{"id":505,"date":"2026-05-08T22:46:18","date_gmt":"2026-05-08T22:46:18","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/rudymartinez.wtf\/stuff-and-nonsense\/2026\/05\/08\/the-rest-of-the-world-report-may-8-2026-evening-edition\/"},"modified":"2026-05-08T22:46:18","modified_gmt":"2026-05-08T22:46:18","slug":"the-rest-of-the-world-report-may-8-2026-evening-edition","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/rudymartinez.wtf\/stuff-and-nonsense\/2026\/05\/08\/the-rest-of-the-world-report-may-8-2026-evening-edition\/","title":{"rendered":"The Rest of the World Report | May 8, 2026 \u2014 Evening Edition"},"content":{"rendered":"<h3>The View From Everywhere Else <\/h3>\n<p><em>Weekday morning and evening editions. Saturdays once. Good news on Sundays. All sources labeled.<\/em><\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<p>1. THE CEASEFIRE THAT IS AND ISN\u2019T: US AND IRAN TRADE FIRE IN THE STRAIT<\/p>\n<p>The ceasefire between the United States and Iran is simultaneously holding and breaking down. As of Friday evening, no one on either side has formally declared it over.<\/p>\n<p>On Thursday, US and Iranian forces exchanged fire in the Strait of Hormuz in the most significant military confrontation since the April 8 truce took effect. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.aljazeera.com\/news\/2026\/5\/8\/us-iran-clash-in-hormuz-as-war-escalates-what-happened-why-it-matters\" target=\"_blank\">US Central Command said<\/a> its forces intercepted \u201cunprovoked Iranian attacks\u201d on three Navy destroyers transiting the strait and struck Iranian military facilities on Qeshm Island in what it described as self-defense. Qeshm is strategically positioned at the entrance to Hormuz and serves as the primary platform for Iran\u2019s asymmetric naval operations. Iranian state media reported explosions on the island and said air defense systems had intercepted drones over the area. By Thursday evening, Iran\u2019s Press TV reported that the situation along the southern coast \u201cis back to normal.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Iran\u2019s version diverges sharply. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.aljazeera.com\/news\/liveblog\/2026\/5\/8\/iran-war-live-trump-says-ceasefire-still-in-effect-as-iran-us-clash\" target=\"_blank\">Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told Al Jazeera<\/a> that the US had struck two vessels near the strait and attacked civilian areas along Iran\u2019s southern coast. He called it a \u201creckless military adventure\u201d and added that \u201cevery time a diplomatic solution is on the table, the US opts for escalation.\u201d Iran\u2019s military said it retaliated by targeting US naval vessels near the strait. CENTCOM said no US ships were hit.<\/p>\n<p>Which side fired first remains disputed. What is not disputed: the exchange came one day after Trump described negotiations with Iran as producing \u201cvery good talks\u201d and suggested a deal was within reach. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the US was expecting Tehran\u2019s formal response to a 14-point memorandum of understanding by Friday. That response, routed through Pakistani mediators, had not been publicly confirmed at publication time.<\/p>\n<p>Trump, posting on Truth Social Thursday, said the ceasefire remained in place. He also warned Iran of a \u201cmuch higher level and intensity\u201d bombing campaign if it rejected the proposed terms. Rubio, at a press conference, said Washington was acting in self-defense and that the MOU remained on the table. Iran\u2019s Foreign Ministry said its side was still reviewing the document but that the US attacks had complicated the review.<\/p>\n<p>Political scientist Chris Featherstone, speaking to <a href=\"https:\/\/www.aljazeera.com\/news\/2026\/5\/8\/us-iran-clash-in-hormuz-as-war-escalates-what-happened-why-it-matters\" target=\"_blank\">Al Jazeera<\/a>, described the exchange as potentially serving a diplomatic function: each side demonstrating resolve while both remain invested in reaching a framework. Former US diplomat Donald Jensen called it \u201ccontrolled escalation,\u201d saying both nations are \u201ctrying to show their resolve\u201d while attempting to settle on a framework. Whether that framing holds into the weekend depends on what Tehran\u2019s response to the MOU actually says.