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Russian hackers exploit Zimbra flaw in Ukrainian govt attacks

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Russian military hackers

Hackers part of APT28, a state-backed threat group linked to Russia’s military intelligence service (GRU), are exploiting a Zimbra Collaboration Suite (ZCS) vulnerability in attacks targeting Ukrainian government entities.

This high-severity security flaw (tracked as CVE-2025-66376 and patched in early November) stems from a stored cross-site scripting (XSS) that unauthenticated attackers can exploit to gain remote code execution (RCE) and compromise the Zimbra server and the target’s email account.

On Wednesday, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) added the vulnerability to its catalog of vulnerabilities exploited in the wild. CISA also ordered Federal Civilian Executive Branch (FCEB) agencies to secure their servers within two weeks, as mandated by the Binding Operational Directive (BOD) 22-01 issued in November 2021.

While the U.S. cybersecurity agency didn’t provide further details on the ongoing exploitation of CVE-2025-66376, security researchers at Seqrite Labs reported a day earlier that the Zimbra XSS vulnerability had been exploited by APT28 military hackers in attacks against Ukraine.

The Ukrainian State Hydrology Agency (a critical infrastructure entity under the Ministry of Infrastructure that provides navigational, maritime, and hydrographic support) was one of the targets of this phishing campaign (named Operation GhostMail).

“The phishing email has no malicious attachments, no suspicious links, no macros. The entire attack chain lives inside the HTML body of a single email, there are no malicious attachments,” Seqrite Labs said.

Attack flow
CVE-2025-66376 attack flow (Seqrite Labs)

​The APT28 (aka Fancy Bear, Strontium) hackers’ malicious messages delivered an obfuscated JavaScript payload that exploits the CVE-2025-66376 vulnerability when the recipient opens the email in a vulnerable Zimbra webmail session.

“The script executes silently in the browser and begins harvesting credentials, session tokens, backup 2FA codes, browser-saved passwords, and the contents of the victim’s mailbox going back 90 days with all the data exfiltrated over both DNS and HTTPS,” the researchers added.

Zimbra security flaws are frequently targeted in attacks, including by Russian state-sponsored threat groups, and have been used to breach thousands of vulnerable email servers in recent years.

For instance, starting in February 2023, the Russian Winter Vivern cyberespionage group used another reflected XSS exploit to breach Zimbra webmail portals and spy on the communications of NATO-aligned organizations and persons, including government officials, military personnel, and diplomats.

In October 2024, U.S. and U.K. cyber agencies also warned that APT29 (aka Cozy Bear, Midnight Blizzard) hackers linked to Russia’s Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) were attacking vulnerable Zimbra servers “at a mass scale,” exploiting a vulnerability previously used to steal email account credentials.

Zimbra is a widely popular email and collaboration software suite used by hundreds of millions of people, including hundreds of government agencies and thousands of businesses worldwide.

Malware is getting smarter. The Red Report 2026 reveals how new threats use math to detect sandboxes and hide in plain sight.

Download our analysis of 1.1 million malicious samples to uncover the top 10 techniques and see if your security stack is blinded.



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Fairfax schools groping case follows string of sexual misconduct cases

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Virginia’s largest public school district is facing renewed scrutiny after parents accused Fairfax County Public Schools officials this week of delaying notification that an adult student identified as an illegal immigrant allegedly groped multiple female classmates.

News broke last week that Israel Flores Ortiz, 19, a junior at Fairfax High School, was charged with nine counts of assault and battery after multiple female students accused him of inappropriately touching them while they were walking in school hallways between classes.

Furious parents who spoke with Fox News Digital and local news outlet WJLA this week claim school officials waited two weeks to inform parents and the move only came after parental pressure. They also claim district officials sanitized the nature of the groping.

The district said in a statement, “While Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS) is unable to comment on specifics due to federal and state privacy laws, we prioritize student and staff safety and fully investigate any time someone reports an incident or says they do not feel safe at school. We are grateful to our law enforcement partners, who continue to work swiftly and thoroughly when there are safety concerns in our schools. The safety of all FCPS students and staff remains a top priority.”

high school lockers istock image

Israel Flores Ortiz, 19, faces nine assault charges after multiple female students reported inappropriate touching at Fairfax High School. (iStock)

SCHOOL BOARD SETTLES WITH BOYS ACCUSED OF SEXUAL HARASSMENT OVER TRANSGENDER STUDENT LOCKER ROOM INCIDENT

The Fairfax High allegations follow several other criminal cases involving alleged sexual misconduct tied to FCPS schools in recent years.

