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Junior Hacker Used Tailscale and OpenSSH to Keep Access After His C2 Went Offline

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A French-speaking attacker broke into a small French automotive business, planted a keylogger, and stole banking and email credentials.

Ordinary stuff, until one move near the end.

Before his command-and-control server went dark, he installed OpenSSH and Tailscale on a victim’s machine, building a way back in that did not run through the C2 at all. When the Havoc server went offline the next day, his access did not. Eighteen days later, the C2 came back, his agents reconnected on their own, and he carried on.

Cato Networks captured the whole operation command by command, 339 of them over 33 days, after the operator left his SSH keys and a step-by-step playbook in an open storage bucket. The write-up, published Tuesday by Cato CTRL researcher Vitaly Simonovich, is a rare view of an intrusion from the operator’s keyboard rather than the forensic leftovers.

Researchers’ lesson is blunt: pulling a C2 server offline is not remediation if the attacker has already built a separate door.

The actor, handle “Poisson,” is not an APT. Researchers describe a junior operator on what looks like a school schedule, active after 3 p.m. CET with a long midday gap, all of it running on free-tier kit: DuckDNS, Backblaze B2, and a cheap IONOS VPS in Berlin. His tradecraft was thin.

He leaked his home directory five times, named his storage buckets after his own handle, and left a test file of his own keystrokes typed over and over inside the keylogger package. He failed at roughly half of what he tried. He compromised four machines anyway.

The chain

The malware ran almost entirely in memory. A VBScript stager with a sandbox-evasion delay decrypted a PowerShell loader, which pulled down a .NET loader that ran Havoc’s Demon agent without dropping the implant to disk. For elevation, he used Start-Process -Verb RunAs, which is not a silent UAC bypass. It pops the Windows consent prompt and waits for someone to click Yes. On one victim, it took a dozen tries across two days.

After that came the nailing-down: a scheduled task running at every logon with highest privileges, shellcode injected into Explorer.exe, and a custom-built RustDesk as a backup channel. The credential grabber was a 70-line Python keylogger that wrote keystrokes to a local file, with no beacon and no exfil server. Poisson just logged in, grabbed the file by hand, and ran powercfg to keep the machines from sleeping, so harvesting never paused.

The move that matters

On April 7, in a five-hour overnight session, he installed OpenSSH Server and Tailscale, joined the victim’s machine to his private Tailscale network, and set up key-based SSH and a reverse tunnel. Now he could reach the machine over Tailscale’s encrypted mesh with no C2 and no exposed ports.

The next day, the Havoc infrastructure went offline. Cato does not say why, and it barely matters: the Tailscale path sat on a separate network, so the access lived.

When the C2 returned on April 26, the agents reconnected automatically, no re-compromise required. Over the final five days, he ran 145 more commands, probed smart-card and certificate stores (a sign he was eyeing certificate-based logins), ran two unexplained executables from a file named Thales.zip for about 32 minutes total, then deleted 17 files and went quiet on May 1.

What he wanted was narrow. No Mimikatz, no lateral movement, no ransomware, and no sign he took the documents he browsed, from tax records to insurance. Just what people type: banking logins, email passwords, government portals. For a small business owner, that is direct financial exposure.

None of the tools is new, which is the point. China’s APT31 used Tailscale through 2024 and 2025 to tunnel quietly out of Russian IT firms, Scattered Spider has leaned on legitimate remote-access tools like Ngrok and Fleetdeck, and RustDesk, Poisson’s backup channel, turns up in recent Akira ransomware intrusions.

The binaries are signed and legitimate, so detection that stops at bad files, not bad behavior, misses them. What Poisson adds is command-level proof that the trick outlives a takedown, run by someone clearly still learning.

What to watch

Cato’s hunting list is concrete:

  • Alert when OpenSSH Server installs on a Windows workstation, which is rarely legitimate.
  • Watch for tailscale.exe on machines that have no reason to run a VPN.
  • Look for ssh -R reverse tunnels heading to outside hosts.
  • Check for wscript.exe running .vbs files out of user staging folders.
  • Flag scheduled tasks set to the highest privileges that launch script interpreters.
  • Watch for powercfg standby-timeout changes that keep machines awake.
  • Block DuckDNS.

The bigger one: when you find a C2, assume it is not the only way in, and go hunting for the quiet persistence layer behind it.