<\/p>\n<p>Oil markets swung sharply across the week. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.rigzone.com\/news\/brent_oil_price_futures_understating_physical_market_stress-08-may-2026-183642-article\/\" target=\"_blank\">Brent hit $108 at one point Wednesday<\/a> before collapsing to $96 on deal optimism, then rebounding above $100 on news of the Hormuz exchange. The International Energy Agency warned this week that the war is disrupting roughly 14 million barrels per day of global oil supply, and that any post-conflict production recovery would proceed slowly, regardless of when a deal is reached.<\/p>\n<p>\ud83c\udf0d <strong>TRANSLATOR\u2019S NOTE:<\/strong> The international press is not reading this as a ceasefire breakdown. Not yet. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.aljazeera.com\/news\/2026\/5\/8\/iran-war-day-70-us-iran-trade-fire-in-hormuz-amid-ceasefire-tensions\" target=\"_blank\">Al Jazeera\u2019s Kimberly Halkett, reporting from Washington<\/a>, described the exchange as a \u201ctit-for-tat\u201d dynamic unfolding in parallel with active diplomacy, a pattern that has characterized the entire post-April 8 period. The framing in regional and international media is that both sides want a deal but neither can afford to be the one that wants it more. What distinguishes Thursday\u2019s exchange from previous incidents is the location: Qeshm Island, the operational heart of Iran\u2019s Hormuz strategy, and the timing, 24 hours before Tehran\u2019s response to the MOU was expected. Whether that timing was deliberate signal, accident, or provocation depends on whose account you accept.<\/p>\n<p>\ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8 <strong>WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW:<\/strong> The ceasefire that markets have been pricing since April 8 has survived another serious test. For now. The week\u2019s whipsaw in oil prices, from $108 to $96 to above $100 in roughly 48 hours, is a direct read-out of how fragile that pricing is. The MOU on the table, according to two US officials who spoke to Axios, would declare an end to the war and open a 30-day negotiating window covering Hormuz, Iran\u2019s nuclear program, and sanctions relief. Nothing is agreed. But Axios reported Thursday, citing US officials, that this is the closest the two sides have been to an agreement since the war began. Iran\u2019s response, how CENTCOM characterizes it, and whether Trump\u2019s patience holds will determine whether Friday\u2019s quiet is a turning point or a pause.<\/p>\n<p><em>Sources: <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.aljazeera.com\/news\/2026\/5\/8\/us-iran-clash-in-hormuz-as-war-escalates-what-happened-why-it-matters\" target=\"_blank\">Al Jazeera<\/a><\/em><em> (Qatar, state-funded\/editorially independent \u2014 Hormuz exchange details, analyst reaction, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2026-05-08\/us-iran-clash-near-hormuz-as-response-on-proposed-deal-awaited\" target=\"_blank\">Bloomberg<\/a><\/em><em> (markets and business \u2014 oil price movements, MOU status, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.axios.com\/2026\/05\/06\/iran-us-deal-one-page-memo\" target=\"_blank\">Axios<\/a><\/em><em> (US \u2014 MOU details, proximity to agreement assessment, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.washingtonpost.com\/national-security\/2026\/05\/07\/us-strikes-iran-ceasefire\/\" target=\"_blank\">Washington Post<\/a><\/em><em> (US, centre-left \u2014 Rubio remarks, Trump ceasefire statement, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.rigzone.com\/news\/brent_oil_price_futures_understating_physical_market_stress-08-may-2026-183642-article\/\" target=\"_blank\">Rigzone<\/a><\/em><em> (energy industry \u2014 Brent price volatility analysis, confirmed this session)<\/em><\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<p>2. THE FOURTH SON<\/p>\n<p>Khalil al-Hayya has buried four sons. The first two died in Israeli strikes on Gaza in 2008 and 2014. The third, his son Hammam, was killed in September 2025 when Israel struck a building in Doha housing the Hamas negotiating delegation. Six people died in that attack, including a Qatari police officer, though al-Hayya himself survived. On Thursday morning, his fourth son, Azzam, died at al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City from wounds sustained in an Israeli airstrike on the Daraj neighborhood the previous night.