there has been no meaningful accountability. Even U.S. lawmakers later stated that Israel had not held anyone accountable for the 2023 strike. 

 Despite ceasefire announcements, Israeli strikes have continued. How do you interpret this coexistence of diplomacy and escalation from a media and strategic communication perspective?

The coexistence of ceasefire language and continued strikes is not a contradiction; it is part of the strategy. Diplomacy becomes the language of de-escalation, while military action continues to shape the facts on the ground. From a media perspective, this creates a dual narrative: officials speak of calm, negotiations, and security arrangements, while civilians experience bombardment, displacement, and fear.

Strategically, it allows Israel to maintain military pressure while benefiting from the political legitimacy of mediation. The ceasefire then becomes not a full halt to violence, but a framework within which selective violence is normalized. 

We have already seen this pattern in Gaza, so none of this is new. Yes, there may be a so-called “ceasefire,” but the killing, famine, displacement, and destruction continue. The reality on the ground did not suddenly change simply because the headlines did. What changed most is the media attention and the language used to describe what is happening. As international focus faded, the coverage became less urgent and more detached, even though the suffering remains. Terms that once reflected the scale of the catastrophe were gradually replaced with softer, more bureaucratic language. 

Do you believe that direct negotiations between Lebanon and Israel can realistically contribute to ensuring Lebanon’s long-term security, particularly in light of ongoing military tensions?

Direct negotiations cannot guarantee Lebanon’s long-term security if they take place under conditions of ongoing fire, occupation, pressure, and repeated violations. Negotiation, in principle, can be a tool of stabilization. But when one side continues military operations while simultaneously demanding political concessions, the process risks becoming coercive rather than genuinely diplomatic.

Lebanon’s long-term security depends not only on talks, but on enforceable guarantees: respect for sovereignty, an end to violations, protection of civilians, and credible accountability mechanisms. Without these conditions, negotiations may temporarily manage the crisis — or create the impression of stability — but they will not address the structural roots of insecurity.

In the Lebanese case specifically, it becomes even more critical to consolidate and make use of every available domestic point of strength before entering any negotiation process, whether political, institutional, social, or strategic.

Internal fragmentation has historically been one of the main vulnerabilities that external actors attempt to exploit. Therefore, Lebanon must work preemptively to block any internal divisions, proxy dynamics, or pressure points that counterparties could use to drag the country into a weaker negotiating position or impose arrangements that do not reflect genuine sovereignty or long-term national interests.

How do you assess the role of the United States as a mediator between Lebanon and Israel? In your view, to what extent is this mediation genuine and effective?

The United States presents itself as a mediator, but its credibility is inevitably shaped and limited by its longstanding strategic and historical alignment with Israel. Washington clearly possesses significant leverage and the ability to pressure Israel when it chooses to do so. However, this leverage is rarely exercised in a sustained, balanced, or unconditional manner, particularly when it comes to restraining escalation or enforcing accountability without broader strategic calculations or political returns.

So the issue is not whether the United States has influence. It clearly does. The deeper question is how that influence is deployed and toward what objectives. In many instances, U.S. mediation appears less like neutral conflict resolution and more like a form of crisis management aimed at containing escalation while preserving Israel’s strategic freedom of maneuver.

This is why many in the region perceive American mediation as reactive rather than transformative. It often succeeds in managing moments of tension, shaping diplomatic optics, or preventing total collapse, but it fails to address the structural causes of instability or to establish a genuinely balanced framework rooted in international law, sovereignty, and equal accountability.

Another important issue to point out is the role of the United States in supplying Israel with the weapons, military aid, intelligence support, and funding that allow it to sustain its military operations. How can a party genuinely mediate a conflict while simultaneously arming and politically backing one side throughout it?

A mediator, in principle, is expected to maintain some degree of balance and impartiality. Yet the U.S. has consistently positioned itself as Israel’s closest ally, not only militarily but also diplomatically. Time and again, Washington has used its veto power at the UN Security Council to shield Israel from international accountability, block resolutions calling for meaningful action, or dilute criticism directed at Israeli policies and military conduct.