What was in Thales.zip, and what those two programs did in their 32 minutes on the machine, is the question Cato leaves open. The answer that matters more: the C2 was never the intrusion, just one way into it. Kill it and leave OpenSSH, Tailscale, the scheduled task, and the keylogger running, and the attacker still has a way back in.

That is the part remediation keeps missing.



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Trump: ‘Very strong’ Iran deal is a ‘wall to a nuclear weapon’ | Donald Trump

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US President Donald Trump claimed that the scheduled signing of his Iran “peace deal” in Geneva on Friday would be successful, calling the MoU “very strong”. He vowed it would be a “wall” to prevent Iran from having a nuclear weapon.



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Congress faces government shutdown risk as appropriations process stalls

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We’re deep enough into the season to have a sense of how the year is going for various clubs and players.

We see which players are most expendable by the trade deadline. And we get an early line on what to anticipate this fall.

Could sub-.500 clubs like the Texas Rangers or The Athletics (now playing in Sacramento) make the postseason? Did the Baltimore Orioles get what they paid for when they signed Pete Alonso from the New York Mets? Will the Detroit Tigers deal back-to-back Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal to the Atlanta Braves or Cleveland Guardians?

All becomes clearer as we approach the All-Star Break in less than a month.

The same is true in Congress. But the schedule is a little more advanced on Capitol Hill compared to the baseball calendar. Yes, Major League Baseball would play a potential Game 7 of the World Series on Oct. 31. Election Day for the midterms is Nov. 3.

DEMOCRATS FACE DAUNTING CONGRESSIONAL BASEBALL GAME STREAK AS EX-MLB GREAT EYES GOP ROSTER SPOT

U.S. Capitol

Lawmakers on Capitol Hill are questioning whether Congress should have a role in approving any agreement with Iran. (Aaron Schwartz/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

However, the Capitol Hill timeframe is more truncated than the baseball slate.

In some respects, Congress is already past its legislative equivalent of the Dog Days of August. In fact, both the House and Senate will likely be out of session for all but a day – if that – in August. They’ll be back in September and then out again until after the midterm.

That is, unless there’s another lengthy government shutdown. And that’s a distinct possibility.

The government’s fiscal year expires at 11:59:59 p.m. ET on Sept. 30. Yes, lawmakers from both sides of the aisle want to rush home in the fall to campaign before the midterms. But last year’s record 43-day comprehensive government shutdown may just be a legislative amuse bouche of what we’re in for this year.

Plus, if Democrats again go to the mat over healthcare or the lack of guardrails for ICE and Border Patrol – despite Republicans just funding those agencies for the rest of the Trump presidency earlier this month – they may view a government shutdown and bogging down everything in Washington as the equivalent of campaigning.

The Senate is meeting this week. The House is out. Chatter started ricocheting around the Capitol this week that the House might consider sending everyone home until September at the end of the next work period. The official calendar has the House meeting through July 2. After adopting the One Big Beautiful Bill last summer, the House left for its August recess a day early in mid-July. One could see the House conceivably cutting town a bit early this year too.

That said, House Appropriations Committee Chairman Tom Cole, R-Okla., wants to advance a few spending bills across the floor before the recess. The House has already approved two of the 12 bills: one for military construction and veterans programs. The other for agriculture.

The House is poised to approve the Energy and Water spending bill next week as well as one for national security initiatives.

CONGRESS FLEES TOWN AS HEALTH CARE PREMIUMS SET TO EXPLODE FOR MILLIONS OF AMERICANS IN JANUARY

Rep. Tom Cole standing and speaking at a podium.

Rep. Tom Cole is running for his 12th term in Congress in Oklahoma. (Getty Images)

Republicans would like to approve the annual defense funding measure soon. That bill consumes well over half of all discretionary spending (money which Congress allocates each year). The GOP may need to follow suit from last year where the House passed the defense plan with only Republican votes. But if the House greenlights the Pentagon’s bill, it will have approved around 80 percent of all spending for the next fiscal year.

However, the Senate is another question. Senate Appropriations Committee Chairwoman Susan Collins, R-Maine, canceled planned sessions to craft multiple spending bills over the past few weeks. She’s blamed Democrats for lack of cooperation.

That said, control of the Senate may hinge on Maine as Collins faces embattled Democratic nominee Graham Platner this fall. Platner lugs around more baggage than a skycap at Dulles International Airport. But Democrats are sticking with Platner. Democrats are in no mood to cede any ground to Collins or present her with any easy “wins” ahead of the fall.

