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Explosions rock Bahrain, Dubai, Jordan and Kuwait as war spreads across Middle East | Dubai

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Iran struck the world-famous Fairmont hotel in Dubai, setting the hotel alight, as the war launched by the US and Israel on Iran quickly spread to the rest of the Middle East on Saturday.

Residents watched in shock as an Iranian missile hit the five-star hotel in Dubai’s luxurious Palm Jumeirah area. Social media videos showed fires breaking out near the entrance of the hotel, which led to four people being injured.

One resident said that “everyone is very scared” as the situation in Dubai continued to deteriorate.

“There is footage of missile interceptions all over the city,” they said. “I am packing a suitcase just in case … not that we can leave, because airspace is closed. It is the thing we have all been frightened about happening, and now it has.”

Missile appears to fall in Qatar as Iran launches retaliatory strikes – video

Elsewhere in the Gulf, previously considered oases of stability in the Middle East, similar scenes unfolded.

Within hours of the first US and Israeli bombs being launched, Iran responded with a wide-ranging attack targeting more than six countries, pulling in places that had been previously untouched by the escalating crisis.

In Bahrain, an Iranian drone flew into a high-rise building in what looked like a targeted attack, exploding and engulfing the skyscraper in flames. Earlier, the country’s national security agency was also struck by an Iranian missile.

Social media footage also appeared to show a missile hitting the huge US naval base in Bahrain. In Kuwait, a drone crashed into the country’s main airport, wounding several employees and damaging the facility.

As Iran responded to US and Israeli strikes by bombing the Gulf and Israel, its proxies joined the fray. Bases belonging to the Iran-backed Popular Mobilization Forces in Iraq were struck by either the US or Israel, killing at least two members of the armed Iraqi group Kataib Hezbollah.

The Iran-backed groups responded by coming to its aid, with Kataib Hezbollah and Yemen’s Houthis both warning they would be joining strikes on US military bases across the region.

Smoke rises over a hotel damaged in Dubai’s famed Palm Jumeirah. Photograph: Video Obtained By Reuters/Reuters

Just a few hours into what Washington was calling Operation Epic Fury, fighting had already expanded far beyond the geographic scope of the previous war in Iran in June 2025, which was almost entirely confined to Israel and Iran.

For citizens in the Middle East, the escalating war prompted anxiety and concern.

In Lebanon, gas stations across the country had lines 10 cars deep within an hour of the strikes. People in Beirut airport watched as commercial flights were cancelled, and grocery stores were filled with the more cautious stocking up on essential goods – the memory of the 2024 war with Israel fresh in their minds.

All eyes were on Hezbollah, the Iran-backed group that previously said the killing of Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was a red line.

A statement from the group on Saturday afternoon made no mention of whether it would help its chief patron, Iran, but instead condemned what it described as a violation of the UN charter by the US and Israel.

Many Lebanese dreaded the entry of Hezbollah into the ongoing conflict, fearful of triggering a response from Israel, which has signalled through diplomatic channels that it would unleash a wide-ranging attack against Lebanon in the case of Hezbollah’s involvement.

Explosions rocked the rest of the Middle East as Israel intercepted incoming Iranian ballistic missiles above other countries. In Jordan, fires blazed in the northern city of Irbid as missile shrapnel fell from the sky and caught alight.

The attacks drew condemnation from Arab states around the region for what they called a violation of their sovereignty by Iran. Qatar called the Iranian strikes on its territory a “direct assault on national security”, while it and other Gulf states warned they have the right to respond.

Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi said in an interview with NBC that he told Gulf states “we have no intention to attack them but we are actually attacking the American bases in the act of self-defence”.

Attacking the Gulf states was a line Iran did not cross in past rounds of conflict, with rare attacks on oil infrastructure remaining unclaimed.

Gulf states had previously tried to prevent the Trump administration from attacking Iran, fearful of blowback and unintended consequences destabilising the country of 93 million.

The aftermath of Israel and US strikes in Tehran. Photograph: Amir Kholousi/Isna/Wana/Reuters

Imposing material costs on Gulf states, stable kingdoms unused to wars in their back yards, could be to get the monarchies to put pressure on Trump to halt the bombing campaign.

Some of the ruling families, such as the al-Thani family in Qatar and the crown prince of Saudi Arabia Mohammed bin Salman, have close relationships with Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law, who has a heavy hand in shaping the president’s Middle East policy.