<\/p>\n<p>Khalil al-Hayya is Hamas\u2019s chief negotiator, leading his organization\u2019s indirect talks with Israel, mediated by Egypt, Qatar, Turkey, and the US Board of Peace envoy Nickolay Mladenov. At the time of the strike, he was in Cairo for exactly those talks. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.aljazeera.com\/news\/2026\/5\/7\/israeli-attack-on-gaza-kills-one-person-wounds-son-of-hamass-al-hayya\" target=\"_blank\">He spoke to Al Jazeera<\/a> before his son\u2019s death was confirmed: \u201cOur sons are the sons of the Palestinian people. My son and the sons of others are all children of our people without distinction.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/neoskosmos.com\/en\/2026\/05\/08\/news\/israel-kills-son-of-top-hamas-peace-talks-negotiator\/\" target=\"_blank\">Reuters confirmed<\/a> that Azzam al-Hayya died Thursday morning after surgery failed to save him. Hamas official Basem Naim confirmed the death. Hamas spokesperson Hazem Qassem told Reuters: \u201cThis repeated policy of targeting the leaders and the sons of leaders will not succeed in extorting a political position from our Palestinian people, nor the Hamas leadership, nor its negotiating delegation.\u201d The Israeli military offered no immediate comment.<\/p>\n<p>Nine Palestinians were killed in Israeli attacks on Gaza that day. Three others, members of the civilian police force, were killed Thursday in separate drone strikes. Also killed Wednesday, in a targeted attack on his vehicle in western Khan Younis, was <a href=\"https:\/\/www.aljazeera.com\/news\/2026\/5\/6\/israeli-strike-kills-colonel-in-gaza-police-force-say-palestinian-medics\" target=\"_blank\">Naseem al-Kalazani<\/a>, the head of the anti-narcotics force in Khan Younis. At least 17 others were wounded in that strike. Israel has intensified attacks on Gaza\u2019s Hamas-run police force in recent weeks, which it says Hamas uses to reinforce its hold on the territory.<\/p>\n<p>According to Gaza\u2019s Health Ministry, at least 837 Palestinians have been killed and over 2,400 wounded since the October 10, 2025 \u201cceasefire\u201d agreement took effect. ROTWR renders that word in quotation marks because Israeli strikes have continued throughout. The total killed in Gaza since October 2023 now exceeds 72,600, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.aljazeera.com\/news\/2026\/5\/7\/israeli-attack-on-gaza-kills-one-person-wounds-son-of-hamass-al-hayya\" target=\"_blank\">according to Al Jazeera<\/a>. The world\u2019s attention, as <a href=\"https:\/\/www.dropsitenews.com\/p\/gaza-khalil-al-hayya-son-killed-israel-ceasefire-talks\" target=\"_blank\">Drop Site News reported from Gaza City<\/a>, has largely shifted to Iran. The killing in Gaza continues at a pace that no longer commands international front pages.<\/p>\n<p>\ud83c\udf0d <strong>TRANSLATOR\u2019S NOTE:<\/strong> The story landed differently outside the United States. Arab and regional outlets led with the pattern: four sons killed across eighteen years, the most recent while their father was in active ceasefire negotiations. They paired it with the September 2025 Doha strike as immediate context. That attack killed people inside the Qatari capital, including a Qatari police officer, while al-Hayya was meeting with mediators. The current strike follows the same logic: applied pressure to a negotiating team through its families. