One dead after Titlis Xpress cable car cabin falls at Swiss ski resort

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One person died Wednesday when a cable car cabin at a Swiss ski resort fell and crashed on a snowy mountainside. 

The fatal incident happened at the ski resort of Engelberg in central Switzerland around 11 a.m. local time, authorities said. 

2 SKIERS KILLED IN AVALANCHE ON POPULAR MONT BLANC SKIING ROUTE NEAR FRENCH-SWISS BORDER

A fatal gondola accident at a Swiss ski resort

A gondola accident killed one in the Engelberg ski area in Switzerland on Wednesday, March 18, 2026. (Kanton Nidwalden)

“A cabin of the ‘Titlis Xpress’ gondola lift between Trübsee and Stand detached from the cable and plunged down the snow-covered slope in rugged terrain,” a press release states. “A person who was in the cabin at the time of the accident sustained fatal injuries.”

The person was identified as a 61-year-old woman. Her exact cause of death has not been disclosed.

Investigators from several agencies were looking into how the accident happened. 

AMERICAN SKIERS RESCUED AFTER GETTING LOST NEAR OLYMPIC VENUE IN THE ITALIAN ALPS

Overview of a gondola that crashed

A gondola accident killed one in the Engelberg ski area in Switzerland on Wednesday, March 18, 2026. (Kanton Nidwalden)

“It’s also important for us that the incident is investigated down to the second. We will provide all the data without gaps,” said Norbert Patt, CEO of Titlis cable cars, during a news conference, the Blick newspaper reported. “It’s an extraordinary event. Gondolas shouldn’t crash,” he added.

Patt said there was a breeze at the time the gondola fell, but could not say how strong the winds were. 

Several schoolchildren attending a ski camp witnessed the accident. 

A gondola that crashed at a Swiss ski resort

A gondola accident killed one in the Engelberg ski area in Switzerland on Wednesday, March 18, 2026. (Kanton Nidwalden)

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“I was really shocked. We were then afraid to go back down in the gondola,” a 14-year-old girl told the news outlet. 



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Ransomware crims abused Cisco 0-day weeks before disclosure • The Register

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Ransomware criminals exploited CVE-2026-20131, a maximum-severity bug in Cisco Secure Firewall Management Center software, as a zero-day vulnerability more than a month before Cisco patched the hole, according to Amazon security boss CJ Moses.

The critical security flaw allows an unauthenticated, remote attacker to execute arbitrary Java code as root on vulnerable devices. Cisco released software updates that fix the vulnerability on March 4 – but the attackers had a head start. 

“Our research found that Interlock was exploiting this vulnerability 36 days before its public disclosure, beginning January 26,” Moses, the chief information security officer of Amazon Integrated Security, said on Wednesday.

A Cisco spokesperson told The Register that it will update its security advisory to reflect the exploitation. 

“We appreciate Amazon’s partnership on this, and we have updated our security advisory with the latest information,” the spokesperson said. “We strongly urge customers to upgrade as soon as possible and reference our security advisory for more details and guidance.” 

Interlock is a ransomware crew that emerged in 2025, and has since infected hospitals and medical facilities – including kidney dialysis firm Davita and Kettering Health, where the criminals not only disrupted chemotherapy sessions and pre-surgery appointments, but also leaked cancer patients’ details online.

This criminal group also claimed to have stolen 43 GB of files from the city of Saint Paul over the summer, forcing the Minnesota capital to declare a state of national emergency.

Amazon caught the intruders in its MadPot honeypot network, which logged exploit traffic tied to Interlock’s infrastructure. And – in a helpful turn for network defenders – the threat intel team also spotted a misconfigured infrastructure server that exposed Interlock’s attack toolkit. 

Interlock’s post-exploit toolkit

That toolkit includes a PowerShell script designed to scoop up information about victims’ Windows environments, such as operating system and hardware details; running services; installed software; storage configuration; Hyper-V virtual machine inventory; user file listings across Desktop, Documents, and Downloads directories; and RDP authentication events from Windows event logs. It also hoovers up browser history such as bookmarks, stored credentials, and extensions from Chrome, Edge, Firefox, Internet Explorer, and 360 browsers.

After collecting all of this data from victims’ computers, the script compresses it into ZIP archives named for each host. “This structured per-host output format indicates the script operates across multiple machines within a network – a hallmark of ransomware intrusion chains that prepare for organization-wide encryption,” Moses wrote.