Conversely, some analysts warned targeting the Gulf kingdoms could backfire, alienating voices that were previously lobbying the US to reconsider its military campaign on Iran.



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Heidi Montag reveals vocal cord hemorrhage after ‘Masked Singer’ elimination

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Heidi Montag is opening up about her vocal injury after getting eliminated from “The Masked Singer.”

During a recent interview with Fox News Digital, the 39-year-old former reality star shared how competing on the Fox competition series affected a vocal injury she sustained before appearing on the show, explaining that it worsened during filming and that she would not have been able to continue even if she hadn’t been voted off.

“I had just had a vocal injury. I ended up with a hemorrhage on my vocal cords and I couldn’t talk for like weeks, a week before and weeks after,” she explained. “I’ve been having to have like vocal recovery. I’ve been to several ENTs. So I couldn’t have continued in the competition even if I got voted in. The injury was pretty significant.”

When she first began to feel symptoms of the injury, Montag said she initially “thought I was sick or something,” and that she “couldn’t even talk” because she lost her voice, adding, “It was pretty severe.”

Heidi Montag spotted in the Pacific Palisades in January 2026.

Montag opened up about her vocal injury. (MEGA/GC Images)

In terms of performing for “The Masked Singer,” the reality star said she went on “vocal rest for like a week” and then had to “do sign language and not talk,” in order to sing the songs.

“I couldn’t even rehearse those songs. So I had to just go out there and just give it my all and do what I could, and then I couldn’t talk after,” Montag said. “And then it was painful. Still, right now when I talk, it’s painful.”

WATCH: Heidi Montag had a hemorrhage on her vocal cords which left her unable to speak

She continued: “It feels almost like strep throat, but the hemorrhage is resolved, and now it’s just like I pulled these muscles because the helmet’s so heavy that I was like lifting up and singing, so I just strained it. There is a thing of trying too hard, I learned. Should have just taken it down a notch. It’s my own fault.”

Montag competed on the show as Snow Cone and was eliminated on the Wednesday, Feb. 25 episode after singing the Spice Girls song, “Wannabe.”

Heidi Montag at the AMAs in Las Vegas in May 2025.

Montag competed on the show as Snow Cone. (Taylor Hill/Getty Images)

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“The Hills” star told Fox News Digital that if given the chance, she would “absolutely do it again” and “had been waiting to do the show” and “had been in talks from season one.”

“It was the most positive experience, from production to performing. It was just an incredible, uplifting, fun experience,” she said. “The biggest challenge is that costume. It is so heavy and big, and you can’t see. I mean, thank God for the backup dancers, they’re really like bodyguards moving you around because you can’t really get from place to place.”

“I couldn’t even rehearse those songs. So I had to just go out there and just give it my all and do what I could and then I couldn’t talk after.” 

— Heidi Montag

On the night of her elimination, Montag was joined on stage by her husband, Spencer Pratt, who dressed up as Mr. Snow Cone, which she said meant that she didn’t have to keep it a secret from him, noting that it “would have been challenging.”

WATCH: Heidi Montag ‘would absolutely’ compete on ‘The Masked Singer’ again

When it comes to keeping it a secret from her kids, she explained that she had “been performing for the past year and going to rehearsal and singing, and so they were used to that.”

Heidi Montag and her family posing with Mickey and Minnie at Disney On Ice in December 2025.

Montag said her kids loved watching her perform as Snow Cone. (Charley Gallay/Getty Images for Feld Entertainment, Inc.)

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“They love Snow Cone,” she said of her children. “It is the best thing I’ve ever done. They cheer [it] on it, they were so sad when I was voted off. My older son, who’s eight, was like, ‘I can’t watch.’ I’m like, ‘It’s okay.’ And then I said to him, ‘Do you wish I continued?’ and he’s like, ‘No, because then you wouldn’t have been with us as much.'”

In order to do the show, Montag shared that she “was having to commute to LA several times a week” and sometimes wouldn’t begin driving back home until 11 p.m., adding she was only “sleeping for like four or five hours,” in order to still be able to get her kids ready for school in the mornings.

WATCH: Heidi Montag did not have a hard time keeping her participation on ‘The Masked Singer’ a secret

Montag and her family are one of many families whose homes burned down in the Los Angeles wildfires in early 2025. They have since relocated to Santa Barbara.

