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‘Disposable’ operatives for hire are a new menace for western countries

When on Friday a 32-year-old Iraqi was brought before a court in New York to be charged with planning to attack Jewish community sites in the US, a curtain was suddenly lifted on a corner of a shadowy world. The detention of Mohammed Saad Baqer al-Saadi in Turkey last week revealed rare details of Iran’s efforts to use terrorism to sow discord among communities in Europe, the UK and the US – but also the outlines of an uncertain and threatening future. Al-Saadi is a senior commander of the Baghdad-based Kataib Hezbollah, a powerful militia with close links to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). He is accused of being connected to 18 separate attacks including firebombings of synagogues and community centres in Belgium, the Netherlands and the UK. Among them also is the stabbing in Golders Green, which left two Jewish men badly injured last month. The criminal complaint against al-Saadi, who has not yet entered a plea and whose lawyer says is a political prisoner, describes a new form of long-distance instigation of violent terrorist acts that has left western states scrambling. Once, a hostile secret service had to send a skilled and experienced operative to commit assassination, sabotage or terrorism thousands of miles away, or activate networks of sleeper agents, or find and train ideologically committed recruits ready to betray their country. Such schemes took years to prepare. Now spymasters can use a series of proxies, each thousands of miles apart, to find candidates for recruitment. Their new operatives might be less capable than their predecessors but are easier to find in significant numbers. “You don’t have to be in even the same time zone as your agents … They are disposable … They are cannon fodder, useful idiots in the genuine sense of the word,” said Tom Keatinge, director of the Centre for Finance and Security at London’s Royal United Services Institute. Though there have been some notorious examples of terrorists for hire before – such as the notorious Illich Ramírez Sánchez, better known as Carlos the Jackal, in the 1970s or Sabri Khalil al-Banna, better known as Abu Nidal a decade later – such mercenaries have long been the exception not the norm. Spies – or their preferred proxies – can now just put out a call on social media and recruit – for a few hundred pounds, euros or dollars – someone who may not even have any sympathy whatsoever with their cause. Encrypted messaging platforms, social media and virtual currencies have created new ways such recruits can be directed and given vital resources. In recent Iranian attacks in Europe paltry payments have been offered for crimes that could earn a convicted offender decades in prison. Al-Saadi is alleged to have used cryptocurrency to pay an FBI undercover agent $3,000 as an advance. Another $7,000 was to follow if attacks on a synagogue and two Jewish community centres in the US had gone ahead – and been recorded. “There have been discussions in recent years about hiring criminals who provide a service … so we are now entering an era of terrorism as a service,” said Peter Neumann, a leading expert in terrorism at King’s College London. Recruitment has occurred on Snapchat and Telegram, frequently in groups or channels where people trade drugs or organise other criminal activity. Sometimes, individuals involved in organised crime are enlisted to recruit low-level operatives who often appear to have little or no idea of what they are getting themselves into. “It is still terrorism, it still has a political agenda and is an attack meant to terrorise a particularly community, whether that is the Jewish community or an entire nation but the perpetrator is not necessarily radicalised as such. One big question is whether it still makes sense to talk about radicalisation of a perpetrator if they are just interested in getting paid,” said Neumann. Outside western Europe and the US, Iranian secret services or their proxies often look for recruits in communities where some “baseline sympathy” might exist. Last month, the United Arab Emirates said it had broken up a network dedicated to sabotage and terrorism that was linked to Iran. Saudi Arabia and Qatar have made arrests too. Frequently, those detained are from Persian-speaking or Shia Muslim communities. In western Europe and the US, this is harder. The FBI informant that al-Saadi hired to commit attacks was posing as a Mexican drug cartel boss. According to the criminal complaint, al-Saadi told him that the campaign in Europe was “going well”. Russia is the principal pioneer of such tactics in recent years, even if unconventional proxy warfare has been part of the armoury of Iran since the immediate aftermath of the revolution in 1979. Experts talk of Moscow’s campaign of “hybrid warfare” in Europe, which has included arson attacks on warehouses, strikes on railways carrying aid to Ukraine, and vandalism designed to foment social unrest. Like the Iranian campaign, the aim here too is to disorientate, distract and divide. Neither Moscow nor Tehran expect that such acts alone will bring total victory but this is not a world where anything is as clear as winning or losing. Every burning synagogue, bombed kosher restaurant or midnight alarm at a US bank is a low-cost win. It is the targeted communities – and the willing idiots – who pay the price.