In September 2025, Thomas Edison High School instructional assistant Derrick Burroughs was arrested after Fairfax County police alleged he sexually assaulted two students on separate occasions. He was charged with two counts of aggravated sexual battery and indecent liberties by a custodian and put on administrative leave, according to police.

The incident followed two other teachers in the district being arrested on sex crime charges in February 2025.

Fairview Elementary School teacher John Barger was arrested and charged with two counts of aggravated sexual battery after detectives alleged he sexually assaulted two students on separate occasions. Later court reporting identified the students as ages 10 and 11.

Chicago classroom

Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS) said it was unable to comment on specifics in the Ortiz case due to federal and state privacy laws, but that it prioritized student and staff safety. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

TRUMP ADMIN ASKS SPANBERGER, VIRGINIA OFFICIALS TO NOT RELEASE ILLEGAL CHARGED WITH GROPING HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS

WJLA reported that parents questioned why they were not notified until weeks after the allegations surfaced.

“We expect that anyone who works with children is focused on their safety and well-being,” an FCPS spokesperson told WJLA 7News at the time. “When that trust is broken, it deeply affects us all. As soon as we were made aware of these allegations, the teacher was removed from our schools and has not returned.”

Also in February 2025, Falls Church High School teacher Richard Joseph Berkowitz was arrested in a Fairfax County child exploitation sting and charged with four counts of solicitation of a minor and two counts of production of child sexual abuse material, police said. Public reporting did not identify FCPS students as alleged victims in that case. He was suspended from teaching upon the arrest, according to authorities.

In 2024, several other cases drew public attention.

In September 2024, police charged former after-school contractor Arturo Elmore-Adon with seven counts of unlawful filming after investigators said they found videos he allegedly took of four girls, all FCPS elementary school students.

empty Classroom

The latest assault allegations at Fairfax High add to previous criminal cases tied to FCPS. (iStock)

VIRGINIA PROSECUTOR’S RECORD ON VIOLENT OFFENDERS SCRUTINIZED AFTER ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT CHARGED IN MOM’S MURDER

At Langley High School, football coach and teacher David Clay Murray was arrested in August 2024 and charged with five counts of sexual solicitation of a minor, WJLA reported, after investigators said he solicited sex acts while communicating with an undercover detective posing as a 15-year-old girl.

Then in October 2024, Langley instructional assistant David Scalea was arrested after police said a student reported seeing him masturbating in a classroom. He was charged with obscene sexual display and contributing to the delinquency of a minor, according to Fox5DC.

In October 2023, Groveton Elementary School teacher James William Nugent II was charged with taking indecent liberties with a child and 13 counts of distributing child pornography after police said he exposed himself to a juvenile and investigators found child sexual abuse material during a search of his home. Police said they believed he may have exposed himself to other children in the area as well.

In April 2023, James Madison High School learning disabilities teacher Allieh Kheradmand was charged with four counts of indecent liberties by a custodian after a student disclosed an inappropriate sexual relationship with her, according to the FCPD.

Fairfax County Public Schools bus

The Fairfax High case is the latest in a string of sexual misconduct cases tied to Fairfax schools since 2023. (Getty Images)

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FCPS did not immediately respond Wednesday to a request for comment about district-wide student-safety policies or the timeline for notifying families in the new Fairfax High case.

The Northern Virginia school system has been criticized by conservative education activists for prioritizing “far-left” policies over student safety concerns because of its gender policies and policies protecting immigrant students from ICE.

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Fairfax is one of five Northern Virginia school systems whose transgender bathroom policies triggered a threat by the Trump administration to pull federal funding, after the administration argued they were violating Title IX.

Fox News’ Taylor Penley contributed to this report.



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NYPD detective testifies Guy Rivera smiled after Jonathan Diller shooting

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The suspect accused of gunning down NYPD officer Jonathan Diller appeared to be smiling in police bodycam video just moments after the fatal shooting, according to testimony from one of Diller’s fellow officers.