The Masked Singer Season 14 airs new episodes on Wednesdays at 8 p.m. ET on FOX, with streaming available the next day on Hulu and Disney+.

Spencer and Heidi Montag at Hulu's Get Real House in April 2025.

Heidi Montag and Spencer Pratt lost their home in the 2025 Los Angeles wildfires. (Monica Schipper/Getty Images)

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With few good strategic options, Iran’s best prospect may be to retaliate while it can | Iran

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Venezula’s Nicholás Maduro was captured. But Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu have chosen a different strategy for Iran: to target and aim to kill the country’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, , and as many other senior regime figures as possible.

Though Iranian military sites and its air defence systems were also targeted by coordinated US and Israeli bombing, beginning in the morning, the most significant attack was on Khamenei’s compound in Tehran.

Film on social media showed heavy plumes of smoke emerging from the site in the capital following the daylight strike, and soon after satellite imagery showed it had been destroyed in what appeared to be a targeted attack.

Khamenei’s fate remains uncertain, but its intention was: an attempt to effect regime change in Iran through bombing and killing with no credible justification in international law. It is a tactic that is disturbingly easy to start, but its results are profoundly uncertain.

Last summer during the 12-day war with Israel, Khamenei had named three potential successors should he be killed. Reports earlier this month indicated that Khamenei had named four layers of succession for key government and military jobs, in an effort to ensure regime survival in the face of a US-Israeli attack.

“There is no sign that the US or anybody else is going to put boots on the ground, so the monopoly of force domestically remains with the Iranian regime,” said HA Hellyer, a senior fellow at the Royal United Services Institute. “The only way that changes [is] if there is an uprising with mass defections.”

Explosions were heard in Tehran, Isfahan, Kermanshah, Qom and other large cities in a broad assault that began in the morning, a deliberate change from a more normal pattern of night-time strikes, to achieve a measure of operational surprise.

Hundreds of targets were struck in multiple waves, the Israeli military said, with little evidence of opposition from what was left of Iran’s air defences – already depleted after last summer’s 12-day war and hit again on Saturday. Political and military targets were struck, with 200 Israeli fighter jets striking at air defence and ballistic launch sites, according to the country’s military.

Over the past month, the US has amassed two carrier strike groups in the region – the USS Abraham Lincoln in the Arabian Sea, joined recently by the USS Gerald R Ford in the eastern Mediterranean. Each carrier has an air wing of about 75 combat aircraft, while allied destroyers and submarines have Tomahawk cruise missiles available, each with a range of about 1,000 miles or more.

Iran, recognising it was faced with an existential crisis for its regime, responded by quickly launching ballistic missiles and drones against Israel and US allies and bases in several countries in the region: Jordan, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, the UAE, and Saudi Arabia, immediately drawing six other countries into the conflict.

Though the UK was not party to the US-Israeli assault – clearly believing the initial attack on Iran to be illegal – it has already been drawn in, supplying fighter jets to protect regional allies.

Initial signs are that the fight, as a traditional military contest, is extremely one-sided. Alma, an Israeli military thinktank, reported that Iran had targeted Israel with 25 waves of attack by 5.30pm local time, while Israel’s Magen David Adom ambulance service reported 89 peoplehad been wounded

One person was killed in Abu Dhabi from falling debris from an intercepted missile, a fire broke out at Fairmont hotel in Dubai after it was hit. So far it appears casualties from Iran’s regional retaliation have been limited, though all it takes is for one missile to get through somewhere across the regional war.

A missile was filmed smashing into the US naval base in Bahrain – the level of damage it caused as yet unclear – followed by a single Shahed-type delta winged drone targeting a radar dome. Both hits were surprising given that the US had airlifted Patriot air defence systems into regional bases over the past month in anticipation.

Iran, meanwhile, appeared to be taking heavier casualties. A primary school for girls in Minab, southern Iran, was struck, killing 85, according to the country’s Tasnim news agency, a grim reminder that so called precision bombing is often not accurate, civilians the victims.

By the evening Iran appeared to be trying to enforce a closure of the strait of Hormuz, through which an estimated fifth of the world’s oil supply passes from Iran and Gulf nations. Warnings were being broadcast to merchant shipping on VHF radio, according to the UK’s Maritime Trade Organisation.

