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Oman’s foreign minister meets with US’s Vance as Middle East tensions rise | Nuclear Weapons News

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Badr bin Hamad Al Busaidi, the key mediator in US-Iran nuclear talks, meets with JD Vance in Washington, DC.

Omani Foreign Minister Badr bin Hamad Al Busaidi has met with United States Vice President JD Vance, amid growing fears grow of a potential US attack on Iran.

Al Busaidi, a key mediator in ongoing talks between the US and Iran, met with Vance in Washington, DC on Friday. He said the nuclear negotiations have so far achieved significant, important, and unprecedented progress, according to the Oman News Agency.

The meeting focused on the indirect talks which are being mediated by Oman. American and Iranian officials held the latest round of negotiations in Geneva on Thursday.

Since resuming talks last month, the US has said it wants Iran to dismantle its nuclear infrastructure entirely, limit its arsenal of ballistic missiles and stop supporting regional allies. While Tehran has shown flexibility about discussing limitations on the enrichment of uranium for civilian use, it has so far treated missiles and proxies as non-negotiables.

During his meeting with Vance, Al Busaidi said the negotiations had resulted in “creative and constructive ideas and proposals.”



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Three dead and dozens injured after Milan tram derails | World News

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Three people have been killed and more than 20 injured after a tram derailed in the centre of Milan, before slamming into a building.

The Number 9 tram was supposed to have continued straight along the central Vittorio Veneto avenue, but it suddenly swerved at a switch track that is used by another tram line, according to a video of the crash broadcast by Sky TG24.

The video shows the tram nearly flipping onto its side as it takes the curve before crashing.

The derailed tram smashed into a building in Milan. Pic AP
Image: The derailed tram smashed into a building in Milan. Pic AP

Milan mayor Beppe Sala suggested human error was to blame, saying the driver had apparently failed to switch tracks to keep the tram going straight.

He described the driver as an experienced employee who had only been on his shift for an hour.

However, he said the driver had skipped a stop before the crash and would be questioned from the hospital where he was being treated for his injuries.

Emergency services said three people had been killed. Mr Sala confirmed that among the victims, one passenger had died on the tram and one on the street.

He said none of the other injured were in a life-threatening condition.

Dozens of ambulances, fire engines and police cars responded to the crash, with crews escorting passengers in thermal blankets away from the scene.

Pic: Reuters
Image: Pic: Reuters

Read more from Sky News:
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ATM, the Milan public transport company, said it was cooperating with prosecutors “to precisely establish the cause and dynamic of the incident”.

The incident came as the city is hosting its seasonal fashion shows and is in the interim between hosting the Winter Olympics and Paralympic Games.



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Comer: Clinton said Trump shared no indication he was involved in Epstein crimes

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Former President Bill Clinton suggested he could not recall President Donald Trump ever implicating himself in Jeffrey Epstein’s crimes, one of the Republicans deposing him said on Friday.

House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., briefly updated reporters during Clinton’s deposition in the panel’s Epstein probe. It began a little after 11 a.m. and is expected to continue into early Friday evening.

“I know there’s a lot of obsession about President Trump from the media, a lot of curiosity about President Trump from media. I want to make a statement because they’ll probably not mention this when they come out here,” Comer said, referring to Democrats on the committee.

He said the panel’s top Democrat, Rep. Robert Garcia, D-Calif., asked Clinton if Trump should be called before the committee like he was.

Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein

President Donald Trump’s connection to Jeffrey Epstein has been the subject of partisan debate in the House. (Rick Friedman/Corbis via Getty Images; Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

“That’s for you to decide,” Clinton said, according to Comer.

“The president went on to say that the president, Trump, ‘has never said anything to me to make me think he was involved,’ and he meant with Epstein,” Comer said. “I thought that was an interesting thing that President Clinton said.”

His deposition, and that of former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton before him, are taking place in the Chappaqua Performing Arts Center in Westchester County, N.Y.

The Clintons have claimed the New York City suburb as their permanent residence since leaving the White House in early 2000.

Democrats who emerged from the performing arts center minutes later to update reporters signaled they did not agree with Comer’s account, but would not go into details on their own.

Garcia suggested there was an agreement between all parties to not discuss details of the deposition as it went on.