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Iran makes new proposal for deal to end war, regional officials say

Iran has made a new proposal for a deal to definitively end the war in the Middle East, officials in the region said on Monday, though there was no sign of any immediate breakthrough in the stalled peace negotiations. A ceasefire has paused most violence after six weeks of US-Israeli airstrikes and Iranian retaliation, but there has been little progress since Donald Trump said the ceasefire was “on life support”, and reports in Israeli media suggest a resumption of hostilities is imminent. Pakistan, which has mediated the discussions since a ceasefire came into effect last month, has shared with the US the new Iranian proposal, said Iran’s foreign ministry spokesperson, Esmail Baghaei, but he gave no details. There were contradictory reports from Islamabad. A Pakistani source appeared pessimistic, telling Reuters that Washington and Tehran “keep changing their goalposts” and that time was running out to find agreement. Other regional officials said Iran had made or reiterated some concessions, including a long-term suspension of its nuclear programme and transfer of its highly enriched uranium to Russia, and a phased reopening of the strait of Hormuz. The semi-official Tasnim news agency, citing an unnamed source close to the country’s negotiation team, reported on Monday that the US had agreed to waive sanctions on Tehran’s oil exports during the negotiation period. There was no independent confirmation of the claims, and the negotiations have been marked by a series of misleading statements made by Iran, the US and mediators to try to publicly frame the talks to their advantage. Rhetoric on both sides has remained defiant in recent days. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) threatened on Monday to impose permits on internet cables passing through the strait of Hormuz, while other officials have said the waterway would remain under Iranian “management”, implying Tehran would impose tolls on shipping, which Washington has said it cannot accept. Axios reported that Trump was expected to meet national security advisers on Tuesday to discuss options for resuming military action. At the weekend, the US president said in a post on Truth Social “the Clock is Ticking” for Iran, adding: “They better get moving, FAST, or there won’t be anything left of them. TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE!” Baghaei said Tehran was prepared for all scenarios. “As for their threats, rest assured that we are fully aware of how to respond appropriately to even the smallest mistake from the opposing side,” he told a televised weekly press conference. Though US-Israeli airstrikes have ceased and Iranian retaliation has been scaled back, drones have been launched from Iran towards Gulf countries hosting US military bases. One drone strike caused a fire at a nuclear power plant in the United Arab Emirates, officials there said on Sunday, and Saudi Arabia reported intercepting three drones. Iran stepped up attacks on the UAE this month after Trump announced a naval mission to try to open the strait of Hormuz, which he suspended after 48 hours. Analysts say the conflict is now deadlocked, with both sides facing significant pressure to bring the war to an end but without sufficient incentives to make painful concessions necessary for a deal. Trump, who faces midterm elections in November that could go badly for his Republican party, held talks with the Chinese president, Xi Jinping, last week in Beijing without securing an indication from China that it would help resolve the conflict. White House officials worry that Trump’s foreign policy gamble in Iran and its effect on US fuel prices may derail Republican chances of keeping control of Congress at a time when voters are more concerned with the cost of living than conflicts abroad. Iran faces a deepening economic crisis and potential damage to its oil infrastructure. Inflation is soaring and some officials fear a surge in popular discontent with the radical regime. The Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), a US-and Netherlands-based monitoring group, said it had documented at least 4,023 arrests in Iran between 28 February, when the war started, and 9 May. Charges included espionage, threats to national security and communicating or sharing content related to the conflict with foreign media, it said. Ahmad-Reza Radan, Iran’s national police chief, said on Sunday that more than “6,500 traitors and spies” linked with the “enemy” had been arrested since anti-government protests peaked in January. The authorities described those demonstrations as riots and put them down with a crackdown that left many thousands dead, according to rights groups. Radan was quoted by the Irna news agency as saying: “The process of identifying and arresting elements associated with the enemy continues, and the police have not stopped their actions in the field of confronting rioters.” There has been growing alarm over executions in Iran. Rights groups have said that since the start of the war, Iran has executed 26 men seen as “political prisoners” – 14 charged over January protests, one over 2022 demonstrations and 11 accused of links to banned opposition groups. Six men have been hanged by Iran on charges of spying for Israel since the war began, according to reports in Iranian official media. HRANA said it had documented at least 3,636 fatalities, including 1,701 civilians, due to US-Israeli attacks on Iran in the war. Israel carried out new airstrikes in southern Lebanon on Monday, Lebanese security sources and the state news agency said, while Hezbollah announced new attacks on Israeli forces, continuing the war in Lebanon despite the extension of a US-backed truce first announced by Trump on 16 April. A 45-day ceasefire extension announced after a third round of US-hosted talks between Lebanon and Israel on Friday began at midnight. With Reuters and Agence France-Presse