Iran could attempt to mine the two 1.9 miles wide shipping lanes with Russian Kilo class and midget Ghadir submarines, though it is unclear such an operation, if attempted, would be successful. The strategy is sufficiently obvious that the US is almost certain to have submarines available to prevent or disrupt a mine laying operation.

The early indications are that the US and Israel plan a bombing campaign that could last weeks, while Iran runs down its estimated stock of 2,000 ballistic missiles. Its ability to retaliate at scale may only last a few days, while the US can run in excess of 125 bombing missions a day from each of its aircraft carriers alone.

Iran has few good strategic options now it is under sustained attack. The regime’s best prospect may be to try to endure the waves that are likely to come, continue to retaliate while it can, and try to retain control of the streets given that the US and Israel have so far expressed no intention of mounting a ground invasion.

If that is the case, it is not obvious how the war will end. “In short, the US and Israel have started this war with vague and unachievable objectives, with no international law base, and little or no support from Gulf states or other US allies,” said Lord Ricketts, former UK national security adviser.



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George Conway suggests US is a ‘terrorist state’ after striking Iran

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Former conservative lawyer and outspoken critic of President Donald Trump, George Conway, suggested Saturday that the United States is a “terrorist state” hours after it joined Israel in carrying out military strikes against Iran.

“Perhaps the terrorist state with nuclear weapons is …. {checks notes} … the United States of America?” Conway wrote on X.

The U.S. and Israel launched a joint military offensive against Iran on Saturday, dubbed “Operation Epic Fury,” after Trump warned of possible U.S. intervention if Tehran refused a sweeping nuclear deal and as deadly anti-regime protests unfolded.

George Conway

George Conway attends the 139th Easter Egg Roll on the South Lawn of the White House on April 17, 2017, in Washington, DC. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Before Conway suggested his own country was acting as a “terrorist state,” he posted similar criticisms of the U.S. on X.

In one post, Conway said he was “hopeful” that the “war in Iran will bring needed democratic change to … the United States of America.”

“Remember, the dim-witted megalomaniacal narcissistic psychopath who has just started a major regional war in the Middle East has unfettered control of approximately 5,177 nuclear warheads,” he wrote in another post, seeming to call out Trump.

JOHN FETTERMAN BREAKS WITH DEMOCRATS OPPOSED TO IRAN STRIKES, BACKS TRUMP’S DECISION TO ACT

Conway wasn’t the only high-profile American calling out the U.S. for its actions in Iran.

Author Jason Hickel accused the U.S. and Israel of being “the single greatest threat to humanity,” claiming that the countries bombed Iran “in the middle of negotiations” while simultaneously “genociding Palestinians.”

“Bombing Iran in the middle of negotiations, while starving Cuba, while genociding Palestinians, while threatening to invade Greenland… the US and Israel are the single greatest threat to humanity and it’s not even close. We are all forced to live in the nightmare they create,” Hickel wrote on X, Saturday.

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During an appearance on MS NOW on Saturday, Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Texas, called for members of Congress to put aside their loyalty to Trump, who she referred to as the “orange man,” and focus on their loyalty to the U.S. Constitution.

“Right now, what we are clearly witnessing is lawlessness yet again, from this administration. And my question to my colleagues in a very serious way is, will you put aside your loyalty to this orange man and actually focus on your loyalty and your oath to the Constitution, which says that only Congress has the power to declare war?” she questioned.

Prior to these comments, MS NOW’s Ali Velshi noted that while “we can have a debate about whether we should be having a war with Iran, and we don’t really have much of a debate about whether the Iranian regime is a bad regime,” Congress was not consulted prior to the strikes.

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“No, we were not, and that’s the problem,” Crockett responded. “There are people that will land on all sides of this conflict and what should be happening or shouldn’t be happening. But the one thing that I want to remind the American people of is that we have a Constitution, and frankly, as members of Congress, we swore an oath to the Constitution as well as the president.”

Fox News Digital reached out to the White House for comment on the various critics. 

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‘Diplomacy was betrayed by the Americans’: Iranian FM spokesman | Israel-Iran conflict

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“This is the second time in less than a year that diplomacy was betrayed by the Americans.” An Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson slammed the United States for once again launching an attack against his country while negotiating with it.