Interlock also uses several custom remote access trojans (RATs) to maintain persistent access to compromised machines. A JavaScript implant overrides browser console methods to hide from malware-detection tools, and then collects a ton more information about the infected host using PowerShell and Windows Management Instrumentation. The implant also hoovers up system identity, domain membership, username, OS version, and privilege context, and then encrypts this data, sending it to the attacker-controlled command-and-control server using persistent WebSocket connections.

Plus, it provides interactive shell access, arbitrary command execution, bidirectional file transfer, and SOCKS5 proxy capability for tunneling TCP traffic. It updates itself and can self-delete, allowing the ransomware operators to remove or replace it without reinfecting the computer.

After breaking in, Interlock also uses its illicit access to drop a second implant, this one Java-based and built on GlassFish ecosystem libraries for identical capabilities. Using nearly identical implants in two different programming languages provides a backup for the criminals, ensuring that they can maintain access to victims’ devices even if one of the implants is detected.

Additionally, Amazon spotted a Bash script that configures Linux servers as HTTP reverse proxies, performing system updates, wiping logs every five minutes, and ensuring persistence even when the machine reboots.

The attackers also deployed additional Java class files including memory-resident backdoor that intercepts HTTP requests in memory – it doesn’t write the files to disk – to further evade antivirus scanning tools, and a tool that functions as a lightweight network beacon to verify code execution and confirm network port reachability.

But wait, there’s more…

In addition to using custom malware, the ransomware slingers also deployed legitimate software to make their traffic blend in with authorized remote access. This includes ConnectWise ScreenConnect for remote desktop control; open source memory forensics tool Volatility; and Certify, another open source offensive security tool used by red teams to exploit misconfigurations in Active Directory Certificate Services (AD CS).

“When ransomware operators deploy legitimate remote access tools alongside their custom malware, they’re buying insurance – if defenders find and remove one backdoor, they still have another way in,” Moses wrote. “This indicates multiple redundant remote access mechanisms – a pattern consistent with ransomware operators seeking to maintain access even if individual footholds are removed.”

Amazon attributed the malicious activity to Interlock based on an ELF binary, embedded ransom note, and TOR negotiation portal, among other artifacts. The ransom note, we’re told, also threatened to expose victims to regulators, using the pressure of fines and compliance violations – in addition to data encryption and leaks – to solicit payment. ®



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Taylor Frankie Paul addresses domestic violence allegations ahead of ‘Bachelorette’

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Taylor Frankie Paul confronted domestic violence allegations head-on, admitting the fallout felt “like the end of the world” as she continued to endure intense public scrutiny days before the premiere of “The Bachelorette.”

Draper City Police Department claimed domestic abuse “allegations have been made in both directions,” referring to Paul and her ex-boyfriend Dakota Mortensen, People reported. According to authorities, “contact was made with involved parties on [Feb] 24th and 25th.”

The alleged incident occurred weeks before Paul’s season of “The Bachelorette” is set to air on March 22.

“Honestly, it’s been a heavy time to see the headlines, especially during this time of ‘The Bachelorette’ being released, and it’s supposed to be a really exciting time,” Paul said during an appearance on “Good Morning America.” “I’m a person that will always speak my truth and that’s what I’m known for and so when the time is right, I will be. But right now, just trying to be in the present moment and focus on this.”

Taylor Frankie Paul and Dakota Mortensen at a premiere

Taylor Frankie Paul addressed domestic violence accusations ahead of “The Bachelorette” premiere. (Getty Images)

“My kids do come first,” Paul emphasized. “My kids come first, and so it’s been like just a back and forth process trying to be here in the present moment, you know, worrying about home and headlines. It’s been stressful to be honest.”

Paul confirmed filming for the fifth season of “The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives” had been paused, but claimed she didn’t know why. The reality TV star admitted she isn’t sure what her future looks like on the show as she deals with allegations of domestic violence for a second time.

“It’s hard to see past this – I’m not going to lie – in this moment, it’s just so heavy,” Paul said. “When your life is broadcasted out there in these headlines, it’s like the end of the world, that’s what it feels like – I’m not going to lie.”

“I will say I’ve been here before, and I got through it, and I’ve shared my story and my light, and I’m hoping I can do that again,” she added.

Fox News Digital reached out to Draper Police Department for additional information.