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Middle East crisis live: Trump warns ‘clock is ticking’ for Iran to reach peace deal

The US has put forward a temporary waiver of sanctions on Iran’s oil to agree to a peace deal and reopen the strait of Hormuz, Iran’s semi-official Tasnim news agency has reported. The offer has yet to be confirmed and would not be in place until a final agreement is reached between the two countries, it said, citing a source close to the negotiations. Donald Trump has issued an extreme warning to Iran to quickly agree to a peace deal with the US or face devastation. As Washington struggles to break an impasse on ending the war, the US president said on his Truth Social platform on Sunday: “For Iran, the Clock is Ticking, and they better get moving, FAST, or there won’t be anything left of them. TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE!” Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said Monday their forces had struck groups linked to the United States and Israel in the western Iranian province of Kurdistan, near the border with Iraq. In a statement carried by the ISNA news agency, the Guards said groups from “northern Iraq and acting on behalf of the US and the Zionist regime were attempting to smuggle a large shipment of American weapons and ammunition” into Iran. Israeli strikes have killed more than 3,000 people in Lebanon since the start of the war between Hezbollah and Israel on 2 March, the health ministry said on Monday, after an 17 April ceasefire failed to stop the fighting. “The total cumulative toll of the aggression from 2 March to 18 May is now as follows: 3,020 martyrs and 9,273 wounded,” the ministry said, with 211 people aged 18 and under and 116 healthcare workers among the dead. Iran’s top security body has announced the formation of a new body to manage the strait of Hormuz, which Tehran has effectively closed to countries it deems hostile to it – and wants to charge ships to traverse. On its official X account, the Supreme national security council shared a post for the Persian Gulf Strait Authority (PGSA) saying it would provide “real‑time updates on the Hormuz Strait operations and latest developments”. Lebanese president Joseph Aoun said Monday that he would do the “impossible” in order to stop the war with Israel, after a ceasefire and direct talks between the countries failed to end the fighting. “The framework that Lebanon has set for the negotiations consists of an Israeli withdrawal, a ceasefire, the deployment of the army along the border, the return of the displaced, and economic aid,” Aoun said in a statement. Gaza’s health ministry said in its latest update that at least six people were killed and 40 others injured in Israeli attacks across the territory over the past day. The health ministry says 877 people have been killed in Israeli attacks since the ceasefire in October 2025. Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi has posted to his Telegram account saying that he has held a phone conversation with his Saudi Arabian counterpart, Faisal bin Farhan al Saud, in which they discussed the latest “regional developments” and issues “related to the current diplomatic process” (between Tehran and Washington). Iraq’s foreign ministry said Monday that the country’s air defence systems had not detected any drones launched from its territory toward Saudi Arabia. Late Sunday, Saudi Arabia said it had intercepted and destroyed three drones that entered from Iraqi airspace, adding that it “reserves the right to respond at the appropriate time and place.” Oman’s foreign ministry has condemned the drone strike that caused a fire at the perimeter of UAE’s Barakah nuclear power plant on Sunday. In a statement shared to X, the ministry expressed its solidarity with the UAE but stressed that it rejected all “hostile and escalatory acts” as it urged for dialogue to address regional issues and called for international law to be respected by all parties. One of Indian billionaire industrialist Gautam Adani’s companies will pay the US Treasury $275 million to settle a probe into whether it violated US sanctions against Iran, the Treasury said in a statement on Monday. The US Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) said the agreement had been reached with Adani Enterprises Limited (AEL), part of the billionaire’s sprawling conglomerate of companies. Ryanair said it has “almost zero concerns” about its jet fuel supplies this summer amid fears over widespread cancellations linked to the Iran war but warned that holidaymakers booking their flights later this year could face higher fares. The budget airline’s chief executive, Michael O’Leary, said Europe had now found plenty of alternative sources of jet fuel, but persistent consumer uncertainty had led to lower summer bookings than usual, keeping fares down.