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.turkiyetoday.com\/region\/azzam-al-hayya-4th-son-of-hamas-negotiator-khalil-al-hayya-killed-in-israeli-strike-3219529\" target=\"_blank\">T\u00fcrkiye Today<\/a>, drawing on Anadolu Agency, placed the killing directly in the context of the Cairo talks and Trump\u2019s Board of Peace process, noting that the Hamas delegation was at that moment meeting with Mladenov. That framing, negotiations proceeding in Cairo as Gaza burns, is largely absent from American coverage.<\/p>\n<p>\ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8 <strong>WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW:<\/strong> Consider the symmetry the rest of the world is considering. Israel\u2019s chief negotiating counterpart in US-mediated Gaza talks has now lost four sons to Israeli strikes, the most recent while he was in Cairo at American-sponsored negotiations, working toward the second phase of Trump\u2019s Gaza plan. The documented facts raise a question American readers can answer for themselves: what would Washington\u2019s response be if an adversary killed the son of the US\u2019s chief negotiator while talks were under way? The question is not rhetorical. It is the question the region is asking. Hamas has said the killings will not alter its negotiating position. Whether they alter Washington\u2019s calculus about what kind of pressure its ally is applying, and to whom, is a different matter.<\/p>\n<p><em>Sources: <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.aljazeera.com\/news\/2026\/5\/7\/israeli-attack-on-gaza-kills-one-person-wounds-son-of-hamass-al-hayya\" target=\"_blank\">Al Jazeera<\/a><\/em><em> (Qatar, state-funded\/editorially independent \u2014 death confirmed, al-Hayya statement, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/neoskosmos.com\/en\/2026\/05\/08\/news\/israel-kills-son-of-top-hamas-peace-talks-negotiator\/\" target=\"_blank\">Reuters via Neos Kosmos<\/a><\/em><em> (wire \u2014 death confirmed, Qassem statement, Cairo talks context, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.turkiyetoday.com\/region\/azzam-al-hayya-4th-son-of-hamas-negotiator-khalil-al-hayya-killed-in-israeli-strike-3219529\" target=\"_blank\">T\u00fcrkiye Today via Anadolu Agency<\/a><\/em><em> (Turkey, state-affiliated \u2014 full family history, Doha 2025 context, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.dropsitenews.com\/p\/gaza-khalil-al-hayya-son-killed-israel-ceasefire-talks\" target=\"_blank\">Drop Site News<\/a><\/em><em> (independent \u2014 Gaza City on-ground reporting, confirmed this session)<\/em><\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<p>3. WHAT AMERICA LOOKS LIKE FROM CEBU<\/p>\n<p>Ten Southeast Asian nations gathered in the Philippines on Friday for the 48th ASEAN Summit. The agenda was shaped almost entirely by a war their governments did not start, did not support, and are now paying for.<\/p>\n<p>Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr opened the summit in Cebu by saying the US-Israeli war on Iran had been felt across the region \u201cthrough higher living costs\u201d and had \u201cthreatened livelihoods\u201d both at home and among the millions of Southeast Asians working in the Middle East. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.aljazeera.com\/economy\/2026\/5\/8\/southeast-asias-leaders-confront-fallout-from-iran-war-at-asean-summit\" target=\"_blank\">Al Jazeera reported<\/a> that the bloc\u2019s joint statement is expected to stress international law, national sovereignty, and freedom of navigation, in careful language that stops well short of naming the United States but leaves little ambiguity about what the summit is responding to.<\/p>\n<p>The energy picture across Southeast Asia is severe. Thailand depends on the Strait of Hormuz for roughly half its energy needs; gas prices are up and tourist arrivals are down as the price of jet fuel has soared. Vietnam, which imports significantly from Kuwait, is watching its 10 percent growth target erode. The Philippines itself declared a state of emergency in late March over fuel shortages. Indonesia and Malaysia have deployed subsidies to buffer the shock. Malaysia has done so more comfortably than most, given its extensive economic ties with Iran and Tehran\u2019s decision to permit Malaysian ships to transit the strait. A Thai-flagged commercial vessel was struck in the strait earlier in the conflict, putting domestic political pressure on Bangkok that has not eased.