BATTLEGROUND REPUBLICANS HOLD THE LINE AS JOHNSON PRESSURES DEMS ON SHUTDOWN

Graham Platner speaking to a crowd at a YMCA in Blue Hill, Maine

Graham Platner addresses the crowd at his watch party after winning the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate at a YMCA in Blue Hill, Maine, on June 9, 2026. Platner will face Republican Sen. Susan Collins in the election for the seat. (Matthew Symons for Fox News Digital)

While the House appropriations process may limp along, it’s all but paralyzed in the Senate. This is where a congressional contagion could spread from the Senate to the House. Some House lawmakers may question why they should stick around to tackle any bills if they’re on a road to oblivion in the Senate. Pressure will ramp up on both sides of the aisle to let everyone go home early rather than engage in an academic exercise.

And let’s fast-forward to fall and the funding deadline. The sides simply are not getting along at all. There’s no incentive for Democrats to help if both the House and Senate are in play this fall. President Trump demonstrated no incentive to negotiate during last year’s government shutdown. It could be worse this time around. That’s why a shutdown may be in the cards.

The question is whether lawmakers stay in Washington for the month of October and try to figure things out when they’d rather be in their districts and states campaigning. Remember, House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., kept the House out for most of the autumn shutdown last year.

MORNING GLORY: WILL THE HOUSE FREEDOM CAUCUS DESERT PRESIDENT TRUMP AND TRIGGER A MASSIVE TAX HIKE?

U.S. Speaker of the House Mike Johnson answering questions at a press conference at the U.S. Capitol

Speaker of the House Mike Johnson answers questions during a press conference at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on June 3, 2026. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)

And then there is the biggest possible bill of all: “Reconciliation 3.0.”

No one really knows exactly what Republicans would stash in a massive package, ala last year’s One Big Beautiful Bill. President Trump is adamant that they add $350 billion in additional military spending on top of the Pentagon’s annual budget measure – mostly to cover the war in Iran. This would also restock munitions exhausted overseas.

Some Republicans believe they should address health care. Yet there’s still no bona fide health care proposal from the Trump Administration. There will be tax cuts. Maybe lower the cost of living. Of course, President Trump also wants the SAVE America Act tacked on to this bill. It requires proof of citizenship to vote. But the president just insisted that congressional Republicans latch the SAVE America Act to a bill to renew FISA.

Either way, the SAVE America Act wouldn’t pass muster with special Senate budget rules. And Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., said repeatedly he would not fire the Senate’s budget umpire, Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough.

IT NEVER ENDS: GOP MOVES TO FUND BORDER, DEMOCRATS BLAST TRUMP SPENDING

Senate Majority Leader John Thune speaking at a press conference flanked by Sen. James Lankford and Sen. Shelley Moore Capito

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., speaks during a Senate Republicans press conference at the U.S. Capitol on June 2, 2026, flanked by Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., and Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va. (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc)

Vulnerable Republicans would love to have another policy bill to campaign on this fall. But there’s lots of skepticism. And any decision to dismiss lawmakers from Capitol Hill early would serve as a signal that there’s no way they can pass “Reconciliation 3.0.”

In Major League Baseball, we usually know by late July or early August if even an average team has an outside shot at the playoffs. The trade deadline is Aug. 3 – although some clubs may try to stock up or unload well before then.

Teams and players on the wrong side of the ledger will play out the string through the end of the season. Then pack up for the hot stove league.

Congress is similar. Members elected to the 119th Congress are in office until 11:59:59 p.m. ET on Jan. 3, 2027. Some are just running out the string.

Yogi Berra famously declared that “the future ain’t what it used to be.”

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In baseball, there were high expectations this season for the New York Mets, Cincinnati Reds and Houston Astros. The season isn’t even to its mid-point. But the future isn’t panning out for these clubs.

The same is true on Capitol Hill. We’ll know soon if the future is what “it used to be,” here too.



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Trump pushes to delay appointment of new spy chief in legislative standoff | Donald Trump News

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Trump says plan to keep controversial acting DNI head, Bill Pulte, in role as he pushes for surveillance, voter ID law.

United States President Donald Trump has delayed the confirmation of his nominee for director of national intelligence (DNI), while calling for lawmakers to pass legislation on surveillance and voter identification requirements.