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Greenlanders are not ‘experimental subjects’, says minister as she decries US doctor’s visit

Greenland’s government has criticised the arrival of a US doctor in Nuuk alongside Donald Trump’s special envoy, Jeff Landry, saying that Greenlanders are not “experimental subjects”. Joseph Griffin said he had joined the delegation as a volunteer to “assess the medical needs” of the Arctic island, which the US president has repeatedly threatened to invade. Greenland’s health minister, Anna Wangenheim, immediately condemned his presence, describing it as “deeply problematic”. “The health sector in Greenland has historically been the subject of geopolitical interest,” she said in a statement hinting at deep sensitivities in the now largely autonomous territory, which as a Danish colony experienced repeated health-related abuses of Indigenous Greenlandic people. “A society with great distances, a chronic shortage of health professionals and a demographic development that pressures the system makes us vulnerable – and that is precisely why it is deeply problematic when people with a political mission to make Greenland part of the United States send a so-called ‘volunteer doctor’ to Nuuk to ‘assess our needs’. “Greenlanders are not experimental subjects in a geopolitical project. “Our healthcare system must be developed through respectful cooperation and Greenlandic self-determination, not through political envoys with hidden strategic interests.” Speaking on Monday after a meeting with Landry, who is also governor of Louisiana, and the US ambassador to Denmark, Kenneth Howery, the Greenlandic prime minister, Jens-Frederik Nielsen, also criticised the doctor’s presence. He said: “If you want to learn about health conditions in Greenland, you have to contact Greenland through the right channels,” he said. Griffin’s presence in Greenland appears to be the latest US attempt to intervene in the island’s healthcare system after Trump said in February that a hospital ship was “on its way” – an offer refused by Nuuk. The ship never arrived. The US delegation’s visit comes as talks between the US and Greenland over the territory’s future continue. Trump’s repeated assertion that the US must acquire or control the island sparked tension between Washington and Copenhagen, both founding Nato members, and more broadly across Europe. Nielsen said the meeting with Howery and Landry had been “conducted with mutual respect and in a good tone” but that the Greenlandic government had made it clear their land was not for sale. “We are committed to continuing the dialogue and finding the best solutions for Greenland. We have reiterated that the Greenlandic people are not for sale, and our right to self-determination is not up for discussion,” he said. The island’s foreign minister, Múte B Egede, said: “We have some red lines. We are not going to sell Greenland. We are going to own Greenland forever.” Landry and Howery are scheduled to attend a business conference, Future Greenland, on Tuesday and Wednesday, and Howery to inaugurate the new US consulate in Nuuk on Thursday. Healthcare is a particularly sensitive subject in Greenland after Danish doctors’ past abuses of local people. Last year Mette Frederiksen, who was then the Danish prime minister and is now acting prime minister amid ongoing coalition talks, issued an official apology to victims of the intrauterine device (IUD) scandal and announced a reconciliation fund. Thousands of women and girls, some as young as 12, were fitted with IUDs without their knowledge or consent between 1966 and 1970 in an apparent attempt to reduce Greenland’s population.