NANCY MACE SAYS ‘UNHINGED’ HILLARY CLINTON ERUPTED DURING CLOSED-DOOR EPSTEIN DEPOSITION

House Democrats in Chappaqua, New York

Democrats speak to members of the media outside the Chappaqua Performing Arts Center in Chappaqua, N.Y., Feb. 26, 2026.  (Adam Gray/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

“I think the best response with that is for you to view the complete record what actually he said, which, look, we’re not going to disclose what was said because that’s not in the rules. But Republicans keep breaking the rules,” the California Democrat told reporters.

“President Clinton did bring up some additional information about discussions with President Trump. I think that the way Chairman Comer described it, I don’t think it’s a complete, accurate description of what actually was said. So let’s release the full transcript, and you can all get a full record of what actually was said, which brings up some very important new questions about comments that President Trump has actually said in the past.”

Trump has been a main flashpoint in the increasingly partisan divide in the House Oversight Committee’s probe.

Democrats have accused the GOP side of covering up for Trump at the expense of Epstein’s victims, while Republicans have accused Democrats of using the pedophile and his heinous crimes as a tool for attacking the commander in chief.

Trump himself told reporters on Friday when asked about Clinton, “I don’t like seeing him deposed.”

The deposition is ongoing behind closed doors, but the committee is expected to release a video and transcript of the entire sit-down within days of its conclusion. The same is true for Hillary Clinton’s deposition, the video for which could be released as early as this weekend.

Bill and Hillary Clinton

Former President Bill Clinton, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and former President George W. Bush attend the inauguration of President-elect Donald Trump in the Rotunda of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 20, 2025. (Chip Somodevilla/Pool/AFP via Getty Images)

The only portion of Clinton’s testimony that is public so far is his opening statement in which he denied knowing anything about Epstein’s crimes.

“Now, let me say what you’re going to hear from me. First, I had no idea of the crimes Epstein was committing. No matter how many photos you show me, I have two things that, at the end of the day, matter more than your interpretation of those 20-year-old photos,” Clinton said, according to his prepared opening remarks.

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“I know what I saw and more importantly, what I didn’t see. I know what I did and more importantly, what I didn’t do. I saw nothing and I did nothing wrong.”

Neither Trump nor Clinton have been implicated in any wrongdoing associated with Epstein or his accomplice, Ghislaine Maxwell.

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Bill Clinton comes out swinging against Comer for rejecting public Epstein hearing: 'Stop the games'


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Microsoft testing Windows 11 batch file security improvements

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Windows

Microsoft is rolling out new Windows 11 Insider Preview builds that improve security and performance during batch file or CMD script execution.

As Microsoft explained today, IT administrators can now enable a more secure processing mode that prevents batch files from being modified while they run by adding the LockBatchFilesInUse registry value under HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Command Processor.

Policy authors can also enable this mode using the LockBatchFilesWhenInUse application manifest control.

Wiz

This change is designed to boost performance and security in enterprise environments where admins rely heavily on scripted workflows.

“We are giving administrators and Application Control for Business policy authors additional controls over the processing of batch files and CMD scripts. Starting with this release, administrators may enable a more secure mode for processing batch files that ensures they do not change during execution,” the Windows Insider team said.

“This enhances the performance and security of batch file processing when code integrity is enabled, as signature validation will only be required to be performed a single time, instead of per statement executed in the batch file.”

With today’s Windows Insider builds, Microsoft has also improved the Shared audio feature, introduced in October, which allows sharing audio between two headphones, speakers, earbuds, or hearing aids.

Shared Audio volume sliders
Shared Audio volume sliders (Microsoft)

Previously, volume adjustments affected both users equally, but the new update adds individual volume sliders for each listener and device. A new taskbar indicator also appears during active sharing sessions to provide a visual reminder and a one-click shortcut to sharing settings.

The compatible device lineup has also expanded to include more Bluetooth LE Audio accessories, with the Samsung Galaxy Buds 4 and Buds 4 Pro, Sony WF-1000XM6, and Xbox Wireless Headset now also supporting the feature.

These new capabilities are rolling out to Windows Insiders in the Beta and Dev channels who have installed Windows 11 Preview Build 26220.7934 (KB5077242) and Windows 11 Preview Build 26300.7939 (KB5077243), respectively.

Modern IT infrastructure moves faster than manual workflows can handle.

In this new Tines guide, learn how your team can reduce hidden manual delays, improve reliability through automated response, and build and scale intelligent workflows on top of tools you already use.