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Iran’s supreme leader Khamenei dies following Israel-U.S. strike in Tehran

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Iran’s militant and unyielding supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who ruled the Islamic Republic for more than three decades and oversaw an era of harsh internal repression and confrontation with the United States and Israel, has died following the Israeli strike in Tehran, as his compound was reduced to rubble, a senior Israeli official told Fox News Digital.

“Khamenei was the contemporary Middle East’s longest-serving autocrat. He did not get to be that way by being a gambler. Khamenei was an ideologue, but one who ruthlessly pursued the preservation and protection of his ideology, often taking two steps forward and one step back,” Behnam Ben Taleblu, senior director of FDD’s Iran program, told Fox News Digital. 

“Khamenei’s worldview was shaped by his militant anti-Americanism and antisemitism, which first manifested itself in his protests against the Shah of Iran,” he added.

Ali Khamenei during his presidency

View of Iranian President Ali Khamenei during a welcoming ceremony for his State Visit, Beijing, China, May 11, 1989.  ( Forrest Anderson/Getty Images)

Born April 19, 1939, in Mashhad, eastern Iran, Khamenei was among the Islamist activists who played a central role in the 1979 revolution that overthrew the U.S.-backed Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. A close ally of Iran’s first supreme leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Khamenei rose through the new system and served as president from 1981 to 1989 before becoming supreme leader after Khomeini’s death that same year.

Decades in power, Khamenei consolidated control over Iran’s political and security system, presiding over repeated crackdowns on dissent and maintaining a hardline posture toward Washington and Jerusalem.

“Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s rule has been marked by unrelenting brutality and repression, both within Iran and beyond its borders,” said Lisa Daftari, an expert on Iran and editor-in-chief of The Foreign Desk. She pointed to executions and the enforcement of strict social controls as defining features of the system under Khamenei’s leadership.

His ultra-conservative style of leadership did face challenges, however. In 2009, following disputed elections in which Khamenei declared victory for the incumbent president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, massive protests erupted across the country.

TRUMP TELLS IRANIANS THE ‘HOUR OF YOUR FREEDOM IS AT HAND’ AS US-ISRAEL LAUNCH STRIKES AGAINST IRAN

Protest in Iran

In this photo taken by an individual not employed by the Associated Press and obtained by the AP outside Iran, Iranians protests the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini after she was detained by the morality police, in Tehran, Oct. 1, 2022. (The Associated Press)

Mass demonstrations also broke out in 2022 after Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old woman, died while detained by the morality police for allegedly wearing her headscarf improperly. The protests were brutally put down, with many of those arrested and put to death by his regime.

In late December, Iran was again rocked by protests and a fierce brutal security response. According to an Iran International investigation, as many as 30,000 people may have been killed across two days, Jan. 8 to 9, 2026.

Nicolas Maduro and Ali Khamenei

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro (L) meets the Supreme Leader of Iran, Ali Khamenei during his visit in Tehran, Iran on Oct. 22, 2016.  (Pool / Supreme Leader Press Office/Anadolu Agency/Getty Image)

International monitors and rights groups have repeatedly documented high execution numbers in Iran in recent years as well. Amnesty International said Iranian authorities executed more than 1,000 people in 2025, calling it the highest yearly figure the organization recorded in at least 15 years. Separately, a U.N. report said Iran executed at least 975 people in 2024, the highest number since 2015.

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Iranian protesters

Iranians gather while blocking a street during a protest in Tehran, Iran on Jan. 9, 2026.   (MAHSA / Middle East Images / AFP via Getty Images)

Across the region, Khamenei invested heavily in Iran’s network of allied militias and armed groups, a strategy used to project Iranian power beyond its borders. From the West Bank and Gaza, where he backed terror groups such as Hamas, to Hezbollah in Lebanon and Houthi extremists in Yemen, as well as other militant militias in Iraq, Iran under Khamenei’s spent hundreds of millions of dollars on the terror groups.

However, his prized proxies, as well as the regime of Bashar al-Assad in Syria, collapsed under Israeli military pressure following the Oct. 7, 2023, attack. During a 12-day war in June 2025, Israel also succeeded in taking out some of Khamenei’s closest aides and senior security figures, leaving the long-serving leader significantly weakened.

Yet analysts argue that Khamenei’s most enduring legacy may be the institutional machinery he built at home to safeguard the system.