NYPD Detective Derval Whyte took the witness stand in a Queens courtroom Wednesday, describing how he “watched my friend get shot for no reason” during a routine traffic stop in March 2024. Whyte went on to recount Diller’s final moments, the New York Post reported.

“He’s on his back, he’s motionless,” he said of Diller. “I heard him say, ‘I’ve been shot.’ I went over to find the gunshot wound. I rolled him back and forth and found the bullet wound above his belly.”

Body camera footage played for the court showed the moments officers attempted to revive Diller in the immediate aftermath of the shooting. The footage also showed a man on the ground in handcuffs who appeared to be grinning, the outlet reported.

NYPD OFFICER JONATHAN DILLER’S WIDOW WEEPS AS SEA OF BLUE FILLS COURTROOM IN ACCUSED COP KILLER’S MURDER TRIAL

Guy Rivera in courtroom

Guy Rivera, charged in the fatal shooting of NYPD Officer Jonathan Diller, listens to opening statements as his trial begins at Queens Criminal Court in the Kew Gardens neighborhood of Queens, March 10, 2026. (Dave Sanders/Pool/The New York Times)

When he was asked to describe the footage, Whyte said, “That’s the defendant. He looks like he’s smiling.”

Diller, a 31-year-old married father, was inspecting a suspicious vehicle parked outside a T-Mobile store in Far Rockaway on March 25, 2024, when 35-year-old Guy Rivera, who was seated in the passenger seat, allegedly fired three rounds at the officer, striking him in the stomach. 

Rivera, a career criminal with nearly two dozen prior arrests, according to police, pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder charges after prosecutors said he gunned down Diller.

BODYCAM SHOWS NYPD OFFICER SHOOTING MAN WITH KNIFE AS MAMDANI CALLS FOR NO CRIMINAL CHARGES

Assistant District Attorney Ken Zawistowski described the fatal encounter during the trial’s opening statements last week.

“[Rivera] took out his gun and pointed it at officer Diller,” Zawistowski said.

Stephanie Diller crying in court

Stephanie Diller, widow of slain NYPD Officer Jonathan Diller, becomes emotional as she attends her husband’s murder trial. (Fox News)

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“He shot officer Diller underneath his bulletproof vest, causing his intestines to be ripped through and causing his iliac artery to be severed — one of the body’s most vital arteries,” Zawistowski continued.

Fox News Digital’s Julia Bonavita and Olivia Palombo, along with Fox News’ Sandy Ibrahim, contributed to this report.



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Google says it will let publishers opt out of AI overviews • The Register

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The UK’s competition watchdog has published responses to its consultation over Google’s strategic market status (SMS) covering search and search advertising services – and the tech biz is offering some concessions.

Google says it will eventually allow sites to opt out of generative AI features in search, and make it easier for users to change the default search engine “without the annoying interruptions.” Details and timelines, however, were conspicuously absent.

The UK’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) designated Google with SMS status in 2025, giving it powers to impose competition requirements on the company.

In January 2026, the CMA launched a consultation on proposed measures, including giving publishers more control over how their content feeds Google’s AI overviews, introducing choice screens for switching search engines, and making ranking systems more transparent.

The proposals drew widespread support, along with criticisms the CMA was not moving far or fast enough. The Publishers Association, for example, called [PDF] for a complete decoupling of Google’s search crawlers from its AI crawlers, and pushed for a shorter implementation timeline.

As well it might, the Publishers Association noted a 19 percent decline in click-through rates to academic reference services, saying it was “likely to be as a result of Google’s conduct in its Search services and AI features.”

The click-through problem was echoed in other responses. The News Media Association (whose membership includes publishers of UK national newspapers The Guardian and The Daily Telegraph) also noted [PDF] concerns around the processes, transparency, and timescale for ranking complaints, and asked the CMA to halve the proposed six-month implementation window to three months.

In its response published this week, Google addressed some of the concerns, stating, “We design our ranking systems to show the most relevant, highest-quality results for your query.” Google claimed its own services and products were not given “special treatment,” and added:

“Some third-party proposals (unsupported by evidence), could expose our systems, and thus our users, to manipulation and abuse. This would make it harder to fight spam, and ultimately slow down our ability to launch improvements for UK users.”