Trump made the announcement in a Truth Social post on Wednesday, saying he planned to keep acting DNI Bill Pulte in the role and postpone the confirmation of his nominee, Jay Clayton.

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Clayton had been scheduled to appear for a Senate confirmation hearing on Wednesday afternoon before Trump forced the delay by directing him to not appear.

The president cited his desire to pressure Democrats to pass a controversial surveillance law and a measure requiring voter identification, as well as his wish not to remove Clayton from his post as federal prosecutor until his replacement was confirmed.

“In the meantime, Bill Pulte will remain as the Acting Director of National Intelligence,” Trump said.

The US president’s nomination last week of Clayton had been a welcome relief to many lawmakers, including prominent Republicans, who raised concerns about Pulte and his lack of experience.

A Trump loyalist and housing official, Pulte had never held intelligence or military positions. The DNI oversees Washington’s 18-agency intelligence community.

Clayton, in contrast, currently serves in what is considered one of the Department of Justice’s most prestigious posts: He works as the US attorney for the southern district of New York in Manhattan.

The DNI vacancy emerged after Tulsi Gabbard announced her resignation in May, citing her husband’s cancer treatment.

FISA and voter identification

Clayton’s confirmation was meant to be fast-tracked to win Democrats’ support for a controversial provision of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which is currently up for renewal.

Section 702 of the law allows spy agencies to collect the communications of targeted foreigners located outside the US without first acquiring a warrant. Civil rights advocates have condemned the tool, saying it exposes US citizens to the government indirectly collecting their data.

Democrats had pledged not to renew the provision if Pulte remained in his role.

In his post, Trump maintained that Clayton could be confirmed before the vote on FISA, giving Democrats the opportunity to change their position.

Trump also added another condition, saying he would not approve FISA without lawmakers also passing a law requiring voter IDs in US elections. The legislation has been a key priority for Trump in advance of the midterm elections in November, but he has not been able to overcome a 60-vote threshold in the Senate.

“Therefore, to add a slight bit of intrigue but, for the Good of the Nation, and the People of our Country, I will not approve FISA without THE SAVE AMERICA ACT going along with it,” Trump said in his Truth Social post.

Despite the statements, Republican Senator Tom Cotton, the chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, initially said he would proceed with Clayton’s confirmation hearing on Wednesday unless Trump withdrew his nomination or ordered him not to appear.

Trump ultimately did direct Clayton to skip the hearing. That, in turn, forced Cotton to postpone the hearing. Afterwards, the senator issued a statement expressing regret at the circumstances.

“It’s regrettable that the president has directed Jay Clayton not to appear at his confirmation hearing today,” Cotton said in a statement.

“Mr. Clayton is a patriot and a highly qualified nominee, as the president has said repeatedly. While today’s hearing is now unfortunately postponed, I look forward to proceeding with his confirmation in the near future.”

Democrats, meanwhile, described the situation as chaotic.

“At every turn, the president has injected more uncertainty into a process that should be focused on one thing: keeping the American people safe,” Senator Mark Warner said in a statement.

“The president’s latest intervention only underscores a simple reality: the biggest obstacle to resolving these issues has not been Senate Democrats or Senate Republicans. It has been the chaos and confusion coming from the White House itself.”



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Colorado transgender sports ban ballot measure qualifies for November

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Opponents of allowing transgender athletes in female sports are launching a national strategy centered on voter-backed ballot measures in blue and purple states.

Speaking on “The Riley Gaines Show,” former gymnastics champion and XX-XY Athletics CEO Jennifer Sey revealed grassroots organizers have successfully qualified a biological sex-protection measure for the November ballot in Colorado.

“Here in, I mean deep blue Colorado — [it] is not a purple state anymore, as you know, it is blue — we got the signatures we needed to put this to the people in November,” Sey said, noting the campaign gathered 25% more signatures than required.

“We’re not done yet because now we need people to vote for it,” she added. “The next wave is ballot initiatives in these blue and purple states.”

JENNIFER SEY DEBATES PRO-TRANSGENDER ACTIVISTS OVER WOMEN’S SPORTS POLICIES, WINS BASED ON AUDIENCE DATA

Protesters against transgender athletes competing in women's sports gather outside the Supreme Court in Washington, D.C.

Protesters against transgender athletes competing in women’s sports gathered outside the Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 13, 2026, as two cases about transgender girls joining girls’ and women’s sports teams were heard inside the court. (Heather Diehl/Getty Images)

Ballot Initiative 109 would require students to compete on sports teams based on their sex assigned at birth. The measure would apply to both high school and college athletes. Critics argue it would restrict transgender students from participating on teams that align with their gender identity.

