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We have a curated list of the most noteworthy news from all across the globe. With any subscription plan, you get access to exclusive articles that let you stay ahead of the curve.
We have a curated list of the most noteworthy news from all across the globe. With any subscription plan, you get access to exclusive articles that let you stay ahead of the curve.
We have a curated list of the most noteworthy news from all across the globe. With any subscription plan, you get access to exclusive articles that let you stay ahead of the curve.
Family, friends, and colleagues fondly remembered Mann as a meticulous professional and a compassionate individual who seamlessly combined his passion for journalism with genuine care for those around him.
Originally hailing from Georgia, Mann met his wife, Mimi, at the University of Georgia’s journalism school. He was a devoted fan of the Georgia Bulldogs.
“Apart from family, it was his greatest passion,” shared his daughter, Samantha Rudolph.
After earning his degree, Mann attended officer candidate school and became a naval officer, serving four years at a base in the Philippines and at the Pentagon.
Once his naval service concluded, Mann began his career with the Associated Press in Louisville, Kentucky. He later worked at the AP’s New York headquarters and various other locations across the United States before spending a decade as the Cairo bureau chief.
“He would sit in his office in the back, smoking cigars, feet on the desk, reading copy,” his daughter remembers. “He was just surrounded by incredible people who looked up to him in every way.”
While in Cairo, an early 1990s trip to Somalia — ravaged by famine and warfare — left even the veteran correspondent traumatized.
“It was seeing the hunger and the deprivation, the remnants of war,” his daughter remembered. “He refused to talk about it. He saw things that he didn’t want to talk about.”
Mann was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s in 2010 and died of a virus in a memory care facility, said Mimi Mann, his wife of more than 60 years.
Despite the disease, she said, “he kept his love of journalism.”
Mann’s most fondly remembered interview took place when he was working at the AP’s Louisville, Kentucky, bureau and met boxer Cassius Clay, who went on to become world champion Muhammad Ali.
“He interviewed countless heads of state, talked to everybody and what stood out was Muhammad Ali,” his daughter Rudolph said. “He always said that without a doubt his best and favorite interview was Muhammad Ali.”
Ken Guggenheim, one of Mann’s former editors, said that, “Billy was just the consummate AP man. He was just a stickler for details, determined that the grammar was right, the style was right and that the story would be perfect when it would hit the wire.”
Above all, however, Mann’s kind and generous personality set him apart, they said.
“Everyone loved Billy,” Guggenheim said. “He was someone who showed you could be a great journalist and a great person at the same time.”
Mann is survived by his wife, daughter, son and four grandchildren.
KAOHSIUNG – Taiwan: In a significant development not seen in almost ten years, Xi Jinping, the leader of the People’s Republic of China and the Communist Party, sat down with the head of Taiwan’s main opposition party. Cheng Li-wun, who leads the Chinese Nationalist Party, also known as the Kuomintang (KMT), met with Xi in Beijing this past Friday.
Prior to their private discussions, the two leaders posed for photographers. Xi reiterated China’s stance, claiming that Taiwan has always been an “inalienable” and “inseparable” part of Chinese territory. He emphasized that the “rejuvenation of the Chinese nation” is an unstoppable trend. Such statements are frequently echoed by Chinese state media and officials, despite the fact that the communist government has never governed Taiwan since its establishment in 1949.
The meeting was held with both leaders acting in their capacities as party heads. China maintains a policy of not engaging with Taiwan’s democratically elected administration, currently led by President Lai Ching-te of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP). While the DPP secured victories in Taiwan’s presidential elections in 2016, 2020, and 2024, they narrowly lost their parliamentary majority in 2024 to a coalition spearheaded by the KMT.