With the proposed ability for sites to opt out of generative AI features in search, Google is extending an olive branch. The company must also address worries that opting out of AI overviews might impact a site’s ranking in web search results.

Similarly, a “permanent, central switch” in a device’s settings for default search engine selection goes some way to addressing concerns, but many responses are clear that a choice screen is required.

Google tried to justify the case for a central setting: “We know that people don’t like being bombarded with frequent, interruptive pop-ups, and that the proposal that we show more choice screens every year, on top of when you set up a new device, would annoy users.”

The process has a while to run yet. ®



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Gabbard says Pakistan missiles a future threat to US, but experts push back | Military News

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Islamabad, Pakistan – The United States’ top intelligence official has placed Pakistan alongside Russia, China, North Korea and Iran as a country whose advancing missile capabilities could eventually put US territory within reach.

Presenting the 2026 Annual Threat Assessment [PDF] before the Senate Intelligence Committee on Wednesday, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard said the five countries were “researching and developing an array of novel, advanced or traditional missile delivery systems with nuclear and conventional payloads, that put our homeland within range”.

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On Pakistan specifically, Gabbard told lawmakers that “Pakistan’s long-range ballistic missile development potentially could include ICBMs with the range capable of striking the homeland”.

The written assessment went further, placing Pakistan across multiple threat categories.

On missiles, it said Pakistan “continues to develop increasingly sophisticated missile technology that provides its military the means to develop missile systems with the capability to strike targets beyond South Asia, and if these trends continue, Inter-Continental Ballistic Missiles (ICBMs) that would threaten the US”.

On weapons of mass destruction, it assessed that Pakistan, alongside China, North Korea and Russia, would “probably continue to research, develop, and field delivery systems that will increase their ranges and accuracy, challenge US missile defences, and provide new WMD-use options”.

The report also flagged South Asia as a region of “enduring security challenges”, warning that India-Pakistan relations “remain a risk for nuclear conflict”.

It referenced last year’s Pahalgam attack in Indian-administered Kashmir as an example of how violence by armed groups can trigger crises, while noting that “President Trump’s intervention de-escalated the most recent nuclear tensions” and that “neither country seeks to return to open conflict”.

The assessment projected that threats to the US homeland could expand from more than 3,000 missiles today to at least 16,000 by 2035.

On Thursday, Tahrir Andrabi, spokesman for Pakistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said: “Pakistan categorically rejects the recent assertion by a United States official alleging a potential threat from Pakistan’s missile capabilities.”

Pakistan’s strategic capabilities are “exclusively defensive” in nature, he said, and are “aimed at safeguarding national sovereignty and maintaining peace and stability in South Asia”.

“Pakistan’s missile programme, which remains well below intercontinental range, is firmly rooted in the doctrine of credible minimum deterrence vis-a-vis India. In contrast, India’s development of missile capabilities exceeding 12,000 kilometres reflects a trajectory that extends beyond regional security considerations and is certainly a cause of concern for the neighbourhood and beyond.”

Pakistan, he said, remains “committed to constructive engagement with the United States, anchored in mutual respect, non-discrimination, and factual accuracy. We urge a more measured and considered approach that aligns with South Asia’s strategic imperatives and advances peace, security and stability across the region.”

Tughral Yamin, a former army brigadier and specialist on arms control and nuclear affairs, said Gabbard was not the first US official to raise such concerns, however.

“Similar remarks have been made in the past. Officially, Pakistan has countered such rhetoric by pointing out that Pakistani deterrence – both conventional and nuclear – is meant against India. Even with India, Pakistan seeks peace at honourable terms and not because US chose to identify Pakistan is a threat,” he told Al Jazeera.

Is Pakistan close to building missiles that can reach the US?

Gabbard’s remarks were framed around the future potential of Pakistan’s missile programme, rather than existing capability. But even from that futuristic prism, experts question the logic of the US intelligence assessment.

Pakistan’s longest-range operational missile, the Shaheen-III, has an estimated range of roughly 2,750km (1,710 miles), sufficient to cover all of India.

An intercontinental ballistic missile is generally defined as having a range exceeding 5,500km (3,420 miles), which Pakistan does not currently possess.