Taylor Frankie Paul standing and posing for a portrait.

Taylor Frankie Paul’s season of “The Bachelorette” premieres on March 22. (Michael Kirchoff / Disney)

A representative for Mortensen told Entertainment Weekly he wasn’t the one to make the domestic violence investigation public.

“His number one priority here is protecting [their 2-year-old son], Ever,” the rep said. “He knew there was a possibility it could come out, but he was not going to be the one to proactively do that because he has always wanted a decent relationship with Taylor. It’s been really hard to achieve that, but he wants to co-parent well.”

“He was just hoping that if he says nothing, as he usually does, it would go away. He’s never done any kind of sit-down interview about his side,” the rep continued. “He kind of just lets it all happen to him, and I think he realizes with the severity of everything now that he just can’t do that.”

Jacob Neeley, Mayci Neeley and Taylor Frankie Paul sitting together on a set.

Taylor Frankie Paul’s relationship with Dakota Mortensen has played out on “The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives.” (Fred Hayes / Disney)

Authorities arrested Paul back in 2023 on charges of aggravated assault, two counts of domestic violence in the presence of a child, child abuse with injury and criminal mischief.

The complaint, filed in 2023, alleged that Paul threw a phone, a wooden play set and “heavy metal chairs” at Mortensen. One of the chairs allegedly hit one of her children who was sitting next to her then-boyfriend on the couch during their argument.

Paul pleaded guilty to aggravated assault, while the other four charges were dropped.

Taylor Paul standing and posing on a red carpet.

Taylor Frankie Paul shares a two-year-old son with ex-boyfriend Dakota Mortensen. (Mike Coppola / Getty Images)

“It was a regret,” she previously told Fox News Digital about her arrest. “Hitting rock bottom, there’s only one way to go, and it helped me to go up. So honestly, as bad as that night was – I think it was also like a blessing in disguise and maybe could have saved my life in a weird way, like, where I was just drowning in misery.”

Paul shares a son with Mortensen. The two officially ended their relationship in December 2024, after the birth of their son, but have kept up on-and-off romantic contact with each other since.

Paul also shares two children with her ex-husband, Tate Paul.



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U.S. robotics companies want federal help to keep Chinese robots out of America’s networks

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Executives at top U.S. robotics companies asked Congress for federal dollars, new legislation and a simpler regulatory field, arguing the support is necessary to adapt to the AI era and compete with their well-oiled, state-funded Chinese competitors.

The U.S. robotics sector, estimated at $50 billion in value, includes world famous companies like Boston Dynamics. The industry is projected to sell millions of robots across the country over the next four years.  

According to a 2025 report from the International Federation of Robotics, the market has sold and installed an average of 500,000 robots between 2020 and 2024. China alone accounted for 54% of those installations, compared to just 9% for America.

Matthew Malchano, vice president of software at Boston Dynamics, told lawmakers in  the House Homeland Security cyber subcommittee hearing Tuesday that robotics represent the necessary physical infrastructure to support the country’s efforts to dominate the global AI race, with robots, drones and other machines more fully integrating AI systems in the coming years.

He pointed to Chinese companies like Unitree, which are capturing market share with police departments and universities across the United States, despite contracting ties to the Chinese military and cybersecurity vulnerabilities like a wormable exploit found in 2025 that would allow an attacker to takeover fleets of Unitree robots.

Malchano said Unitree is one of “dozens” of Chinese companies propped up by China’s national AI and robotics plan, which “envisions transforming virtually every major industry in China by integrating AI powered robots” through funding and favorable policies.

He pressed U.S. lawmakers for a similar national strategy, and stumped for the passage of the National Commission on Robotics Act, sponsored by Rep. Jay Olbernolte, R-Calif., that would develop a bipartisan commission to drive it.

Max Fenkell, global head of policy and government relations at ScaleAI, said while the U.S. is winning the AI race on its chosen metrics – model quality and chips – it is “losing” on data and implementation.

Unlike large language models, which download training data straight from the internet, AI systems for robots will require unique training data gathered, categorized and labeled through thousands of hours of bespoke testing.

While China has pursued an “industrialized” training strategy in tandem with industry, funding mile-long stretches of warehouses dedicated to gathering training data for Chinese companies, the U.S. has no similar strategy.

“We’re seeing two different races play out and I fear right now the United States may be winning the wrong one,” he said.