In a photo released by Xinhua News Agency, Chinese President Xi Jinping, right, is seen shaking hands with Kuomintang (KMT) party leader Cheng Li-wun in Beijing on Friday, April 10, 2026.(Xie Huanchi/Xinhua via AP)
This meeting coincided with a contentious debate in Taiwan regarding defense expenditure. The opposition coalition has been obstructing President Lai’s proposed special defense budget of $40 billion. On a recent visit to Taipei, U.S. Senator Jim Banks emphasized that passing the budget would demonstrate Taiwan’s commitment to its own defense, advocating a strategy of “peace through strength.”
Hours before Cheng and Xi smiled for the cameras, Lai did not directly mention the Beijing meeting, but said on social media that any compromise with an authoritarian regime would damage Taiwan’s sovereignty. There are also concerns that if the special budget isn’t approved soon, the willingness of President Donald Trump to sell weapons to Taiwan could change should Trump decide to strike some kind of deal with Xi at a possible meeting in May.
Xi’s phrase “rejuvenation of the Chinese nation,” which was repeated by Cheng, is a reference to the goal of China becoming a — if not the — major world power by 2049, the centennial of the founding of the communist PRC.
Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te, center, walks before an offshore anti-terrorism drill at the Kaohsiung harbor in Kaohsiung, southern Taiwan, Sunday, June 8, 2025.(Chiang Ying-ying/AP)
In comments that are sure to evoke controversy in Taiwan, Cheng repeated much of Xi’s phrasing, claiming that in the more than 100 years of interactions between the KMT and the CCP, “all we ever wanted is to guide the Chinese nation out of decline and toward rejuvenation.” Cheng went on to say, “The great Chinese rejuvenation involves people on both sides of the strait. It is about the reawakening and resurgence of Chinese civilization.”
That’s not how many here in Taiwan see things. Rose Chou, 45, works as an administrator in one of the biggest primary schools in Kaohsiung, southern Taiwan’s largest city and a major port. Chou told Fox News Digital it was time for Taiwan to dump any connection to being China or a part of China. “Yes, I want a Republic of Taiwan. I have an 18-year-old son. And, yes, I realize we may have to fight. I’m willing to fight.”
A screen grab captured from a video shows the Chinese People’s Liberation Army’s Eastern Theater Command launching large-scale joint military exercises around Taiwan with naval vessels and military aircraft in China on May 24, 2024. Led by the People’s Liberation Army (PLA), “integrated operations inside and outside the island chain are being conducted to test the command’s capabilities to jointly take battlefield control and launch joint strikes, and to seize control of crucial areas,” Li Xi, the spokesman for the PLA Eastern Theater Command, said. (Photo by Feng Hao / PLA / China Military/Anadolu via Getty Images)(Feng Hao/PLA/China Military/Anadolu via Getty Images)
Chou readily admitted that most people she knows favor maintaining the status quo. A very small number, she said, are committed to the idea of unification — but under what terms they hope that could occur, Chou said she didn’t know.
Under the status quo that dates from the end of the Chinese civil war in 1949, Taiwan’s official name remains the Republic of China, to nominally indicate that Taiwan is a part of China, just not “Red China.” This formula previously satisfied the communist regime in Beijing, but — especially since Xi Jinping’s rise — Beijing has pushed Taiwan towards outright submission.
A meeting between the head of the KMT and the CPP hasn’t happened in almost a decade, but there is precedent. A KMT chair met Xi in 2015, and again in 2016, and separately, in 2015, then-Taiwan president Ma Ying-jeou met Xi in Singapore, during which each addressed the other as “Mister,” and titles used were “Leader of Taiwan” and “Leader of Mainland China,” respectively.
In a statement after the meeting, a spokesperson for the American Institute in Taiwan, the de facto U.S. embassy in Taipei, said, “The United States supports cross-Strait dialogue. We expect cross-Strait differences to be resolved by peaceful means, free from coercion, in a manner acceptable to the people on both sides of the Strait. Meaningful cross-Strait exchange should focus on dialogue between Beijing’s leadership and Taiwan’s democratically elected authorities without preconditions, while also including engagement with all other political parties in Taiwan.”
