
Iranian Shura Council Speaker: We Defeated Israel and Destroyed the Iron Dome
Amir Hagag
The Iranian Shura Council Speaker confirmed that his country defeated Israel and destroyed its Iron Dome, according to a breaking news report by Cairo News Channel.
The Iranian Shura Council Speaker explained that the Iranian people protected their nuclear and missile gains and held out until the last moment.
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Al-Ahram Weekly
10 hours ago
- Al-Ahram Weekly
Securing sovereignty: Why Yemen matters for Egypt and the Gulf
Real sovereignty demands clarity. Yemen must engage regionally not as a subordinate actor, but as a partner seeking stability, development, and long-term prosperity. The recent 12-day war between Israel and Iran—and the subsequent ceasefire—has reignited urgent questions about fragile states caught in regional crossfires. In Yemen's case, this moment of respite highlights the perils of tying domestic peace to external power shifts. For too long, Yemen's crisis has been viewed mainly through the prism of Iranian interference. This narrow framing oversimplifies the collapse of the Yemeni state and reinforces a failed strategy: waiting for geopolitical winds to deliver national salvation. The Houthis are not merely a proxy. They represent an entrenched authoritarian project with ideological and structural roots that precede their alignment with Tehran. To stake Yemen's recovery on weakening Iran is to gamble its future on forces indifferent to its sovereignty. Moreover, placing full blame on Iran allows Yemeni elites to evade responsibility. State institutions did not fail in a vacuum—they eroded through internal mismanagement, exclusionary politics, and the absence of a shared national vision. Iran exploited that vacuum; it did not create it. Polarization and the erosion of national agency Yemen's political landscape remains fractured by regional alignments that often prioritize external interests over national imperatives. Some actors gravitate toward the Iranian axis, while others lean unconditionally toward Gulf-led coalitions, often without clear terms of engagement or sovereignty safeguards. The core challenge is to distinguish between strategic partnership and political dependency. Gulf engagement is essential—geographically and economically—but it must be rooted in mutual respect and national agency, not transactional subordination. Real sovereignty demands clarity. Yemen must engage regionally not as a subordinate actor, but as a partner seeking stability, development, and long-term prosperity. Yemen and the Gulf: Integration without concession Yemen's future is inextricably linked to the Gulf. Its geography—bordering Saudi Arabia and Oman, and straddling the Red and Arabian Seas—places it at the heart of the Arabian Peninsula's security architecture. But geographic proximity must translate into purposeful policy. Yemen's integration with the Gulf should be deliberate and principled—anchored in fairness, shared interests, and respect for its unique challenges. Integration does not mean abandoning sovereignty. When conducted on equitable terms, it strengthens it. This principle applies beyond the Gulf. The Bab el-Mandeb Strait, connecting the Red Sea to the Gulf of Aden, is vital not only to Yemen and the Gulf states but also to Egypt's maritime and economic security. Instability in Yemen threatens the Red Sea corridor, a strategic waterway essential for Egyptian interests and global trade. Egypt's Red Sea stakes Egypt's strategic posture makes it a natural stakeholder in Yemen's stabilization. As a Red Sea power and a central Arab actor, Egypt has both the interest and capacity to play a constructive role—through diplomacy, economic engagement, and maritime coordination. Securing Red Sea trade routes aligns directly with Egypt's priorities: safeguarding Suez Canal revenues, curbing arms trafficking, and securing its southern maritime flank. As such, Egypt's involvement in Yemen's stabilization should not be peripheral. It is a core national interest. Moreover, Egypt can offer a balancing voice, supporting Yemen's reintegration into the Gulf system while advocating for inclusive political frameworks and respect for national sovereignty. Its historical leadership in Arab diplomacy positions it to bridge gaps and reduce the zero-sum logic that has long plagued Yemen's external engagements. From conflict arena to constructive partner For Yemen to escape its current trap, it must reimagine sovereignty—not as isolation, but as the capacity to choose partnerships that empower national institutions. This shift requires building a political project that unites rather than fragments: development-oriented, citizenship-based, and institutionally grounded. Yemen must not remain a passive arena for foreign rivalries. It must become an active partner in shaping its own region. This means engaging Gulf states from a position of dignity while also cultivating strategic partnerships with Egypt and others committed to Red Sea stability. The opportunity is real. As the Middle East's geopolitical map is redrawn, so too is the space for formerly sidelined states to assert their relevance. Yemen can either be absorbed into the calculations of others or reclaim its rightful place through clarity of vision and strategic diplomacy. With Gulf partnership and Egyptian engagement, Yemen's sovereignty need not be a distant aspiration. It can be a foundational pillar of a new regional order—one based not on axes and dependencies, but on cooperation, balance, and mutual respect. *The writer is a Yemeni diplomat, academic, and political advisor. Follow us on: Facebook Instagram Whatsapp Short link:


Al-Ahram Weekly
10 hours ago
- Al-Ahram Weekly
Trump administration threatens new Harvard cuts over Jewish rights - International
The Trump administration on Monday accused Harvard of violating the civil rights of its Jewish and Israeli students and threatened to cut off all federal funding if the university does not take urgent action. Harvard has been at the forefront of Donald Trump's campaign against top US universities after it defied his calls to submit to oversight of its curriculum, staffing, student recruitment and "viewpoint diversity." Trump and his allies claim that Harvard and other prestigious universities are unaccountable bastions of liberal, anti-conservative bias and anti-Semitism. In a letter sent to the president of Harvard, a federal task force accused it of failing to protect the students during campus protests against Israel's war against Hamas in Gaza. Following an investigation, the task force concluded that "Harvard has been in some cases deliberately indifferent, and in others has been a willful participant in anti-Semitic harassment of Jewish students, faculty, and staff," according to the letter. The letter went on to say that the majority of Jewish students at Harvard felt they suffer discrimination on campus, while a quarter felt physically unsafe. "Jewish and Israeli students were assaulted and spit on; they hid their kippahs for fear of being harassed and concealed their Jewish identity from classmates for fear of ostracization," the letter said. Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters Harvard was in violation of civil rights legislation and "if you break federal law, you should not be receiving federal tax dollars." The school said it strongly disagreed with the government's findings as it "has taken substantive, proactive steps to address the root causes of antisemitism in its community." The Trump administration has also sought to remove Harvard from an electronic student immigration registry and instructed US embassies around the world to deny visas to international students hoping to attend the Massachusetts-based university. Harvard has sued the Department of Homeland Security and other agencies to block the efforts, arguing that they were illegal and unconstitutional and the courts have put those moves on hold for now. International students accounted for 27 percent of total enrollment at Harvard in the 2024-2025 academic year and are a major source of income. Follow us on: Facebook Instagram Whatsapp Short link:


Al-Ahram Weekly
11 hours ago
- Al-Ahram Weekly
PHOTO GALLERY: Israeli strikes shatter Palestinians' moment of escapism at cafe
Palestinians check an area of a cafe that was damaged in an Israeli strike, Gaza City. AP Palestinians check an area of a cafe that was damaged in an Israeli strike, Gaza City. AP The mother of the Palestinian journalist Ismail Abu Hatab, who was killed in an Israeli strike on a cafe, mourns over the body of her son as she stands outside the Shifa Hospital, Gaza City. AP The mother of the Palestinian journalist Ismail Abu Hatab, who was killed in an Israeli strike on a cafe, mourns over the body of her son as she stands outside the Shifa Hospital, Gaza City. AP A Palestinian wounded in an Israeli strike is treated in the Shifa Hospital, Gaza City. AP A Palestinian wounded in an Israeli strike is treated in the Shifa Hospital, Gaza City. AP Palestinians check an area of a cafe that was damaged in an Israeli strike, Gaza City. AP Palestinians check an area of a cafe that was damaged in an Israeli strike, Gaza City. AP A man carries a child, who was killed in an Israeli strike, as he walks outside the Shifa Hospital, Gaza City. AP A man carries a child, who was killed in an Israeli strike, as he walks outside the Shifa Hospital, Gaza City. AP Palestinians mourn over the bodies of people who were killed in Israeli strikes, as they stand outside the Shifa Hospital, Gaza City. AP Palestinians mourn over the bodies of people who were killed in Israeli strikes, as they stand outside the Shifa Hospital, Gaza City. AP A man carries a child, who was wounded in an Israeli strike, after being treated in the Shifa Hospital, Gaza City. AP A man carries a child, who was wounded in an Israeli strike, after being treated in the Shifa Hospital, Gaza City. AP