Executives at the hearing were unanimous in suggesting Congress block U.S. federal agencies from purchasing Chinese-made robots and create a single federal regulatory standard for the industry, while Fenkell and Malchado asked for the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency to conduct a security review of foreign-made robots.

At the hearing, Rep. James Walkinshaw, D-Va., noted a long history of bipartisan cooperation to help U.S. companies compete against state-subsidized Chinese firms. 

“With extensive state investment in technology companies and laws that enlist private companies to serve the interest of the government, the PRC’s military-civil fusion is a serious threat to our own national security,” said Walkinshaw.

AI-powered robots collide with the Trump administration’s thirst for data

As lawmakers weigh how best to position U.S. companies to compete with China, they must also grapple with the possibility that AI-powered robots could be hacked, manipulated or intentionally turned against the public.

Privacy and civil liberties experts have long expressed concerns about the use of robots in areas like policing, in certain military contexts and against American citizens.

The requests for more help from Washington comes at the same time the U.S. government, including the military and Department of Homeland Security, has become markedly more aggressive under the Trump administration about tracking data on Americans and using force against U.S. citizens involved in immigration operations.

Companies like Boston Dynamics sell their robots to manufacturing facilities, semiconductor fabricators, energy plants, first responders, and the U.S. Secret Service. But they also sell them to police departments and the U.S. military, and an early version of the company’s viral “BigDog” quadruped model was created through the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency at the Department of Defense.

Last year, Immigrations and Customs Enforcement spent $78,000 for a Canadian robot that could perform similar tasks as Spot, another Boston Dynamics robot model, including deploying smoke bombs, according to Governing.

Last month, DHS finalized a $1 billion contract with Palantir to expand AI data analytics across the department to support immigration enforcement. The Coast Guard alone is investing $350 million in robotics and autonomous systems by 2028. 

Congressional Democrats are currently blocking funding for DHS over its immigration and data collection policies.

Greg Otto

Written by Greg Otto

Greg Otto is Editor-in-Chief of CyberScoop, overseeing all editorial content for the website. Greg has led cybersecurity coverage that has won various awards, including accolades from the Society of Professional Journalists and the American Society of Business Publication Editors. Prior to joining Scoop News Group, Greg worked for the Washington Business Journal, U.S. News & World Report and WTOP Radio. He has a degree in broadcast journalism from Temple University.



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Three charged with murder after man found dead in wheelie bin | UK News

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Three people have been charged with murder after a body was found in a wheelie bin, police have said.

The body of Thomas Niven, 37, was discovered in the bin in Cash’s Park, Coventry, last Friday.

On Wednesday evening, West Midlands Police said Tammy Sturdy, 45, Camron Sturdy, 21, and Shane Turkington, 37, had all been charged with murder following Mr Niven’s death.

All three suspects, who are from Coventry, have been remanded in custody and are due to appear before Coventry Magistrates’ Court on Thursday morning.

In a statement previously released through police, Mr Niven’s family said they were “in shock and are devastated” at his death.

They added: “He was a pillar of strength towards us all.

“He was loving and caring, he loved all of his family, he was a big softy when it came to animals and his nephews and nieces.”

Police have urged anyone with information who could assist the investigation to contact them.



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Assad-era Syrian prison official found guilty of torture by US jury

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A former Syrian prison official was convicted by a U.S. federal jury in Los Angeles Monday on torture and immigration fraud charges after prosecutors said he oversaw and at times personally carried out brutal abuses against detainees under the now-ousted regime of former Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

Samir Ousman Alsheikh, a former brigadier general who once headed Damascus Central Prison, also known as Adra Prison, was found guilty following a nine-day trial of conspiracy to commit torture, immigration-related fraud offenses, and three counts of torture, according to the Justice Department.

The case marks a historic step toward accountability, with Alsheikh becoming the first Assad-era official to be tried and convicted in a U.S. federal court.

Prosecutors said the 73-year-old ordered and oversaw the torture of political prisoners between 2005 and 2008, including beatings, suspension from ceilings and the use of devices such as the so-called “Magic Carpet,” which folded victims’ bodies to inflict extreme pain.

TEXAS FAMILY SUES SYRIA FOR DEATH OF LOVED ONE: ‘PLAN TO HOLD THE REGIME FULLY ACCOUNTABLE FOR ITS CRIMES’

Former Syrian President Bashar al-Assad (right) standing across a desk from Samir Ousman Alsheikh in a formal room.