Sey said they’ve been able to get the measure on the ballot with little money, noting it’s a grassroots organization. She added that another blue state, Washington, is advancing a similar initiative to restrict transgender athletes from joining female sports teams.

“We didn’t have a lot of money. We didn’t really have any money here in Colorado, but we had an amazing grassroots organization, and we went out and got the signatures,” she said.

Still, Sey noted that a change in culture could be just as impactful as a change in the law.

TRUMP SIGNS ‘NO MEN IN WOMEN’S SPORTS’ EXECUTIVE ORDER

Jennifer Sey attends Cannes Lions festival event in France.

Jennifer Sey, then global chief marketing officer of Levi Strauss & Co., attended the Cannes Lions Festival on June 21, 2018, in Cannes, France. (Christian Alminana/Getty Images for Cannes Lions)

“I personally feel like we have to really change the cultural conversation and make this something that no state would dare do, no league would dare do, because the people wouldn’t tolerate it,” Sey said.

She said that while there is an executive order in place, signed by President Donald Trump last year, she believes there needs to be more concrete legislation in case future administrations look to undo it.

TRANS ATHLETE WINS NEW YORK STATE GIRLS’ SHOT PUT TITLE, BEATING SECOND PLACE BY MORE THAN 2 FEET

“I think we need state-by-state legislation. I think we need national legislation,” Sey said.

“We have an executive order, but that’s temporary. It functions like law while we have President Trump in office, but you and I both know that could change and lots of states are ignoring it,” she added.

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Trump signed the “Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports” executive order in February 2025, which prohibits transgender female athletes from competing in female sports. It also requires athletes to compete on teams or in competitions based on their sex assigned at birth.

“Under the Trump administration, we will defend the proud tradition of female athletes, and we will not allow men to beat up, injure, and cheat our women and our girls. From now on, women’s sports will be only for women,” Trump said at the signing.



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Massive brush fire sends thick smoke over western Miami | Newsfeed

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NewsFeed

Aerial footage captured a brush fire near a major interstate that blanketed a residential neighbourhood near Miami with heavy smoke. The wildfire, known as the “Quarry 2 Fire,” had scorched roughly 5,300 acres and was approximately 30% contained as of Wednesday morning.



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Russia warship fires warning shot at British couple – The Latest | Keir Starmer

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Keir Starmer has called the firing of warning shots by a Russian warship at a British yacht sailing across the Channel on Tuesday ‘deeply concerning and reckless’.

Russia’s defence ministry said the yacht was on a ‘dangerous course’ and several attempts were made to contact it – a claim disputed by the retired couple onboard the 40ft yacht.

Nosheen Iqbal speaks to the Guardian’s defence and security editor, Dan Sabbagh watch on YouTube



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GOP bill threatens federal funding for colleges with CCP-tied groups

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FIRST ON FOX: New legislation introduced in the House of Representatives threatens federal funding for colleges and universities  working with organizations with alleged ties to the Chinese Communist Party. 

The Espionage Protection Act, authored by Rep. Pat Fallon, R-Texas, would amend the National Security Act of 1947 to prohibit federal funding for intelligence programs at universities that maintain contractual or in-kind relationships with organizations tied to the CCP. 

“American citizens and or professors at these institutions would be compromised and would be doing highly sensitive research and the Chinese Communist Party could benefit from that illegally,” Fallon told Fox News Digital.

“There have been instances of this where they’re using their either trained assets for the Chinese Communist Party or they’re sympathetic – stealing highly sensitive research, biotechnology, etc. and bringing it back to Beijing,” he added.

Rep. Pat Fallon standing on the House steps of the U.S. Capitol

Rep. Pat Fallon, R-Texas, is seen on the House steps of the U.S. Capitol on Dec. 6, 2022. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc)

‘SERIOUS CONCERNS’: GOP SOUNDS ALARM ON TAXPAYER FUNDS GOING TO ‘HIGH RISK’ UNIVERSITIES VULNERABLE TO CCP

The legislation would revoke  federal funding for grant programs, including: Intelligence Community Centers for Academic Excellence, Intelligence advanced research projects, undergraduate and graduate training, Stokes Scholarship Programs and SMART Scholarship for Service Program.