But even with shorter range ICBMs, Pakistan would not be in a position even close to reaching US shores: The distance between the two countries exceeds 7,000 miles (11,200km). Only Russia, the US, France, China and the United Kingdom have ICBMs that can travel that distance, while India and North Korea are developing missiles of that range. Israel is speculated to possess an ICBM – the Jericho III – that can travel a comparable distance.

In January last year, senior US officials, speaking anonymously at a briefing for nongovernmental experts cited by the Arms Control Association, assessed that Pakistan’s ability to field long-range ballistic missiles was “several years to a decade away”. Gabbard’s latest testimony suggests that assessment has not significantly changed.

Washington has nonetheless been closely monitoring Pakistan’s missile programme.

In December 2024, the Joe Biden administration sanctioned Pakistan’s National Development Complex, the body responsible for its ballistic missile programme, along with three private companies.

The US accused them of procuring items for long-range missile development, including specialised vehicle chassis and missile testing equipment.

Jon Finer, then US deputy national security adviser, said at the time that if current trends continued, Pakistan would have “the capability to strike targets well beyond South Asia, including in the United States”.

Pakistan pushes back

While Pakistan has previously described US sanctions as “biased and politically motivated”, accusing Washington of relying on “mere suspicion” and invoking “broad, catch-all provisions” without sufficient evidence.

Interactive_Pakistan_India_Missiles_August25_2025-1755868832

Jalil Abbas Jilani, a former Pakistani ambassador to Washington, rejected Gabbard’s new remarks in a post on X.

“Tulsi Gabbard’s assertion at the Senate hearing that the US homeland is within range of Pakistan’s nuclear and conventional missiles is not grounded in strategic reality,” he wrote. “Pakistan’s nuclear doctrine is India-specific, aimed at maintaining credible deterrence in South Asia, not projecting power globally.”

Abdul Basit, a former Pakistani high commissioner to India, also criticised the comparison.

“Pakistan’s nuclear programme has always been India-specific. Such self-serving and groundless assertions only betray Gabbard’s incorrigible biases,” he wrote on social media.

Pakistan has long maintained that its nuclear and strategic programmes are calibrated solely to deter India. Three months after its May 2025 conflict with India, Pakistan announced the formation of its Army Rocket Force Command (ARFC).

It has also accused Washington of double standards, pointing to deepening US strategic cooperation with New Delhi, including advanced defence technology transfers, while penalising Islamabad for pursuing what it sees as necessary deterrence.

Yamin said Gabbard “quite conveniently” overlooked India’s longer-range missile capabilities.

He pointed to systems such as the Agni-V, with a range of more than 5,000km (3,100 miles), and the Agni-IV, which can travel about 4,000km (2,485 miles). India’s Defence Research and Development Organisation – its government military R&D institution – is currently developing the Agni VI missile, an ICBM that could have a range of up to 12,000km (7,450 miles).

Debate over intent

Nevertheless, in a June 2025 article in Foreign Affairs magazine, Vipin Narang, a former US Department of Defense official, and Pranay Vaddi, a former US National Security Council official, wrote that US intelligence agencies believed Pakistan was developing a missile “that could reach the continental United States”.

They suggested Islamabad’s motivation might not be India, which its current arsenal already covers, but rather to deter Washington from intervening in a future India-Pakistan conflict or from launching a preventive strike against Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal.

Pakistani analysts have challenged that premise.

Rabia Akhtar, a nuclear security scholar, said Gabbard’s statement reflected “a persistent flaw in US threat assessments, which is substituting worst-case speculation for grounded analysis”.

“Pakistan’s deterrence posture is India-centric. Folding it into a US homeland threat narrative is misleading. The claim that Pakistan is pursuing capabilities to target the US ignores decades of evidence. Its nuclear programme, doctrine, and missile development have remained India-centric. Even its longest-range systems are calibrated to deny India strategic depth, not project power beyond the region,” she told Al Jazeera.

Still, Christopher Clary, a political scientist at the University at Albany, said Gabbard’s assessment clarifies an open question about the Trump administration’s stance.

“It was unclear up until now whether the Trump administration’s [decision to stay] quiet on alleged Pakistan ICBM development arose because the issue had gone away, perhaps because Pakistan quietly had settled US concerns,” he wrote on X. “But the US intelligence community assesses apparently that the issue persists.”