A handout photo shows former Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, right, and Samir Ousman Alsheikh on or about July 25, 2011, when Assad appointed Alsheikh as governor of Deir ez-Zor. (U.S. Department of Justice)

He entered the United States in 2020 after lying about his past on his visa application and later attempted to become a U.S. citizen, authorities said.

Alsheikh, who was arrested at Los Angeles International Airport in 2024 as he attempted to board a one-way flight to Beirut, faces up to 20 years in prison for each torture-related count when he is sentenced at a later date.

“Samir Ousman Alsheikh ordered, directed, and directly participated in heinous acts of torture designed to inflict excruciating mental and physical pain with the goal of punishing and silencing political dissent,” said Tysen Duva, assistant attorney general for the Justice Department’s criminal division in a statement.

“For many years, he evaded responsibility for his crimes in Syria, including by lying to U.S. immigration authorities in order to reside in the U.S. with the hope of obtaining citizenship. Thanks to the courage and perseverance of the victims and the dedication of Department of Justice prosecutors, along with their law enforcement partners, justice has prevailed and Alsheikh can no longer run from his past.”

‘HIGH STAKES DIPLOMACY’: NEW BOOK GIVES AN INSIDE LOOK AT EFFORTS TO BRING HOME AN AMERICAN DETAINED IN SYRIA

A ripped portrait of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

A torn portrait of Bashar al-Assad inside the Presidential Palace Dec. 10, 2024, in Damascus, Syria. (Ali Haj Suleiman/Getty Images)

According to a federal criminal complaint filed in July 2024, Alsheikh was an associate of Maher al-Assad, the younger brother of Bashar al-Assad, who led the Syrian military’s elite Fourth Division.

He was appointed by Assad in 2011 as governor of Deir ez-Zor following anti-government protests that spread across the country during the Arab Spring.

The Syrian Emergency Task Force (SETF), a Washington-based advocacy group, assisted investigators in bringing the former regime official to justice. The organization first identified Alsheikh in Los Angeles through a tip and conducted its own verification using open-source material and leaked Syrian government data.

It then alerted U.S. authorities and worked with the FBI and Justice Department to help build the case, including connecting investigators with key witnesses who testified about abuses at Adra Prison. According to SETF, it pushed for torture charges rather than solely immigration violations to ensure broader accountability.

WHATEVER HAPPENED TO…SYRIA’S CIVIL WAR?

Syrian opposition lawmaker Mamoun al-Homsi sits in his office in Damascus during a 2001 file photo.

Syrian lawmaker and opposition activist Mamoun al-Homsi is pictured at his office in Damascus Aug. 7, 2001. (Khaled Al-Hariri/Reuters)

Mamoun al-Homsi, a former independent member of the Syrian Parliament, was arrested in 2001 for demanding democratic reforms and spent five years in Adra Prison. He told Fox News Digital in an interview, through a translator, that Alsheikh stood out from other prison directors for his brutality.

Al-Homsi said that while previous prison heads largely adhered to prison rules and did not target detainees for their political views, Alsheikh’s arrival in 2005 marked a shift. 

“The toughest torture for me wasn’t anything done to me physically as much as it was what was done to others on my behalf,” said al-Homsi.

SETF executive director Mouaz Moustafa, who attended the trial, told Fox News Digital that testimony revealed Alsheikh allegedly ordered another prisoner, Khaled Abdul Malek, to poison al-Homsi.

Syrian police officers stand guard at the entrance of Damascus Central Prison in the Adra area.

Police stand at the gate of Damascus Central Prison in the Adra area near the Syrian capital of Damascus May 28, 2010. (Khaled al-Hariri/Reuters)

“Khaled Abdul Malek had come so close to Mamoun al-Homsi so he told him about this plan and told him don’t eat anything from anyone to the point where Mamoun al-Homsi would go to the trash if there was any and wash whatever is left,” Moustafa said.

Malek refused Alsheikh’s demand to poison the prominent political figure, leading to him being placed in Wing 13, a notorious part of the prison where people were tortured.

“Khaled Malik then had his back broken,” Moustafa said, adding that he arrived in court with a cane and could barely walk.

Al-Homsi said he survived on olive pits and lost more than 60 pounds. He was released in 2006 and later fled to Canada.