<\/p>\n<p>How extraordinary the ordinary has become was illustrated this morning off South Korea\u2019s west coast. A Malta-flagged tanker, the <em>Odessa<\/em>, arrived off the port city of Seosan carrying one million barrels of Gulf crude, representing between 35 and 50 percent of South Korea\u2019s daily consumption, after transiting the Strait of Hormuz in mid-April. <a href=\"https:\/\/abcnews.com\/Business\/wireStory\/oil-tanker-arrives-south-korea-after-passing-strait-132770947\" target=\"_blank\">AP reported<\/a> that HD Hyundai Oilbank, which operates one of South Korea\u2019s largest refineries, confirmed the arrival. The delivery took three weeks to reach its destination from the strait. South Korea normally imports more than 60 percent of its crude through Hormuz; it has introduced petroleum price caps for the first time in decades and instructed refiners to divert naphtha exports to domestic use. One tanker completing a transit that would have been unremarkable ten weeks ago is, today, significant enough to warrant a wire service dispatch.<\/p>\n<p>The labor dimension is less visible in American coverage but central to the region\u2019s governments. Millions of Southeast Asians work in the Gulf states, in construction, domestic work, healthcare, and hospitality. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.npr.org\/2026\/05\/07\/nx-s1-5813503\/affected-by-the-iran-war-residents-in-southeast-asian-countries-voice-their-concerns\" target=\"_blank\">As NPR reported this week from Thailand<\/a>, remittances from those workers are a significant share of national income for the Philippines, Indonesia, Vietnam, and others. When Gulf economies contract, when construction projects freeze, when expat workers are sent home, that money stops flowing. The war\u2019s human cost in Southeast Asia is not measured in casualties. It is measured in wire transfers that are no longer arriving.<\/p>\n<p>The geopolitical signal from the summit may carry more weight than the economic one. The 2026 State of Southeast Asia survey by Singapore\u2019s ISEAS Yusof Ishak Institute, the region\u2019s most authoritative annual polling of its elite, found that <a href=\"https:\/\/foreignpolicy.com\/2026\/05\/06\/iran-war-southeast-asia-philippines-vietnam-indonesia-china-united-states-geopolitics-economics\/\" target=\"_blank\">52 percent of respondents said they would side with China over the United States<\/a> if forced to choose. That figure was lower before the war. Senior researcher Shahriman Lockman of Malaysia\u2019s Institute of Strategic &amp; International Studies told NPR the dynamic plainly: \u201cTrump has really made it very easy to basically blame America for a lot of things.\u201d His colleague Aries Arugay put it in starker terms, saying the US had shown no sensitivity \u201cto the impact of its unilateral actions to some of its Southeast Asian partners, including allies.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>China has moved to fill the space. <a href=\"https:\/\/thesoufancenter.org\/intelbrief-2026-april-15\/\" target=\"_blank\">The Soufan Center noted<\/a> that Beijing is positioning itself as a responsible energy partner, investing in ASEAN\u2019s renewable energy transition, the ASEAN Power Grid project, and solar and battery infrastructure across the region, even as it has quietly restricted its own diesel and fertilizer exports to protect domestic supply. The message China is broadcasting to ASEAN: we are the stable partner. The message the war has done more to reinforce than any Chinese propaganda campaign could have managed on its own.