Because of this, many people in the region do not view the U.S. role as true mediation, but rather as political management of the conflict in a way that protects Israeli interests first and foremost. At times, there may be public calls for “restraint” or symbolic criticism directed at Israel, but these rarely translate into concrete pressure, consequences, or real measures capable of changing the situation on the ground.

How do you interpret the U.S.–Israel relationship in ongoing regional conflicts, and is it driven more by Israeli influence on U.S. policy or by Israel serving as a strategic instrument of American foreign policy?

The U.S.-Israel relationship is not a simple one-way relationship. It is neither a case of Israel fully dictating U.S. policy, nor one in which Israel acts merely as a passive instrument of Washington. Rather, it is a deeply entrenched strategic partnership shaped by overlapping geopolitical interests, domestic political dynamics, military-industrial ties, intelligence sharing, and longstanding ideological commitments. In many cases, the way this relationship is projected internationally reflects coordination and orchestration rather than purely spontaneous alignment or reactive policymaking.

Israel often functions as a forward strategic asset for U.S. influence in the region.
At the same time, successive Israeli governments have demonstrably influenced U.S. regional policy through lobbying networks, political pressure, intelligence framing, and the creation of faits accomplis that later become incorporated into broader American calculations. At the same time, when the United States itself becomes directly involved in wars or large-scale regional escalation, priorities can become more nuanced. While the starting point may be mutual strategic benefit, the consequences of conflict — economically, politically, militarily, and socially — also affect both countries differently just like we are witnessing in the context of the war on Iran. Domestic considerations inside each state then begin influencing how policymakers manage escalation, absorb costs, or redefine objectives.

This should not necessarily be interpreted as a rupture or divergence between the two allies, but rather as each side attempting to manage the implications of conflict according to its own national interests and internal pressures. The domestic factor is becoming increasingly important, particularly within the United States itself after the genocide in Gaza.

One of the most significant long-term shifts today is generational. Among younger Americans — especially Gen Z and segments of younger voters — we are witnessing a noticeable transformation in sentiment regarding Israel, U.S. foreign policy, and military involvement in the region. Public opinion trends increasingly show skepticism toward unconditional support, greater emphasis on human rights discourse, and stronger “America First” domestic priorities.

This matters strategically because today’s younger voters are tomorrow’s policymakers, legislators, journalists, and opinion-makers. Over time, these shifts may not dismantle the U.S.-Israel alliance, but they could reshape the terms under which it operates, introducing greater pressure inside the United States to prioritize American domestic interests and costs over open-ended regional commitments or “Israel First” strategic calculations.

UAE spent $6m on Epstein-linked reputation firm to suppress ambassador report

The United Arab Emirates paid more than $6 million to a secretive U.S. reputation management firm tied to whitewashing a client’s link to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, to manipulate Google search results and suppress damaging reporting about its ambassador to Washington, Yousef Al-Otaiba, according to a New York Times investigation.

The revelation appears in a wider investigation into Terakeet, a Syracuse-based firm that specializes in search engine optimization and online reputation management for powerful clients facing public scrutiny, Middle East Monitor reported. 

While the New York Times investigation focuses mainly on Terakeet’s failed attempt to repair the reputation of Goldman Sachs general counsel and supporter of Israel, Kathryn Ruemmler, over her links to Epstein, one of its most striking revelations concerns the firm’s work for the UAE and its long-serving ambassador in Washington, Yousef Al-Otaiba.

An advocate of Israel, Ruemmler’s Washington legal career saw her make the case for legislation to combat the anti-BDS (Boycott Divestment and Sanctions) campaign. In 2019, she and former U.S. solicitor general Paul Clement were cited as having written legal opinions arguing that legislation linked to President Donald Trump executive order on anti-Semitism did not violate the First Amendment, even though critics warned that such measures could be used to suppress campus criticism of Israel and support for BDS. 