WHY SYRIA PLAYS A KEY ROLE IN TRUMP’S PLANS FOR MIDDLE EAST PEACE

A high-altitude satellite view of Adra Central Prison in Damascus, Syria.

An aerial view of Adra Prison, located on the outskirts of Damascus, Syria. (Google Earth/Fox News Digital Ashley Carnahan)

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The former parliament member told Fox News Digital the verdict sends a message that former regime officials cannot evade accountability, even if they leave Syria and attempt to rebuild their lives abroad.

Al-Homsi called the verdict a signal that justice, though long delayed, is finally taking hold — an outcome he described as essential for the future of a free Syria.



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Qatar says Iran missile attack sparks fire, causes damage at gas facility | US-Israel war on Iran News

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Qatar’s Foreign Ministry strongly condemns attack that caused “extensive damage” at the Ras Laffan complex.

Qatar’s Ministry of ⁠Interior says civil ⁠defence teams are responding to a fire at the country’s main gas facility after an Iranian attack.

In a statement on Wednesday, QatarEnergy said there was “extensive damage” following the “missile attacks” on Ras Laffan Industrial City.

“All personnel have been accounted for and no casualties have been reported at this time,” the world’s largest liquefied natural gas (LNG) producer added.

The announcements came hours after Iran threatened to attack oil and gas facilities across the Gulf region in retaliation for an Israeli attacks on its South Pars gasfield as the fallout from the United States-Israeli war on the country continues to escalate.

Iran’s warning was directed at Qatar’s Mesaieed Petrochemical Complex, Mesaieed Holding Company and Ras Laffan Refinery; Saudi Arabia’s Samref Refinery and Jubail Petrochemical Complex; and the United Arab Emirates’s Al Hosn Gas Field.

In a statement, Qatar’s Foreign Ministry strongly condemned “the brutal” Iranian targeting of Ras Laffan Industrial City.

“Qatar considers this assault a dangerous escalation, a flagrant violation of its sovereignty, and a direct threat to its national security,” it said.

On March 2, Qatar suspended LNG production following an attack on at its giant Ras Laffan facility, as well as on a water tank at a power plant in Mesaieed Industrial City.



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US central bank predicts inflation rise from Iran war as oil prices surge again | Money News

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The US central bank has raised its forecast for inflation as the Iran war-linked surge in global energy prices threatens self-inflicted damage on the world’s largest economy.

The Federal Reserve held off putting up interest rates despite the challenge to price stability posed by President Trump’s decision, along with Israel, to attack the Iranian government.

Retaliation from Iran, centred on Gulf neighbours, has severely curbed oil and gas output across the region, with the halt to deliveries through the key Strait of Hormuz resulting in a global supply squeeze.

Oil prices rallied higher on Wednesday ahead of the Fed’s rate decision after an Israeli strike on a key Iranian gas field was met by Iranian threats to target energy infrastructure across the Middle East.

Brent crude rose more than 5% to $109 a barrel at one stage. It is 50% up in the month to date.

The bank’s latest economic projections, issued alongside its interest rate announcement, indicated upwards pressure on inflation and the wider economy ahead from the war.

It also noted that US factory gate prices had already hit their highest level for a year in February – before the first bombs were dropped on the last day of that month.

Iran war latest: Criticism of attacks on Iran gas field

The forecasts saw inflation ticking up by 0.3 percentage points higher by the year’s end than it had previously expected.

Fed chair Jay Powell said the outlook was “uncertain” but added “there will be some effects” for inflation ahead from the war.

He judged that some upwards pressure in the short term could be partly offset later by some trade tariff effects falling away.

The message was seen by analysts as a cautious response to the conflict to date and market reaction was also muted.

The US is the world’s largest oil producer but it imports the bulk of what its refineries need for things like road fuels because they are configured to process heavier oil than the US produces.

The price shock was first seen at US filling stations where petrol costs are currently up by 28% this month on average, according to AAA data.

The country is far less exposed to shifts in wholesale natural gas costs because it is a major producer and user of its own product. US prices are actually flat in March so far.

The issue for the Fed, like other central banks, is uncertainty over the duration of the war.

The longer it drags on, the more likely banks are to raise interest rates in the hope of dampening the prospects of higher prices becoming engrained in the economy beyond fuel, air fares and transport.

Europe, including the UK, are particularly exposed to so-called secondary effects as energy buyers.

The Bank of England is widely tipped to follow the Fed and leave the base rate at its current level of 3.75% when its rate-setting committee meets on Thursday.