<\/p>\n<p>\ud83c\udf0d <strong>TRANSLATOR\u2019S NOTE:<\/strong> The ASEAN summit is receiving substantive coverage across regional Asian media that has not translated into American front pages. <a href=\"https:\/\/asialink.unimelb.edu.au\/diplomacy\/insights\/impacts-iran-war-southeast-asia\/\" target=\"_blank\">The Bangkok Post<\/a>, <a href=\"https:\/\/asialink.unimelb.edu.au\/diplomacy\/insights\/impacts-iran-war-southeast-asia\/\" target=\"_blank\">Jakarta Post<\/a>, and regional outlets are leading with the economic emergency: fuel shortages, remittance collapse, growth forecast revisions. The geopolitical shift, the 52 percent ISEAS figure, is being treated in Asian policy circles as a genuine inflection point, not a blip. The Foreign Policy analysis published this week put it directly: Southeast Asia is one of the world\u2019s clearest theaters of constrained agency, where security leans toward Washington and economic gravity leans toward Beijing. The war has accelerated that tension in China\u2019s favor, and the Cebu summit is the first formal multilateral expression of that.<\/p>\n<p>\ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8 <strong>WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW:<\/strong> Ten US treaty allies and partners, nations that host American bases, buy American weapons, and have anchored American Pacific strategy for decades, gathered today specifically to manage the fallout from an American war. None of them were consulted before it started. All of them are paying for it now, in fuel prices, in stranded workers, in growth forecasts revised downward. And in the region\u2019s most authoritative survey of its own leadership class, a majority said they\u2019d choose China over the United States in a forced choice, a number that was lower before February 28. The war\u2019s strategic costs in the Pacific are not being debated in Washington. They are being tallied in Cebu.<\/p>\n<p><em>Sources: <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.aljazeera.com\/economy\/2026\/5\/8\/southeast-asias-leaders-confront-fallout-from-iran-war-at-asean-summit\" target=\"_blank\">Al Jazeera<\/a><\/em><em> (Qatar, state-funded\/editorially independent \u2014 ASEAN summit opening, Marcos remarks, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/abcnews.com\/Business\/wireStory\/oil-tanker-arrives-south-korea-after-passing-strait-132770947\" target=\"_blank\">AP via ABC News<\/a><\/em><em> (wire \u2014 South Korea tanker arrival, HD Hyundai Oilbank confirmation, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.npr.org\/2026\/05\/07\/nx-s1-5813503\/affected-by-the-iran-war-residents-in-southeast-asian-countries-voice-their-concerns\" target=\"_blank\">NPR<\/a><\/em><em> (US \u2014 on-ground reporting from Thailand, expert quotes, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/foreignpolicy.com\/2026\/05\/06\/iran-war-southeast-asia-philippines-vietnam-indonesia-china-united-states-geopolitics-economics\/\" target=\"_blank\">Foreign Policy<\/a><\/em><em> (US policy journal, centrist \u2014 ISEAS survey figure, regional geopolitical analysis, confirmed this session); <\/em><em><a href=\"https:\/\/thesoufancenter.org\/intelbrief-2026-april-15\/\" target=\"_blank\">Soufan Center<\/a><\/em><em> (non-partisan think tank \u2014 China energy positioning, labor migration impact, confirmed this session)<\/em><\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<p><strong>NUMBERS AT PUBLICATION<\/strong> <br \/>\ud83c\uddee\ud83c\uddf7 Iran: 3,636+ killed (HRANA floor estimate \u2014 FROZEN since April 7, pre-ceasefire; ceasefire in effect since April 8; post-ceasefire strike activity ongoing but not yet tallied by HRANA) <br \/>\ud83c\uddf1\ud83c\udde7 Lebanon: At least 2,715 killed, 8,353 injured (Lebanese Ministry of Public Health, as of May 6) <br \/>\ud83c\uddee\ud83c\uddf1 Israel: At least 26 killed, ~7,800 injured (Al Jazeera live tracker, as of April 27) <br \/>\ud83c\udf0d Gulf states: At least 28 killed (Al Jazeera live tracker \u2014 figure stable, no update found this session) <br \/>\ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8 US military: 14 KIA confirmed (<a href=\"https:\/\/GlobalSecurity.org\" target=\"_blank\">GlobalSecurity.org<\/a> operational report, May 7 \u2014 includes KC-135 crew; 13 was the March 28 CENTCOM figure) <br \/>\ud83d\udee2\ufe0f Brent crude: $100.30\/barrel (rebounding after mid-week drop on deal optimism; Hormuz clash reversed Thursday losses) <br \/>\u26fd US gas: $4.55\/gallon (editor-confirmed)<\/p>\n<p><em>Sourcing note: Iran civilian casualties sourced to HRANA (US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency), a floor estimate relying on activist networks inside Iran. Lebanon figures from Lebanese Ministry of Public Health. Methodology differs across sources; figures should not be treated as directly comparable.