Akhtar, who is also the director at Centre for Security, Strategy and Policy Research, University of Lahore, reiterated that there is no evidence that Pakistan is designing missiles to reach beyond targets associated with India’s present or future capabilities.

“A more serious conversation would move beyond worst-case speculation and engage with the regional logic that actually drives nuclear decision-making in South Asia,” she said.

A complicated diplomatic backdrop

Gabbard’s assessment comes at a complex moment in US-Pakistan relations.

Over 2025, the two countries underwent a diplomatic reset, driven in part by the four-day conflict between India and Pakistan in May.

Trump has repeatedly cited his administration’s role in brokering the ceasefire between the nuclear-armed neighbours that brought the fighting to a halt, claiming credit on dozens of occasions. The episode helped open the door to a broader recalibration in ties, including Pakistan’s nomination of Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize. India has maintained that the ceasefire occurred without third-party involvement.

Relations appeared to warm further when Trump hosted Pakistan’s army chief, Field Marshal Asim Munir, for a private White House lunch in June. It marked the first time a US president had hosted a Pakistani military chief who was not also the head of state.

Munir visited Washington twice more later in the year, including a September meeting that also involved Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif.

At the Sharm el-Sheikh summit in October aimed at ending Israel’s genocidal war in Gaza, Trump described Munir as “my favourite field marshal” and has praised him repeatedly.

Pakistan’s strategic relevance has also extended to the Middle East. Its ties with Gulf states and working relationship with Tehran have made it a useful interlocutor, including during the continuing US-Israeli strikes on Iran. In September, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia signed a mutual defence agreement, days after Israel struck Doha, Qatar’s capital, with a missile, raising concerns across the Gulf over whether regional nations could continue to depend on a US security umbrella.



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Mike Pence calls for national voter ID law in exclusive interview

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EXCLUSIVE: Former Vice President Mike Pence says that a national voter ID law “is truly an idea whose time has come.”

In an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital, Pence urged the Senate to “make voter ID the law of the land in all 50 states.”  The Senate is currently debating the SAVE America Act, which is strongly championed by Pence’s former boss, President Donald Trump.

The SAVE Act, which stands for Safeguard American Voter Eligibility, narrowly passed the GOP-controlled House in February mostly along party lines. But it’s stalled in the Senate, where Republicans hold a 53-47 majority in the chamber, far short of the 60-vote threshold needed to pass the bill.

The federal bill would require strict voter ID and proof-of-citizenship requirements across the country. Republicans say the bill is necessary to secure election integrity.

FIRST ON FOX: REPUBLICAN GOVERNORS URGE CONGRESS TO PASS SAVE ACT

SAVE Act supporters holding signs

Supporters of the SAVE Act, a federal bill which would require strict voter ID and proof-of-citizenship requirements across the country, attend a rally outside the U.S. Capitol on Sept. 10, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Kent Nishimura/Getty Images)

“I think requiring our voters to show photo ID at the ballot box or prove American citizenship is simply an idea whose time has come,” Pence emphasized.

And the former Indiana governor added, “I’m proud of the fact that the state of Indiana, 15 years ago, was one of the first states to adopt voter ID laws. Went all the way to the Supreme Court of the United States and was upheld. It became model legislation for many states around the country.”

While polls indicate the vast majority of Americans — regardless of the political affiliation — support voter IDs at the polls and preventing noncitizens from voting in federal elections, Democrats argue the bill is not needed, since citizenship is already a requirement to vote and instances of noncitizen voting are rare.

FLORIDA REPUBLICANS SEND SAVE ACT-STYLE PROOF-OF-CITIZENSHIP VOTING BILL TO GOV. DESANTIS’ DESK

Democrats and voting rights groups also charge that the federal bill would create unnecessary barriers, making it harder for voters to cast a ballot. And longtime Senate Democratic leader Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York has framed the SAVE Act as “Jim Crow 2.0.”

Pence noted that “the time, place and manner of elections under the Constitution is governed by the states. But the federal government has, under our Constitution, the ability to set certain conditions and parameters, and I believe the Save ACT falls well within the constitutional prerogative of the Congress.”

Mike Pence Fox News interview

Former Vice President Mike Pence is interviewed by Fox News Digital, on March 18, 2026, in Washington D.C. (Paul Steinhauser/Fox News )

The former vice president, through his policy and advocacy organization Advancing American Freedom, last month urged Congress to pass the bill.