The same decision is expected shortly afterwards by the European Central Bank though it could, in theory, be the first to react to any extended price shock through a rate increase if the war drags on. That is because its main deposit rate is already less restrictive.

US Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell during a news conference in January. Pic: Reuters
Image: US Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell during a news conference in January. Pic: Reuters

Central banks have no power of control over oil costs, which were on track on Wednesday evening for their highest US market close since hostilities started, only the ability to help limit wider effects by raising borrowing costs.

The crisis promises to be the first major test for Mr Trump’s recently-nominated Fed chair Kevin Warsh, who appears set to replace Mr Powell when his term ends in May.

The president continues to demand interest rate cuts from the Fed but analysts say there is no credible path to rate cuts while the war in the Middle East continues to rage, despite employment market weakness.



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Ricki Lake admits impulsive facelift decision without research

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Ricki Lake is getting candid about going under the knife — admitting her decision to undergo a facelift wasn’t too carefully planned.

“I didn’t do any research when I decided very impulsively to have my face done,” Lake said on the “Inside Edit” podcast.

“I met with him on the next available [appointment]. I had my consult, I booked the next available appointment. So that was in mid-June. I booked for July 18. Never looked back.”

The former talk show host said the sudden move came after a dramatic weight loss that left her dealing with excess skin.

VALERIE BERTINELLI SAYS SHE WAS ‘LUCKY TO HAVE SURVIVED’ SEVERE POST-SURGERY INFECTION

Ricki Lake posing on the red carpet at a premiere event in New York City, wearing a stylish outfit and smiling for photographers.

Ricki Lake’s facelift decision was made “impulsively” after she lost 40 pounds. (Santiago Felipe/WireImage/Getty Images)

“I had just lost 40 pounds and I had this hanging,” she said, pointing to the area under her chin. “And it wasn’t just like that I didn’t like what I saw or wanted to look younger. I have gray hair. It’s not about that. It’s like, I had an appendage hanging that wasn’t going to grow back, like come back up.”

The “Hairspray” star framed the choice as practical, but what sealed the deal was seeing a friend’s dramatic transformation up close.

‘MORMON WIVES’ STAR SAYS PLASTIC SURGERY NIGHTMARE RUINED HER LIFE AND REALITY TV CAREER

Ricki Lake before and after her weight loss, plastic surgery reveal

The former talk show host said that her decision to have the surgery wasn’t about wanting to look younger. (Getty Images)

“I saw her eight days after her surgery and not only did she look amazing, she was euphoric. She was like a different person — she was just on top of the world, and I was like, ‘I’ll have what she’s having.’”

Despite the lack of research, Lake said the results — and recovery — exceeded expectations.

“I healed so quickly. I hosted an event at the Academy Museum two weeks after my surgery. I looked flawless. Flawless.”

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Ricki Lake wearing a black dress on the red carpet

Ricki Lake opens up about her facelift decision and slams Hollywood stars who lie about cosmetic procedures. (Getty Images)

This isn’t the first time Lake has gone public about changing her look.

Last June, she admitted to plastic surgery after a dramatic weight-loss transformation during an appearance on “Watch What Happens Live” with host Andy Cohen.

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After talking to him candidly about her hair loss, she said, “I’ve also had, and I’ll reveal this to you [although] I’ve told other people. I’ve had a lower face and neck lift.”

Close up of Ricki Lake

The “Hairspray” star said she saw a friend’s transformation results and decided to undergo a cosmetic procedure. (Chris Haston/NBC via Getty Images)

As Cohen continued to praise her appearance and said she looked “so good,” Lake raised her hands under her chin to highlight her jawline.

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“Thank you, I kind of think it’s the best facelift I’ve ever seen,” Lake added. “And my doctor, let me give a shoutout, because he’s a genius.”



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US intel chief Gabbard says Iran was not rebuilding enrichment prior to war | US-Israel war on Iran News

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Washington, DC – Tulsi Gabbard, the director of US National Intelligence, said that the United States intelligence community had assessed that Iran was not rebuilding its nuclear enrichment capabilities following US and Israeli attacks last year.

The revelation on Wednesday appeared to undercut one of President Donald Trump’s key justifications for joining Israel in launching the latest war against Iran.

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Trump and his top officials have repeatedly cited Iran’s nuclear ambitions as one of the main reasons for abandoning ongoing diplomatic talks in favour of military action.