<\/em><\/p>\n<h3>WATCH LIST<\/h3>\n<p>\ud83d\udd34 <strong>Iran\u2019s MOU response \u2014 still waiting.<\/strong> Tehran\u2019s formal answer to the 14-point US framework was expected Friday through Pakistani mediators. It has not arrived. Silence through the weekend is itself a signal: internal deliberation, factional deadlock, or deliberate delay as leverage. A response that arrives Monday moves markets. Continued silence, against the backdrop of Thursday\u2019s Hormuz exchange, raises the probability of resumed escalation.<\/p>\n<p>\ud83d\udd34 <strong>Hormuz: next 48 hours.<\/strong> Thursday\u2019s exchange established a new precedent: direct fire between US and Iranian forces while both sides maintain the ceasefire is technically intact. How CENTCOM characterizes any further contact, and whether Iran\u2019s IRGC draws its own lines on Qeshm operations, determines whether \u201ccontrolled escalation\u201d holds as a framework or breaks.<\/p>\n<p>\ud83d\udfe1 <strong>Lebanon-Israel Washington talks, May 14-15.<\/strong> Third round confirmed by the State Department. Lebanese officials tell Al Jazeera the goal is a non-aggression pact and full Israeli withdrawal, not a peace treaty. Israel\u2019s Beirut strike Wednesday, the first since the April 16 ceasefire, will be sitting in the room. Watch for whether the US presses Israel on de-escalation as a precondition for progress.<\/p>\n<p>\ud83d\udfe1 <strong>Gaza: second phase talks.<\/strong> The Hamas delegation was in Cairo this week with Mladenov pushing Trump\u2019s Board of Peace plan into its second phase: Israeli withdrawal, reconstruction, and Hamas disarmament. Hamas has said it will not engage seriously on phase two until Israel fulfills phase one obligations, including halting attacks. Thursday\u2019s killing of al-Hayya\u2019s son, and the ongoing pace of strikes, makes that precondition harder to satisfy.<\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<p><em>\u201cWhenever the people are well informed, they can be trusted with their own government.\u201d \u2014 Thomas Jefferson, 1789<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The View From Everywhere Else Weekday morning and evening editions. Saturdays once. Good news on Sundays. All sources labeled. 1. THE CEASEFIRE THAT IS AND ISN\u2019T: US AND IRAN TRADE FIRE IN THE STRAIT The ceasefire between the United States and Iran is simultaneously holding and breaking down. As of Friday evening, no one on [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_oxygen_hide_in_design_set":false,"_oxygen_tags":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[143],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-505","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-patreon"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/rudymartinez.wtf\/stuff-and-nonsense\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/505","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/rudymartinez.wtf\/stuff-and-nonsense\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/rudymartinez.wtf\/stuff-and-nonsense\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/rudymartinez.wtf\/stuff-and-nonsense\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/rudymartinez.wtf\/stuff-and-nonsense\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=505"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/rudymartinez.wtf\/stuff-and-nonsense\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/505\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/rudymartinez.wtf\/stuff-and-nonsense\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=505"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/rudymartinez.wtf\/stuff-and-nonsense\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=505"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/rudymartinez.wtf\/stuff-and-nonsense\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=505"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}