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Pressure on Mexico after two ex-officials surrender to US over alleged cartel ties

Pressure is mounting on Claudia Sheinbaum, Mexico’s president, after two former top officials from the country’s Sinaloa state – both members of her Morena party – gave themselves up to US authorities over alleged ties to the Sinaloa cartel. The state’s former security minister, Gerardo Mérida Sánchez, crossed the border into Arizona last week and was taken into custody by US marshals, Mexico’s security ministry said. Sinaloa’s former finance minister, Enrique Díaz Vega, was taken into custody in New York. Both Mérida and Díaz were charged last month as part of the indictment of 10 Sinaloa officials including Governor Rubén Rocha Moya for alleged ties to the powerful Sinaloa cartel, accusing them of aiding in the massive importation of illicit drugs into the United States. Moya has called the charges “completely untrue and without any basis”. Meanwhile, Sheinbaum has resisted extraditing the former governor, repeatedly requesting more evidence from US authorities. On Monday, Sheinbaum maintained her defiant stance on national sovereignty, and denied any links between her government and organized crime. “We’re not going to cover for anyone under any circumstances,” she said. “But why [is the US] so interested in Mexico? They should address their own problems there first. They need to focus on their own issues, first and foremost, drug consumption and the flow of weapons.” But with two high-ranking officials now in US custody, it will become increasingly difficult for Sheinbaum to protect both her party and Moya, despite his being a close ally of her mentor, former president Andrés Manuel López Obrador. “There is a growing perception in Washington that she’s playing for time and kicking the can down the road, but reality is going to overtake her,” said Arturo Sarukhán, a former Mexican ambassador to the US. “There’s now a greater possibility that others among those 10 will try and strike a bargain with US law enforcement and then you have no control as to what information is being shared with whom, and that could be a ticking timebomb for Morena.” The fact that the two former top officials surrendered rather than waiting for extradition, also offers weight to the justice department’s initial indictment, analysts said. “If they were empty accusations, without any basis, then no way you’d turn yourself in,” said Eduardo Guerrero, a Mexican security analyst. Meanwhile, having both former officials in custody will help strengthen Washington’s efforts to build a case against the Sinaloa governor, according to Guerrero. “Both of them know a lot about Rocha Moya,” he said. “They’re going to offer up a whole lot of evidence.” Sheinbaum is also likely to contend with further accusations against officials within her party – and soon. Last week, Terry Cole, the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) administrator, testified before the US Senate and said that Rocha’s indictment was “just the start”. On Friday, the New York Times reported that the Trump administration had instructed federal prosecutors to use terrorism statutes to go after corrupt Mexican officials. The directive, according to the New York Times, was announced by associate deputy attorney general Aakash Singh. “We should be tripling the number of indictments of corrupt government officials who are using their power and their positions to enable terrorists and monsters who traffic in misery and poison,” Singh told colleagues, according to an unnamed source cited by the New York Times. For months, Sheinbaum had appeased Washington by acquiescing to Trump’s demands, sending thousands of troops to the border to control immigration and handing over nearly 100 cartel members to face justice in the United States. But relations began to fray in recent weeks over revelations that CIA agents have been operating in Mexico without the federal government’s knowledge, including reports that the US agency was involved in the assassination of a mid-level cartel member in March. This increased pressure from Washington by going after current officials, including those within the governing Morena party, has pushed Sheinbaum and her relationship with Washington to the limit. “We’re on the brink of an abyss, this is being the proverbial dominoes folding one after the other,” said Sarukhan.