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Why did Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl show hit a nerve? | Music

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Bad Bunny as a case study in global relevance and diaspora power.

Bad Bunny was the most-streamed artist on Spotify for four years. He headlined the Super Bowl, singing in Spanish, challenging long-held ideas about what it means to be “mainstream”. His career highlights how streaming platforms, diaspora audiences, and shifting cultural power now determine global relevance. Bad Bunny has long used his music as an unapologetic political statement, including his stance against the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Our guests discuss the political and cultural tensions his rise has exposed.

Presenter: Stefanie Dekker

Guests:
Jorell Melendez-Badillo – Associate professor, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Elizabeth Booker Houston – Political commentator and lawyer



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Jon Stewart argues media ‘squandered’ audience trust with ‘hype machine’

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“The Daily Show” host Jon Stewart argued on his podcast Wednesday that the media may have “squandered” audience trust after creating a “hype machine” around stories such as the President Donald Trump-Russia collusion investigation.

While speaking with MS NOW host Ali Velshi on “The Weekly Show,” Stewart told his guest: “I think within the media, it gets back to — you talked about it earlier — you said, ‘It’s about what you earn with your audience.’ And I wonder if, in media, they’ve squandered some of that based on those incentives.”

“So, for instance, we’ll go back to, like — there’s always that rush of, like, ‘Now we’ve got Trump, and the Mueller report, and it’s Mueller time,’ and all these things. And the hype machine that generates that, whether it was for action in Iraq or accountability through these special counsels — that it raises an expectation of its audience,” he continued.

Jon Stewart and Ali Velshi

Jon Stewart and Ali Velshi on “The Weekly Show” podcast on Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2026. (Screenshot/”The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart”)

In 2019, then-Attorney General William Barr released the conclusions of Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s report. It did not establish a link by Trump or his campaign to conspire with Russia to sway the 2016 election. 

Velshi added that the hype generated by the media around stories like the Mueller report acts as a “dopamine rush” for audiences.

Aside from raising expectations, Stewart said such coverage also leads audiences to expect those involved to face consequences for their reported actions — which may never come.

“The more you run on that hamster wheel, or gerbil wheel … I wonder if that begins to numb your audience to consequence. And is that where the trust has been lost?” he asked. “That not only is it about holding to account, but it’s about tempering their expectation.”

JON STEWART DISMISSES CALL TO RUN FOR OFFICE, WARNS NOT TO TRUST TV STARS AS POLITICAL LEADERS

Jon Stewart.

Comedian Jon Stewart at Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show” FYC Event at Linwood Dunn Theater on June 7, 2025. (Phillip Faraone/Getty Images for Comedy Central)

Velshi agreed, saying that the media could present themselves differently.

He added that while it’s fine to add “a little dressing” to news coverage to grab the audience, it’s also important to relay the “important stories.”

“It can’t all be the world’s on fire all the time, because then nobody thinks there’s a fire. It can’t all be breaking news, because then nothing is breaking news,” the MS NOW host said. “It can’t all be about this is the thing that’s going to take Trump down, because, actually, your goal needs to be more important and more sustaining than taking Trump down. It needs to be fixing our society as it relates to incentives in media, as it relates to poverty, as it relates to healthcare.”

He noted that the issues he listed “are not actually terribly hard fixes,” and are all “things that the world can do” given the technology we have today.

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President Donald Trump gestures while speaking

President Donald Trump speaks during a breakfast with Senate and House Republicans in the State Dining Room of the White House, Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Velshi then returned to warning about the “real danger” that comes from “associating everything with Trump.” 

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“There’s a real danger in associating everything with Trump, because Trump will go away,” he said. “And you’ll still have all these problems. And you’ll still have this movement of 35% of Americans who trust nothing and want to tear it all down. We have to fix the system. And that means people understanding the system and understanding their role and their agency.”

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DoJ Seizes $61 Million in Tether Linked to Pig Butchering Crypto Scams

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Ravie LakshmananFeb 27, 2026Financial Crime / Social Engineering

The U.S. Department of Justice (DoJ) this week announced the seizure of $61 million worth of Tether that were allegedly associated with bogus cryptocurrency schemes known as pig butchering.

The confiscated funds were traced to cryptocurrency addresses used for the laundering of criminally derived proceeds stolen from victims of cryptocurrency investment scams, the department added.