Pence reiterated his stance in his Fox News Digital interview, noting, “We have championed the SAVE America Act since it was first introduced, and will continue to. I’d urge every member of the Senate to set politics aside, cast a vote to restore public confidence in election integrity in this country.”

SENATE GOP EYES BLAME GAME AS TRUMP-BACKED SAVE ACT HEADED FOR DEFEAT

Pence earned the ire of Trump’s supporters five years ago, when he dismissed the president’s unproven claims of massive voter fraud in the 2020 presidential election and certified former President Joe Biden’s electoral college victory. The certification was upended for hours by the Jan. 6 riots at the U.S. Capitol, during which some of the rioters chanted “Hang Mike Pence.”

Protestors at Capitol on Jan. 6

Supporters of President Donald Trump assemble outside the U.S. Capitol before storming the building, on Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington, D.C. (AP Photo/John Minchillo, File)

“We all remember the election controversies of six years ago. We saw states that literally changed the rules in the midst of COVID for how votes would be counted,” Pence recollected. “There was never any evidence of widespread fraud that would change the outcome of the election, but it undermined public confidence, and it’s one of the reasons we’ve strongly supported election reform in states across the country.”

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And the former vice president reiterated, “I truly do believe that making sure the American people have confidence that those that are voting are citizens of this country, and that voter ID becomes the law of the land is truly an idea whose time has come.”



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What did Arab and Muslim ministers discuss in Riyadh meeting on Iran? | US-Israel war on Iran News

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As the United States-Israeli war on Iran approaches its fourth week after unleashing chaos across the Middle East, foreign ministers from Arab and Muslim countries have convened for urgent discussions in Saudi Arabia.

Talks were held on Wednesday as Iran was targeting several energy facilities across Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar in retaliation against Israel’s strike on the South Pars gasfield, Iran’s biggest source of energy. That attack came during a week marked by Israeli assassinations of top Iranian security official Ali Larijani, Basij paramilitary commander Gholamreza Soleimani and intelligence chief Esmail Khatib.

The meeting of top diplomats in Riyadh was aimed at mustering a common response to Iran’s increasing retaliation against US assets and infrastructure in the region, which not only threatens regional stability but is also causing disruptions to the global economy.

So what happened in Riyadh? How might these countries deal with Iran? And is Iran likely to listen?

Who was at the Riyadh meeting?

A joint statement issued on Thursday confirmed that foreign ministers from Qatar, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Turkiye and the United Arab Emirates attended the meeting on Wednesday.

All these countries have been impacted by the war, whether in terms of direct attacks from Iran, secondary threats from falling debris, dwindling energy supplies or looming mass displacement if the war continues.

Lebanon, in particular, has suffered heavy casualties since Hezbollah began strikes on Israel on March 2 in retaliation for its killing of Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei on the first day of the war two days earlier. Israel has carried out strikes in Lebanon that have killed at least 968 people in less than three weeks and has also launched a ground invasion in southern Lebanon.

What was decided in Riyadh?

The main takeaway from the meeting was that the 12 countries, which have broadly been sympathetic to Iran in the past, now assert “the right of states to defend themselves”, citing Article 51 of the United Nations Charter on defensive action.

They issued a collective condemnation of “deliberate Iranian attacks” with ballistic missiles and drones that have struck a range of targets, including residential areas, water desalination plants, oil facilities, airports and diplomatic positions.

Foreign ministers called on Iran to:

  • Halt its attacks.
  • Stop “provocative actions or threats” aimed at its neighbours.
  • Cease supporting, financing and arming pro-Iran proxy groups based in Arab states.
  • Refrain from actions or threats aimed at blocking the Strait of Hormuz or threatening maritime security in the Bab al-Mandeb strait.

They also condemned Israeli attacks on Lebanon and what they described as Israel’s expansionist policies in the region.

The meeting yielded a unified response to Iran’s increasingly unpredictable behaviour. But the joint statement was vague about how countries would follow this up.

What happens next?

Speaking early on Thursday after the meeting finished, Saudi Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud did not elaborate on when his country might act to rein in Iran. “Do they [the Iranians] have a day, two, a week? I’m not going to telegraph that,” he said.