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Angela Merkel says Europe ‘not making sufficient use of diplomatic potential’ to engage with Russia – as it happened

… and on that note, it’s a wrap for today! Former German chancellor Angela Merkel said the European Union was “not making sufficient use of its diplomatic potential,” as she supported the bloc’smilitary support for Ukraine, but suggested Europe should not cede the peace talks to US president Donald Trump and get involved diplomatically (18:09). Her comments come after Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy suggested last night that the time has come for Europe to pick its preferred negotiator for eventual peace talks with Russia (9:52, 11:32). The discussion comes as experts point to Ukraine’s progress in the fight against Russia, with Moscow unable to advance significantly in recent weeks (11:10). In other news, Greenlandic prime minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen said the US position on Greenland has not changed after meeting with Donald Trump’s envoy to the island, Jeff Landry (16:54). Poland has urged the US to provide clarity on its force posture in Europe amid confusion over its decision to cancel deployment of 4,000 US troops to Poland (14:03, 16:10). The hantavirus-hit cruise ship MV Hondius has arrived at the Port of Rotterdam, where it will be disinfected and its crew members will go into quarantine (10:00, 10:32). Latvian opposition leader Andris Kulbergs has been designated to try form a new government after Evika Siliņa’s resignation last week after a recent drone incursion incident (13:28). If you have any tips, comments or suggestions, email me at jakub.krupa@theguardian.com. I am also on Bluesky at @jakubkrupa.bsky.social and on X at @jakubkrupa.

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How realistic is threat of Iran charging to use internet cables under strait of Hormuz?

Could undersea cables – the sinews of the global internet – become the next frontier in the US-Israel war against Iran? Last week, two Iranian state-linked media channels, Tasnim and Fars, suggested Iran could leverage its power over the strait of Hormuz, the 25-mile (40km) stretch between Iran and Oman, by charging US tech companies to use the internet cables that traverse the strait. Tasnim implied this could be a lucrative proposition, netting Iran hundreds of millions of dollars each year. At least seven cables lie beneath the waters of the strait, many of them vital to the massive AI buildout under way in Gulf countries. But what exactly is Iran proposing, and is it a realistic course of action? What has Iran said it will do? Tasnim’s proposal, as it is written, has three parts: first, charge foreign companies’ licence fees to use the subsea cables; second, require “technology giants” (it names Meta, Google, Amazon and Microsoft) to “operate under the laws of the Islamic Republic of Iran”, which probably implies joint ventures‘; and third, monopolise the repair and maintenance of these subsea cables, presumably charging the world for these services. This will “transform the strait of Hormuz into a strategic hub for the generation of legitimate wealth”, it says. All of this, says Tasnim, is legally justified by article 34 of the 1982 UN convention on the law of the sea. This, it says, allows Iran to claim a part of the seabed of the strait of Hormuz as its territory, even as the surface waters are used for international navigation. Do any other countries do this? Not in the same way. Iranian media pointed at the examples of Egypt, which, according to Tasnim, generates between $250m and $400m annually by charging fees on subsea cables. Egypt does charge fees on cables that cross its territory, and in some cases jointly owns and operates these cables through Telecom Egypt. Its revenue figures for this are not public, although they are estimated to be a significant portion of Telecom Egypt’s total income. The difference, however, is that the cables in question actually pass through the territory of Egypt, said Doug Madory, an expert in internet infrastructure at Kentik. In fact, many of them cross Egypt overland, alongside highways and oil pipelines. Can Iran actually charge fees on undersea cables, and how would that work? Highly doubtful. From the legal perspective, there are sanctions considerations, said a former US state department official specialising in the global internet. It also would be impossible to charge specific companies, as there is no way to separate out their internet traffic. Most of the cables in question do not terminate in Iran; they pass under the sea, miles offshore. “The only way they could extract tolls for ships or submarine cables is through threats,” said Madory. “That is not something we have seen before.” How easy would it be for Iran to cut these subsea cables? “A suicide mission,” said Madory. News stories abound about suspicious cable cuts in the Baltic Sea and the Red Sea, some suggesting that slicing subsea cables could be a future wartime tactic for the Houthis, Russia or China. However, Madory said many of these stories were “hyperbolic”. Most cable cuts are likely to be the result of accidents – dragging anchors – and not intentional sabotage. As for Iran, it is very unlikely that it could cut cables under the strait of Hormuz unnoticed; it simply does not have the technology. It would have to do so overtly, under constant US air patrols. What would be the consequences of a cable cut in the strait of Hormuz? Such a cut would be disruptive to internet traffic in the Gulf – but may not have great impact on the rest of global connectivity. This is because the cables under the strait of Hormuz mostly just service Gulf countries, said Madory – unlike the cables that run through the Suez and Egypt, which carry much significant traffic between Europe and Asia. Iraq and Iran, for example, have alternative overland cables they can use for connection. In theory, a subsea cable cut could be easily remedied. Cable cuts happen all the time; there are a few each week, said Madory, and more than a dozen repair ships are constantly at work around the world repairing the cables. However, if Iran were to threaten those repair ships, they may not take the risk: “Cable repair ships do not operate under fire.” That could make the disruption more long-lasting.