Terakeet’s work for the UAE is said to have begun in July 2019 and continues to this day. Much of its formal work focused on promoting tourism in the Emirates. However, former employees told the paper that Al-Otaiba was concerned about a 2017 article published by The Intercept, written by Ryan Grim, now co-founder of Drop Site News, which reported that the ambassador had once had ties to sex workers and traffickers.

Rather than challenge the report directly, Terakeet allegedly worked to bury it.

The Times reported that a small team at Terakeet was tasked with pushing Grim’s article off the first page of Google search results. The account manager, Kenneth Schiefer, reportedly relocated from Syracuse to Washington for more than a year to work in person with Al-Otaiba at the UAE embassy, avoiding a digital trail of emails and text messages between them.

Terakeet then established a personal webpage for Al-Otaiba and generated flattering online profiles emphasizing his leadership and diplomatic credentials. The firm supplied these profiles to institutions linked to the ambassador, including the Milken Institute, the Special Olympics and Harvard’s Kennedy School, as well as to The Marque, a paid digital profile directory.

The Times also reported that Terakeet used an anonymous editor handle, VentureKit, to create what it described as a fraudulent “sock puppet” account, Quorum816, to add positive information about Al-Otaiba to his Wikipedia page in 2020. Wikipedia later reversed the edits and suspended both accounts.

The purpose of the operation was clear: to create enough favorable and “differentiated” content about the UAE ambassador to force damaging reporting lower down in Google search results. According to the Times, the effort succeeded. By 2023, The Intercept article had dropped to page two of Google results. Today, for most users, it appears on page five.

The UAE is said to have paid Terakeet more than $6 million between 2020 and 2022 for the work.

The wider New York Times investigation centres on Terakeet’s work for Goldman Sachs and Ruemmler, a former White House counsel under President Barack Obama. Terakeet reportedly sought to address what an internal memo described as her “association risk problem” over her ties to Epstein.

Senior Terakeet figures reportedly discussed how to promote favorable material about Ruemmler so that at least 80 percent of the first 30 Google results would be positive. The firm created or planned personal websites, LinkedIn pages and multiple biographical profiles intended to appear above stories about her meetings and correspondence with Epstein.

But the effort ultimately failed. New documents released by the U.S. House Oversight Committee and later by the Justice Department reportedly revealed extensive references to Ruemmler in Epstein-related records, including emails in which she used affectionate terms for him and discussed travel, gifts and legal advice. Ruemmler announced in February that she would resign from Goldman Sachs.

‘Israel tried to drag Saudi Arabia into war with Iran to impose regional dominance’

Saudi Arabia’s former ambassador to the United States, Saudi Prince Turki Al Faisal, said Israel had tried to drag Riyadh into a war with Iran, but Saudi Arabia had avoided such a confrontation through “wisdom and foresight”.

In an article published in Arab News, Prince Turki accused Israel of attempting to involve Saudi Arabia in the conflict with Iran in order to impose its regional dominance. He also voiced concern over what he described as the Israeli government’s “adventurism”.

“Had the Israeli plan to ignite war between us and Iran succeeded, the region would have been plunged into ruin and destruction,” he said.

Prince Turki praised Saudi Arabia’s handling of the consequences of the war launched by the United States and Israel against Iran, saying the kingdom had played a key role in preventing a wider regional escalation.

The article said that, for Saudi Arabia, Israel was “no longer a pillar of security”, but rather “a source of problems” that threatens Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s strategic vision.

According to Saudi Arabia and Oman, which strongly opposed the war from the outset, “Israel dragged Trump into this dangerous adventure”. The article said Saudi messaging in this regard aligned with a growing view in the United States that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had pushed Washington towards the war.

It added that even if Netanyahu and Trump were “full partners”, Israel was still widely seen as the main source of instability.

Prince Turki also said that “Netanyahu’s strategic blindness is very clear”, adding that Saudi Arabia had likely concluded, even before the war began, that Trump and Netanyahu would fail to achieve their goal of toppling Iran’s ruling system.