Fallon singled out  the Confucius Institute, a nonprofit educational funded by the CCP, for particular scrutiny. While the number of universities who work with the Confucius Institute has seen a dramatic decline due to funding threats in the past, the organization still works with a number of schools.

The Texas congressman also told Fox News Digital he supports an outright ban on student visas for Chinese nationals.

Students tossing graduation caps during a graduation ceremony.

A Riverside County school district in California is under investigation for allegedly issuing invalid diplomas to nonresident Chinese students and engaging in possible financial misconduct, according to a lengthy audit that found potential fraud and unlawful financial practices. (FoxDIGITAL/iStock)

TRUMP ADMINISTRATION BEGINS NEW WAVE OF INTERNATIONAL STUDENT VISA REVOCATIONS: ‘NO ONE HAS A RIGHT TO A VISA’

“It would wholly take away one of the major concerns, which would be with Chinese students coming over and stealing technologies and other sensitive data… so it definitely needs to be explored and looked into,” he said. 

The debate around whether Chinese students should be allowed in U.S. schools has created some divide within the GOP. In an interview with Fox News’ Sean Hannity, President Donald Trump said an outright ban could damage relations between Beijing and D.C., and discussed some of the benefits of allowing Chinese professionals  into the country.

“I frankly think that it’s good that people come from other countries and they learn our culture and many of them want to stay here,” Trump said following his meeting with President Xi Jinping last month.

TRUMP JOLTS IMMIGRATION HAWKS WITH SURPRISING DEFENSE OF CHINESE STUDENTS IN USA

Donald Trump and Xi Jinping walk past a row of American and Chinese flags in front of a mural.

Chinese President Xi Jinping, right, and U.S. President Donald Trump meet at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing. (Kenny Holston/Pool Photo via AP)

Trump noted that the idea of letting Chinese students in U.S. schools “doesn’t sound like a very conservative position – and I’m a conservative… commonsense guy. I think MAGA is common sense.”

Xi and  rump met in Beijing last month, where Trump described the meeting as “incredible” and “very successful,” despite the traditional rift between the two world powers. 

Trump’s  comments about Chinese students in the U.S. sparked some backlash from members of the GOP who take a hard line position on immigration, including former Georgia congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene.

REP. GREENE RAISES RED FLAG AFTER TRUMP INDICATES US WILL ACCEPT 600,000 CHINESE STUDENTS

“Trump says it’s insulting to tell China their students can’t go to our universities, imagine being an American student and receiving a rejection letter while 500,000 Chinese students get in,” Greene said to The New Republic.

A person holding a passport and visa documents

The Trump administration says foreign student visa vetting will be a continued process rather than a one-time check. (iStock)

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis was critical of the Trump administration’s stance on Chinese students last year, and signed legislation to block colleges from hiring students from China and other “countries of concern” in academic labs.

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The IIE Open Doors Report, which is sponsored by the State Department, estimates that more 260,000 Chinese students are in the U.S. as of the 2024-2025 academic school year. Most students hold F-1 visas, which don’t automatically expire upon graduation from a university. 

In April, Fallon announced that he was running for chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee during an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital. If he wins, he said he plans to root out CCP influence in the U.S.



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Nanawati: The Last Negotiation | Ep 6 – Afghanistan | Documentary

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Under Taliban rule, one woman struggles to negotiate with the men limiting the lives of Afghan women.

Under Taliban rule, Afghan women live under constant threat, their freedoms stripped away and their voices suppressed. Amid this reality, a quiet resistance persists: Women find ways to learn, teach and organise in secret, keeping alive the knowledge and skills that the Taliban government seeks to erase. This episode explores the moral and emotional complexities of this struggle, highlighting the courage it takes to balance safety, survival and the fight for rights.

At its centre is Mahbouba Seraj, a fearless advocate who believes that even those who aim to suppress women must be confronted through dialogue. While she tirelessly draws international attention to what Afghan women are facing, her willingness to engage with the Taliban has sparked tension with other activists.

After exhausting every path, she turns to “nanawati”, an ultimate appeal to the other side’s humanity, to ask the Taliban to restore education and basic rights for girls and women. Through her story, the episode examines the delicate, often controversial choices involved in pursuing both strategic visibility and grassroots empowerment, showing how one woman’s approach to negotiation and resistance sustains hope in the darkest circumstances.

A film by Fatima Lianes



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