However, he left little room for doubt that Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states will act if necessary, adding that they have “very significant capacities and capabilities that they could bring to bear should they choose to do so”.

Emphasising his country’s right to defend itself, he said he hoped Iran had got the message and its leaders would “recalculate quickly and stop attacking their neighbours”.

But he added: “I am doubtful they have that wisdom.”

The Saudi foreign minister said that while the war would eventually come to an end, it will take time to restore relations with Iran because trust has been “shattered”.

Saudi Arabia’s relations with Iran have historically been rocky, but the two countries embarked on a Beijing-brokered rapprochement three years ago.

Reporting from Tehran, Al Jazeera’s Ali Hashem said the Saudi response “could be read as the end of the beginning of the Iranian-Saudi normalisation that started just a few years ago”.

How is Iran likely to respond?

With much of its leadership gone, the question of who is calling the shots in Iran is unclear.

New Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei, who has not been seen in public since he was appointed to succeed his assassinated father, had never held government office before taking the top job.

Late on Wednesday, his official Telegram channel read: “Every drop of spilled blood comes at a price, and the criminal murderers of these martyrs will soon have to pay it.”

According to Iranian government figures, 1,444 people have been killed in US-Israeli strikes on Iran so far, with 18,551 injured.

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) issued a statement saying: “Operation True Promise 4 against oil facilities associated with the US in the region was conducted with strength,” dedicating it to Khatib and “martyrs of the intelligence community”.

The statement, cited by Iran’s IRGC-affiliated Tasnim news agency on Thursday, said Iranian forces had responded to the “deceiving and lying enemy” that had targeted energy facilities in the country, referring to an Israeli strike on South Pars.

It added that it did not “wish to harm the economies of friendly neighbouring countries” but it had “entered a new phase of warfare” to defend Iran’s infrastructure.

Commenting on the escalation, Al Jazeera’s Hashem said: “It’s not any more the Iran that we know. There’s a new leadership, there’s a new mentality and the main issue is that Iran is now in the middle of a war.”



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Pistons’ Cade Cunningham reportedly diagnosed with collapsed lung

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As the Detroit Pistons have suddenly become a contender for the NBA title, their best player will be missing for the foreseeable future.

Cade Cunningham, who has thrust his name into the MVP conversation, has been diagnosed with a collapsed lung, according to ESPN, and is expected to miss an extended period of time.

The 24-year-old was the first overall pick five years ago out of Oklahoma State and has lived up to the billing, averaging 22.6 points, 7.9 assists and 5.4 rebounds per game in his career.

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Cade Cunningham

Detroit Pistons guard Cade Cunningham (2) looks on during the first half against the Washington Wizards at Capital One Arena. (Daniel Kucin Jr./Imagn Images)

He has hit another level in the last two seasons, though, being named an All-Star each time — last year, he finished seventh in the MVP vote. Since the start of the 2024-25 season, he’s put up 25.4 points, 5.8 boards and 9.5 assists per contest.

Cunningham has seen the trials and tribulations of the Pistons, as it was just three seasons ago when they set the all-time record for the longest losing streak in NBA history at 28 games and finished 14-68 under Monty Williams, who had just signed, at the time, the richest contract for an NBA coach in history.

Cade Cunningham gets excited

Detroit Pistons guard Cade Cunningham (2) celebrates during the first half of an NBA basketball game against the Indiana Pacers in Indianapolis, Monday, Nov. 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

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But the following season, the Pistons earned the sixth seed in the Eastern Conference before losing to the New York Knicks in the first round. However, they’ve taken the next step and are running away with the East with a 49-19 record, good for a 3.5-game lead in the conference ahead of the Boston Celtics. The Knicks are five games back.

The playoffs are set to begin on April 18, meaning Cunningham’s first-round availability is certainly up in the air. For context, C.J. McCollum missed roughly two months with the diagnosis in 2021 and about one month two years later.

Cade Cunningham handles the ball

Cade Cunningham of the Detroit Pistons handles the ball during the game against the Utah Jazz on Dec. 21, 2023, at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit, Michigan. (Chris Schwegler/NBAE via Getty Images)

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So, it figures that if the Pistons make a run, Cunningham could return — but when certainly remains a question.

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