“As a result of Operation Midnight Hammer,” Gabbard said in written testimony to the Senate intelligence committee, referencing the June 2025 US strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities, “Iran’s nuclear enrichment program was obliterated”.

“There have been no efforts since then to try to rebuild their enrichment capability,” Gabbard said in the written testimony.

Notably, Gabbard did not read that portion of her testimony, which was provided to members of the committee, during her publicly televised oral testimony. When pressed on why she omitted the portion, Gabbard said simply that she did not have enough time. She did not deny the assessment.

“You chose to omit the parts that contradict Trump,” Senator Mark Warner, a Democrat, responded.

Trump has repeatedly said the June 2025 attacks, which came at the end of a 12-day war between Israel and Iran, had “obliterated” Iran’s nuclear capacity, even as he warned that Iran’s alleged nuclear ambitions presented an immediate threat to the US.

Tehran has for years denied it is seeking a nuclear weapon. Nuclear and arms monitors have maintained that even if Tehran were seeking a nuclear weapon, it did not represent a short- or medium-term threat.

The foreign minister of Oman, who had mediated the latest round of US-Iran indirect nuclear talks ahead of the war, has refuted Trump officials’ claims that the most recent negotiations were not yielding any progress.

The Guardian newspaper also reported this week that the United Kingdom’s national security adviser, Jonathan Powell, had attended the final session of talks and assessed that the Iranian position did not justify an immediate rush to war, citing sources familiar with the situation.

The administration has not settled on any single justification for launching the war, also pointing to Iran’s ballistic capabilities, its potential threat to Israel and US forces in the Middle East, and the totality of the Iranian government’s actions since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

The concept of an “imminent threat” is significant in determining the legality of Trump’s decision to strike a sovereign country under international law.

It is also significant for US domestic law, under which presidents can commit the military only in instances of immediate self-defence. Only Congress can officially declare war or authorise extended military campaigns.

Iran’s government ‘intact but largely degraded’

The White House said earlier this week that Iran’s ballistic missile capacity was “functionally destroyed”, with the Iranian navy “effectively destroyed” and the US and Israel dominating the country’s airspace.

Experts have assessed that Iran still maintains the military capacity to inflict significant damage in the region, and it has continued to wield its military influence over the Strait of Hormuz.

Gabbard, meanwhile, offered a more sober assessment than the White House, saying that despite the killings of Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, top military officials, and most recently the head of the Supreme National Security Council, Ali Larijani and the intelligence minister, Esmail Khatib, “the regime in Iran ⁠appears to be intact but largely degraded by Operation Epic Fury”.

“Even so, Iran and its proxies remain capable of and continue to attack US and allied interests in ⁠the Middle East. If a hostile regime survives, it will seek to begin a years-long effort to rebuild its missiles and UAV [drone] forces,” she said.

Gabbard also listed Iran, alongside Russia, China, North Korea and Pakistan, as among the countries “researching and developing an array of novel, advanced, or traditional missile delivery systems, with nuclear and conventional payloads, that put our homeland within range”.

The Washington, DC-based Arms Control Association has said that US intelligence as of 2025 had said it may take Iran until 2035 or longer to develop a missile capable of hitting the US, if it did indeed seek to do so.

High-profile resignation

Gabbard spoke a day after a top official in her agency, Joe Kent, the director of the US National Counterterrorism Center, resigned in opposition to Trump’s war with Iran.

In his resignation, Kent said that Iran “posed no imminent threat” to the US and that Trump’s decision to enter the war went against his “America First” pledges.

Kent is the first high-profile member of the Trump administration to step down in response to the war.

Gabbard herself had previously been a vocal opponent to indefinite military engagement in the Middle East and war with Iran. A former member of the US House of Representatives from Hawaii, she left the Democratic Party and supported Trump, in part, due to his anti-war vows.

However, in a post on X on Tuesday, Gabbard defended Trump’s decision to go to war.

“As our Commander in Chief, he is responsible for determining what is and is not an imminent threat, and whether or not to take action he deems necessary to protect the safety and security of our troops, the American people and our country,” she said.

She said her agency’s role was to funnel US intelligence to Trump.

“After carefully reviewing all the information before him, President Trump concluded that the terrorist Islamist regime in Iran posed an imminent threat and he took action based on that conclusion,” she said.



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