A nuclear-powered Type 094A Jin-class ballistic missile submarine of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Navy is seen during a military display in the South China Sea April 12, 2018. (Reuters/Stringer)
Elizabeth Freund Larus, a Taiwan Fellowship Scholar in Taipei, told Fox News Digital the KMT’s traditional China approach no longer connects with much of Taiwan’s electorate. “KMT Chair Cheng’s trip is trying to replicate Ma Ying-jeou’s approach to cross-Strait relations,” Larus said. “But that approach is 30-years old and no longer appeals to the Taiwanese. As a result, many people in Taiwan are critical of her China trip.”
Larus said Beijing is also likely to use the visit for domestic propaganda, presenting it as proof that Taiwan embraces cultural and social affinities with mainland China while casting the government in Taipei as an outlier. “Cheng may be welcomed in Beijing,” Larus said, “but her party may receive a less enthusiastic reception” in local elections later this year and in the next presidential and legislative elections in 2028.
Taipei-based political risk analyst and Tamkang University assistant professor Ross Feingold told Fox News Digital, “President Lai’s DPP has a savvy media team, which for many years has successfully shaped public opinion towards China. Following today’s meeting, Cheng and the KMT will be portrayed as traitors willing to sell out Taiwan.”
He concluded by noting, “Ultimately, though, the success or failure of Cheng’s visit to China and meeting with Xi will be determined by Taiwan’s voters, despite efforts from China and the United States to influence events. For the Trump administration, though, its near-term priority in Taiwan remains legislative approval to purchase billions of dollars of American weapons and speedy implementation of Taiwan’s commitment to invest $250 billion in the United States.”
Eryk Michael Smith is a Taiwan-based correspondent who since 2007, has worked both as a broadcast journalist for the island’s only English-language radio station, ICRT, as well as with numerous other publications and local news outlets. Smith’s journalism focuses on Taiwan-China relations, local politics, as well as science and technology developments in the greater China region. He is based in Taiwan’s largest southern city, Kaohsiung. He can be followed @ErykSmithTaiwan
In a surprising turn of events, law enforcement officials have labelled a Chicago-area woman’s claims of being detained for two days as a fabrication.
Authorities in Wisconsin, including the county sheriff, are taking legal action against Sundas “Sunny” Naqvi, accusing her of defamation. They argue that Naqvi misled the public last month by alleging she was held in the Broadview U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility and subsequently transported to Dodge County, Wisconsin.
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“Sundas Naqvi was never detained by ICE, was not transferred to the Broadview detention facility, nor transported across state lines to Dodge County by law enforcement,” Sheriff Dale Schmidt stated emphatically on Friday. “She was never in the custody of the Dodge County Sheriff’s Office.”
The lawsuit filed by Sheriff Schmidt details what he describes as a hoax orchestrated by 28-year-old Naqvi.
Last month, Naqvi’s supporters rallied behind her after she claimed to have been detained for 30 hours by Customs and Border Protection at O’Hare Airport. However, these claims are now under scrutiny as officials seek legal recourse.
Her family said she was then sent to the ICE detention facility in Broadview and later taken to a facility in Dodge County, where they said she was released Saturday, March 7.
According to the lawsuit, Sheriff Schmidt says Naqvi was actually staying at a hotel near O’Hare and allegedly sending text messages from her room.
“She checked into the Hampton Inn and Suites in Rosemont, Illinois for the entire duration of this alleged event, traveled from the Hampton Inn and Suites in Illinois to the Holiday Express in Beaver Dam, (Wisconsin), was done to complete this hoax. She scammed a victim out of thousands of dollars in pursuit of this hoax against the federal government and the Dodge County Sheriff’s Office,” Schmidt said.
During the sheriff’s news conference, he displayed what he says are messages from Naqvi at the time she claimed she was in custody.
One message said, “going to look into this hotel” and “in the room now.”
There was also an image shown at the press conference, in which the sheriff says Naqvi was spotted at a store in Wisconsin during the time she says she was being held by Dodge County officials.