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Xi prepares to welcome Putin to China four days after hosting Trump

Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin exchanged “congratulatory letters” on Sunday ahead of the Russian president’s visit to Beijing this week, four days after Donald Trump left China after a high-stakes summit. Xi said bilateral cooperation between Russia and China had “continuously deepened and solidified”, Chinese state media reported, with this year marking the 30th anniversary of the two countries’ strategic partnership. Putin will arrive in China on Tuesday evening and meet Xi on Wednesday morning, the Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov told reporters on Monday. Ushakov said the two leaders would discuss all areas of bilateral relations, including the proposed Power of Siberia 2 gas pipeline. An article published in the state media tabloid the Global Times on Monday said the visits of the US and Russian presidents showed Beijing was “fast emerging as the focal point of global diplomacy”. It said: “The tightly sequenced visits have sparked widespread attention, with analysts noting that it is extremely rare in the post-cold war era for a country to host the leaders of the US and Russia back to back within a week.” China’s deepened relationship with Russia has been a cause for concern in the west, particularly since Moscow launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. China’s economic and diplomatic support for Russia since then has helped to sustain the conflict, according to western diplomats and analysts. The two leaders have met on more than 40 occasions, far outstripping Xi’s encounters with western leaders. China and Russia’s bilateral trade has soared to record levels since 2022, with China buying more than one-quarter of Russia’s exports. China’s large purchases of Russian crude oil have supplied Moscow with hundreds of billions of dollars of revenue for the war in Ukraine. Beijing has bought more than $367bn of Russian fossil fuels since the start of the war, according to data collected by the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air. The purchases have supported China’s energy security, which has become especially important since the crisis in the Middle East stopped the shipping of oil through the strait of Hormuz. Neither the war in Ukraine nor the Sino-Russian relationship appeared to feature heavily in Trump’s talks with Xi last week. The Chinese statement about the main bilateral meeting made a brief reference to “the Ukraine crisis” while the US statement did not mention it at all. Instead, the US-China talks appeared to focus on trade, Taiwan and the war in the Middle East, with Trump saying China agreed with him on the importance of reopening the strait of Hormuz. Xi pressed Trump on Taiwan, warning him of the potential for conflict if the issue was not handled properly. Trump left Beijing saying he had not decided whether to approve a multibillion-dollar deal to send US weapons to Taiwan. Halting the sale would be a major win for Beijing, which seeks to take control of the self-governing island, something the majority of Taiwanese oppose. Joseph Webster, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, said in a newsletter: “Taiwan may be the subtext of the Xi-Putin meeting.” Webster said Beijing may be looking to sign more fossil fuel deals with Moscow to ensure its supplies of energy in the event of a future conflict. Expanding Russian oil pipeline capacity to China “would significantly enhance Beijing’s oil security in a Taiwan contingency”, Webster wrote. Russia has been pushing China to move forward with the Power of Siberia 2 gas pipeline, which would add 50bn cubic metres of capacity to the network between the two countries. Additional research by Yu-chen Li