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Ali Khamenei

Iran’s Supreme Leader Khamenei makes first public appearance in weeks with fresh U.S. threats. (Office of the Iranian Supreme Leader Credit/ASSOCIATED PRESS)

A recent report by United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI), authored by Saeid Golkar and Kasra Aarabi, describes the Bayt, the Office of the Supreme Leader, as a parallel structure embedded across Iran’s military, economy, religious institutions and bureaucracy.

In an interview with Fox News Digital, Aarabi said, “It is the hidden nerve center of the regime in Iran… it operates as a state within a state.” He argued that even Khamenei’s removal would not necessarily dismantle the system. “Even if he is eliminated, the Bayt as an institution enables the Supreme Leader to function,” Aarabi said, adding, “Think of the Supreme Leader as an institution rather than just a single individual.”

Aarabi also warned that “eliminating Khamenei in isolation on its own is not enough,” calling for a broader strategy aimed at the wider apparatus surrounding the supreme leader. “You have to dismantle this extensive apparatus that he has created,” he said.

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“Unlike Khomeini, the founding father of the Islamic Republic, Khamenei institutionalized his power. Today, the Islamic Republic is more a product of Khamenei than Khomeini,” FDD’s Ben Taleblu added.

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Netanyahu claims ‘many signs’ Iran’s Khamenei ‘no longer alive’ | Conflict

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu claims he has seen “many signs” that Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei may have been killed.



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Four lives saved by cruise ship from distressed boat taking on water in Gulf of Mexico

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Passengers aboard a cruise ship sailing from Texas to Mexico erupted in cheers after the crew rescued four people from a distressed, makeshift boat in the Gulf — the second such rescue involving a Caribbean cruise ship in just days, according to reports.

The Regal Princess was en route from Galveston to Cozumel on Monday, Feb. 23, when crew members responded to the distress suffered by a small boat that had four people aboard.

“Regal Princess responded to a small vessel in distress and safely rescued four individuals at sea,” the cruise line said in a statement shared with multiple media outlets.

“All four individuals were brought onboard and were evaluated by the ship’s medical team,” it continued. 

“Their safety and well-being remain our immediate priority.”

People waiting on shore as Regal Princess cruise ship is about the dock.

The Regal Princess cruise ship sailing from Texas to Mexico (not pictured) rescued four people from a small boat in distress this week. (Robin Utrecht/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

Photos shared on social media showed what appeared to be four men aboard a small rusted boat constructed of metal and wood, as People reported.

A white sheet or tarp could be seen blowing in the wind as passengers dumped water from the vessel into the surrounding sea, according to the posts shared online.

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Fox News Digital reached out to Princess Cruises for comment as well as to passengers. 

Some of the travelers onboard said they noticed something unusual when their ship began to change course.

Princess cruise ship seen anchored off the Bahia de la Paz.

Passengers said their ship changed course (not pictured) before rescuing four people from a makeshift boat that had been taking on water. (Alfredo Martinez/Getty Images)

“We knew something was going on because the ship started turning,” passenger Melody Almogabar Barr told the Houston Chronicle.

When the ship’s captain announced the rescue was successful, people inside the packed theater began to cheer, said Barr.

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“It is clear that this cruise ship has passengers that care about the well-being of others, and we are grateful to have been a part of that,” she told the outlet.

Princess Cruises said the rescued individuals would be transported to the ship’s next scheduled port, where they would be received by local authorities and support services.

Aerial shot of the Brazoria National Wildlife Refuge, established in 1969, which is located along the Gulf coast of southeast Texas near Galveston shot via helicopter from an altitude of about 1000 feet.

The ship had departed Galveston, Texas, on Feb. 22 — and was set to return on March 1. (iStock)

“Consistent with international maritime obligations, individuals rescued at sea are cared for onboard and transported to the ship’s next scheduled port stop,” the cruise line reportedly said in its statement.

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Under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, ships are required to provide assistance to anyone found at sea in danger, provided doing so does not pose serious risk to the rescuing vessel. 

The rule applies regardless of nationality or circumstances.

Ships are required to provide assistance to anyone found at sea in danger, provided doing so does not pose serious risk to the rescuing vessel. 

“Princess Cruises extends its sincere appreciation to the captain and crew of Regal Princess for their swift response, professionalism and unwavering commitment to safety,” the statement said. 