“Criminal actors and professional money launderers use cyber-enabled fraud schemes to swindle their victims and conceal their ill-gotten gains,” said HSI Charlotte Acting Special Agent in Charge Kyle D. Burns.

“HSI special agents work diligently to trace the illicit proceeds of crime across the globe to disrupt and dismantle the transnational criminal organizations that seek to defraud hardworking Americans.”

As is the norm in such cybercrime operations, threat actors are known to target individuals by cultivating romantic relationships after approaching them on dating and social media messaging apps. These activities are carried out by individuals who are trafficked into scam compounds operating primarily in Southeast Asia with promises of high-paying jobs.

The cybercrime syndicates behind the scams then confiscate their passports and are coerced into conning victims online by posing as charming strangers or brokers on investment platforms, or face brutal consequences. The end goal is to coax unsuspecting users into parting with their hard-earned money in fraudulent cryptocurrency investment schemes.

According to the DoJ, the fake platforms displayed made-up investment portfolios displaying unusually high returns in a deliberate attempt to make victims invest more of their funds. The reality hits when users try to withdraw their funds, at which point they are asked to pay an extra fee as a way to extract even more money from them.

“Once the victims’ money transferred to a cryptocurrency wallet under the scammers’ control, the crooks quickly routed that money through many other wallets to hide the nature, source, control, and ownership of that stolen money,” the department added.

In a coordinated announcement, Tether said it has frozen around $4.2 billion in assets linked to illicit activity to date, including nearly $250 million related to scam networks since June 2025 alone.



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Rubio plans Israel trip as Trump says he’s ‘not happy’ with US-Iran talks | Donald Trump News

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United States Secretary of State Marco Rubio is scheduled to travel to Israel next week as President Donald Trump expresses displeasure with the ongoing negotiations with Iran.

On Friday, the US Department of State issued a notice that Rubio’s trip will run from March 2 to 3, and that its focus will be on relations with Iran and Lebanon, as well as implementing Trump’s 20-point plan for war-torn Gaza.

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This will be Rubio’s fifth trip as secretary of state to Israel, a close US ally. He visited for the first time in February 2025, then in September and twice in October of last year.

No other details were provided about the latest diplomatic outing. But it comes at a delicate time for relations in the Middle East.

Just this week, the US and Iran held a third round of indirect talks, this time in Switzerland, as the two sides attempt to negotiate a deal to restrict Iran’s nuclear programme.

A new round of talks is slated to take place in Austria on Monday, the day Rubio arrives in Israel.

Still, Trump used a public appearance on Friday on the White House lawn to voice frustration at the slow pace of negotiations.

“I’m not happy with the fact that they’re not willing to give us what we have to have. I’m not thrilled with that. We’ll see what happens,” Trump said.

“We’ll have some additional talks today. But no, I’m not happy with the way they’re going.”

Trump added that he was not averse to using the military to accomplish his aims. “I’d love not to use it, but sometimes you have to. We’ll see what happens.”

Trump’s latest comments are likely to feed ongoing fears of a military escalation with Iran, a conflict that could spill into the broader region.

His remarks coincided with an email from US Ambassador Mike Huckabee to embassy staff in Israel, giving them permission to leave the country, another signal that simmering tensions might boil over.

Huckabee emphasised that those who leave “should do so TODAY”, according to media reports. He added, however, that there is “no need to panic”.

A public notice from the US Embassy in Jerusalem acknowledged the authorisation to leave and cited “safety risks” due to “terrorism and civil unrest”.

“Persons may wish to consider leaving Israel while commercial flights are available,” the notice said.

Threat of Iran attack

Concerns have been mounting, though, that the US may seek to take military action against Iran, a longtime adversary of Israel and the US.

Since January, the administration of US President Donald Trump has deployed a “massive armada” to the waters near Iran, including two aircraft carriers, the USS Gerald Ford and the USS Abraham Lincoln.

Trump has also hinted on several occasions that he is prepared to launch an attack, either to force a deal to limit Iran’s nuclear capabilities or intervene on behalf of Iranian protesters.

On January 1, for instance, Trump responded to a deadly crackdown on antigovernment demonstrations in Iran by posting a message on Truth Social.

It said that the US military was “locked and loaded and ready to go” to “rescue” any protesters who might be killed.

More recently, during last Tuesday’s State of the Union address, Trump described his military threats as a successful tactic in stopping the execution of protesters.