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“Their actions reflect the longstanding maritime tradition and obligation to assist those in distress at sea.”

The ship departed Galveston Feb. 22 for a seven-day Western Caribbean sailing, according to CruiseMapper. 

The itinerary included a stop in Cozumel, Mexico, followed by Roatan Island in Honduras; the ship was set to return to Texas on March 1.

Passengers walk along a pier beside the Carnival Dream cruise ship docked at a tropical port.

The rescue was the second in less than a week involving a Mexico-bound Caribbean cruise ship aiding a small vessel in distress. (iStock)

The rescue comes amid other recent incidents in the region. 

On the night of Feb. 16, a Carnival Cruise Line ship — also on its way to Cozumel — rescued another “small vessel in distress,” according to reports.

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A Carnival Celebration ship brought five people safely onboard as their makeshift boat reportedly began taking on water, Carnival Cruise Line told multiple outlets. 

The U.S. Coast Guard was notified and provided guidance during the rescue — and the ship continued its seven-day itinerary without disruption.

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Iran, US, Israel officials give civilians clashing directives as bombs drop | News

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Tehran, Iran – Iranians are being directly addressed by leaders inside and outside the country after the United States and Israel launched attacks across Iran, prompting Tehran to respond with a wave of ongoing missile and drone attacks across the region.

“In light of the continued joint operations by the US and the Zionist regime against Tehran and several other major cities, if possible while remaining calm, please travel to other centres and cities where it is feasible for you to do so,” read a text message sent to the 10 million residents of Tehran by the government on Saturday afternoon.

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All outbound roads from the capital were heavily congested with traffic from the morning, shortly after the US and Israel began joint strikes that targeting more than 20 of Iran’s 32 provinces.

Inside Tehran, people also formed long queues in front of petrol stations, even as government authorities emphasised that they remain in control, saying that food and fuel supplies would not be a problem and that contingency plans were in motion.

Authorities also accommodated civilians trying to exit the city, including by setting up roadside refuelling stations. Many families were headed to three provinces to the north near the Caspian Sea, as they did during the 12-day war with Israel.

Last June, during the war, US President Donald Trump issued a direct warning telling all Tehran citizens to immediately evacuate.

But in a video message released shortly after the strikes began on Saturday, he urged the Iranian people to stay in their homes and wait for a suitable time to rise up and overthrow the theocratic establishment governing Iran since a 1979 Islamic revolution. He framed it as “probably your only chance for generations”.

Similar sentiments were echoed in separate video messages released by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Reza Pahlavi, the son of Iran’s Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the US-backed shah who was overthrown by clerics led by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini during the revolution.

“Be vigilant and prepared so that at an appropriate time, which I will inform you precisely, you return to the streets for the final effort,” Pahlavi said.

This was in reference to nationwide protests that gripped Iran in January, during which thousands of civilians were killed, many on the nights of January 8 and 9.

TEHRAN, IRAN - FEBRUARY 28: Cars sit in traffic amid reports of widespread attacks in the country by the United States and Israel on February 28, 2026 in Tehran, Iran. After explosions were seen in the Iranian capital, the office of the Israeli Defense Minister issued a statement saying it had launched a preemptive strike against the country, followed by a statement from the U.S. president that they had launched combat operations. (Photo by Majid Saeedi/Getty Images)
Cars sit in traffic in Tehran on February 28, 2026 [Majid Saeedi/Getty Images]

Iranian authorities claim that civilians were killed by “terrorists” and “rioters” armed, funded and trained by the US and Israel. But the United Nations and international human rights organisations have blamed state forces for an unprecedented crackdown against peaceful protesters, and say tens of thousands have been incarcerated and some face execution.

Student protests also took place last week in Tehran and major cities, including the holy Shia city of Mashhad to the northeast and Shiraz to the south of Iran. A number of students were suspended, while others were arrested or summoned by intelligence authorities.

Universities and schools were declared closed after the strikes on Saturday until further notice, according to a directive by the Supreme National Security Council. Most had already been moved online until the end of the Iranian calendar year on March 20 in response to the unrest at other universities.

But dozens of people, many of them children, were killed after two schools were hit in southern Iran’s Minab and in Tehran.

State media showed paramilitary Basij members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) patrolling the streets of downtown Tehran on Saturday afternoon on motorcycles and vehicles and waving flags.