“We stopped them from hanging a lot of them with the threat of serious violence,” Trump said.

He added that he would not be afraid to act. “I will never hesitate to confront threats to America wherever we must,” Trump said in the primetime speech, which accused Iran of having “spread nothing but terrorism and death and hate”.

On Friday, however, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk signalled that eight protesters have nevertheless been sentenced to death, and 30 more are at risk of receiving the same penalty.

Turk also warned against the possibility of military action, highlighting the risk of civilian harm.

“I am extremely alarmed about the potential for regional military escalation and its impact on civilians, and I hope the voice of reason prevails,” he said.

Pushing for a deal

But the protesters have not been the only motive Trump has cited for his sabre-rattling.

Trump has also indicated that military intervention may be necessary should Iran fail to agree to a nuclear deal.

On February 19, the president told reporters aboard his jet, Air Force One, that Iran had “10, 15 days, pretty much maximum” to strike a deal with US negotiators.

Should it fail to, Trump indicated he would take his “maximum pressure” campaign a “step further”, appearing to imply military action.

“We have to make a meaningful deal. Otherwise, bad things happen,” Trump had said earlier in the day at an inaugural meeting of his Board of Peace panel.

Iran, meanwhile, has said its position is “close” to that of the US on many issues, but it has called for the Trump administration to drop what it considers “excessive demands“.

Recent reports have indicated that the US government not only wants Iran to dismantle its nuclear programme, but it also seeks to curtail its ballistic missile arsenal and sever its relations with regional allies and proxy groups, like Hezbollah in Lebanon.

Iran, however, has largely dismissed those demands as unrealistic, and it has argued that its nuclear enrichment programme is designed to produce civilian energy, not weaponry.

It has also warned of retaliation if the US proceeds with another military strike.

Last June, the US bombed three Iranian nuclear sites, including the Fordow facility, as part of a 12-day war initiated by an Israeli attack. The Trump administration dubbed the campaign “Operation Midnight Hammer”.

The latest negotiations seek to mint a new nuclear deal following the collapse of the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), a multilateral agreement that saw Iran scale down its nuclear programme in exchange for sanctions relief.

But Trump’s decision, during his first term, to withdraw the US caused the deal to fall apart. As part of his withdrawal, Trump renewed US sanctions against Iran.

‘There’s always a risk’

But the pressure on Iran has increased in recent days, particularly as media reports emerged that the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the UN’s nuclear watchdog, has been blocked from accessing the three sites targeted in Operation Midnight Hammer.

The agency has indicated that it cannot confirm whether Iran has suspended nuclear enrichment at the sites, nor can it estimate the size of Iran’s nuclear stockpile.

That news is likely to fuel the Trump administration’s efforts: It has long warned that Iran seeks a nuclear weapon, a claim Tehran denies.

As he prepared to travel to Texas on Friday, Trump was asked about the prospect of a military strike sparking a wider, drawn-out regional war with Iran.

He largely shrugged off the possibility, citing successes with Operation Midnight Hammer as well as his decision to order the assassination of Iranian military commander Qasem Soleimani in 2020.

“I guess you could say there’s always a risk. When there’s war, there’s a risk in anything, both good and bad. We’ve had tremendous luck,” Trump replied.

Later, he added, “Everything’s worked out, and we want to keep it that way.”

He called on Iran to negotiate in “good faith and conscience”. Still, he ended with a note of scepticism: “They are not getting there.”



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Campus Radical Newsletter: Anti-ICE curriculum in geography class, trans kindergarten teacher sparks outrage

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‘BIASED LESSON’: Minnesota middle school teaches eighth graders ICE ‘harassed’ migrants in geography class curriculum

FAITH FURY: Pro-abortion Notre Dame professor withdraws from institute role after fierce criticism from bishops, cardinals

SPEECH PENALIZED: Canadian school trustee hit with $750K penalty after tribunal rules against his trans-policy posts

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Iowa City residents gather Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026, at the Pentacrest to protest the killing of a Minnesota woman by an ICE agent. (Jessica Rish/Press-Citizen / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images)

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Nomadic art haven opens in Qatar’s desert | Tourism

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NewsFeed

A new art exhibition in a tent in the middle of the Qatari desert offers visitors the chance to experience creativity and nature in a unique setting. Al Jazeera’s Naya Hejazi went to see what it’s all about.



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