A similar gathering was recorded in Palestine Square, where pro-state groups shouted “Death to America” and “Death to Israel”.

Iranians forced into another internet blackout

The opening salvo in Tehran targeted the Pasteur neighbourhood in the downtown area, where government offices are located.

A satellite image and videos of the area showed that the compound housing the offices of the supreme leader was largely destroyed in the strikes. It was not immediately clear if Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was present at the time of the attack, but the foreign minister later told NBC News that Khamenei and President Masoud Pezeshkian were alive “as far as I know”.

Minutes after the start of the war, Iranian authorities began shutting down internet connections and mobile phone connections across multiple areas of Tehran. Some mobile connectivity was restored, but the internet shutdown was expanded across the country, with almost all traffic blocked and leaving only few proxy connections working to access the global internet.

The Islamic Republic had imposed an unprecedented 20-day total internet shutdown in January, and heavy state filtering was in place prior to the shutdown on Saturday.

Iranian authorities urged citizens on Saturday to only follow official state media, to report any suspicious activity, and to refrain from collaborating with “enemies” on pain of heavy punishment.

As daylight waned, Tehran’s streets emptied, but the sounds of explosions continued to ring loud.



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Supreme leader of Iran on Trump’s radar: Who is Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and why is he a villain for America? – Who Is Ayatollah Ali Khamenei Iran Supreme Leader Us Israel Attack On Iran Donald Trump Us Israel Iran War

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America and Israel have launched a new and extremely aggressive joint military operation against Iran. Several explosions have been heard in Iran’s capital Tehran and the direct aim of this attack is to eliminate Iran’s top leadership. While confirming the attacks, US President Donald Trump has openly appealed to Iranian citizens to overthrow their own government. There is only one name at the center of this entire geopolitical turmoil and the new crisis in West Asia – Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Let us understand through simple questions and answers who 86-year-old Khamenei is and why he has become an eyesore for Western countries.

What direct connection does the latest US-Israel attack have with Khamenei?

In this latest attack on Iran, many areas across the country as well as those specific areas of the capital Tehran, which are directly linked to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei, have been targeted. According to reports, seven missiles fell near the Presidential Palace and Khamenei’s offices (compound) located north of Tehran. The main objective of this strategy of America and Israel is to target the leadership of the Islamic Republic. However, Khamenei was not present in Tehran during the attacks and was evacuated to a secure location.



After all, who is Ayatollah Ali Khamenei?

86-year-old Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is a religious leader who has held the post of Supreme Leader of Iran since 1989. He assumed this position after the death of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic Republic of Iran. Khomeini led the Islamic Revolution of 1979, in which the US-backed Shah was ousted from power. Today, Khamenei, along with being the spiritual leader of the country, holds the ultimate and supreme power over the government, military and judiciary.


Why has Khamenei become the biggest ‘villain’ for America and Israel?

During his rule, Khamenei has always maintained a hostile relationship with Western countries and considers the US to be Iran’s number one enemy, with Israel right behind. The main basis of their unlimited power is Iran’s powerful ‘Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ (IRGC) and ‘Basij’ paramilitary forces, whose loyalty is directly to Khamenei.

The biggest reason for this enmity is Iran’s nuclear program. Although Khamenei claims that his nuclear program is only for civilian purposes and that he will never produce nuclear weapons, the US and Israel continue to allege that Iran is secretly developing a nuclear bomb.

What tough stance has Trump and the Israeli leadership taken towards Khamenei?

Top officials of America and Israel are now openly threatening to remove and eliminate Khamenei from power. Israel’s Defense Minister Israel Katz has clearly stated that a dictator like Khamenei, who aims to destroy Israel, ‘cannot exist’. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has also not ruled out the possibility of an attempt to assassinate him.

On the other hand, US President Donald Trump has claimed that he knows exactly where the ‘so-called Supreme Leader’ is hiding and that he is an ‘easy target’ for the US. Trump has made a direct appeal to the Iranian people for regime change, saying, “When we’re done, taking over your government… may be your only chance for generations.”

This tension between Khamenei and Western countries has now reached a decisive and dangerous turn. While Khamenei maintains his firm grip on power despite tough international sanctions and domestic opposition, the US and Israel have now resorted to direct military action to uproot his leadership. The outcome of this conflict will determine the condition and direction of geopolitics of the entire Middle East.