Sheriff Schmidt says this isn’t Naqvi’s first time lying to law enforcement. Court records confirm a 2019 case in which Naqvi filed a false police report with Skokie police, claiming she was sexually assaulted in a park. She pleaded guilty and did two years of probation, and the case was then dismissed
The sheriff is also suing Cook County Commissioner Kevin Morisson for defamation. Morisson held a press conference on behalf of Naqvi last month.
“Allegations of an illegal detention of a US citizen, allegations of a government cover up by federal authorities and the Dodge County Sheriff’s Office, coordinated messaging designed to generate outrage and media attention. Misuse of the system will not go unanswered. This is Dodge County, Wisconsin, not Cook County, and we will hold them accountable,” Schmidt said.
The Dodge County sheriff said while the situation is disturbing and defamatory, no laws were broken in Wisconsin. So they cannot file criminal charges.
Neither Naqvi nor her family replied to requests for comment.
Cook County Commissioner Kevin Morrison said, “It is my understanding that a lawsuit has been filed. I have not seen it. And if a suit has in fact been filed, I cannot comment on pending litigation.”
The Dodge County sheriff said Naqvi was detained at O’Hare by Customs and Border Protection, but for a little over an hour, not 30 hours as she claimed.
Customs and Border Protection said she was flagged for additional inspection based on law enforcement checks.
Alejandro Garnacho, who now plays for Chelsea, has opened up about the emotional toll of leaving Manchester United, a departure he acknowledges was painful. The winger’s exit followed a series of tensions with the club, which he seems to look back on with some regret.
The Argentine talent departed Old Trafford over the summer in a £40 million deal, after a falling out with then-manager Ruben Amorim. The conflict, which unfolded in front of the Red Devils squad, marked a turning point in Garnacho’s tenure at United.
Garnacho’s relationship with Amorim soured after he voiced his displeasure at being used as a late substitute during United’s disappointing Europa League final loss to Tottenham in May. Adding fuel to the fire, his brother Roberto publicly criticized Amorim on social media, accusing the coach of undermining Garnacho.
Before his departure, Garnacho stirred the pot further by sharing a photo of himself in an Aston Villa shirt, sporting Marcus Rashford’s name on the back – a nod to his former teammate who had also fallen out of favor under Amorim’s management.
While his actions were controversial among fans, Garnacho has since expressed that he holds no grudge against Manchester United after his five-year stint with the club.
Alejandro Garnacho has opened up on how he was ‘hurt’ by his Manchester United departure
The forward left in the summer on the back of a string of clashes, including with former manager Ruben Amorim (right)
When asked by Premier League Productions if he regretted how the move panned out, he said: ‘Maybe yes, because I loved that club. They gave me the confidence from the start, from Spain, to bring me to the academy, then they bring me to the first team, so it was like four or five years, and amazing love from everyone, from the fans, the stadium, everything was really good.
‘It’s just sometimes you have to change for the good of your life or the next steps. I only have good memories of Man United.’
After a rocky start to life under Amorim, the Portuguese had praised Garnacho’s work to earn a spot back in his team, despite there being no natural fit in his back-three system.
The natural winger slotted into a No10 role, but things went south again and he fell down the pecking order again.
That, he has said, was a key reason as to why he left – admitting that he made some questionable moves when he was out the team.
‘I remember in the last six months I was just not playing like before at Manchester United,’ he said. ‘I started to be on the bench, it’s not a bad thing, I was only 20 years old, but in my mind it was like I had to play every game.
‘In my mind, maybe it is also on me, I started to do some bad things. But yes, it was just this moment in life and sometimes you have to make decisions and I am really proud to be here and still in the Premier League at a club like this.
‘Everyone knows the team we have and the things we can do. Sometimes, we have better moments or worse moments, I am proud to be here but with United, I have nothing wrong to say about the club, no one in the club or the team-mates. It’s just a moment in life that changes and life continues. I have no regrets.’
Garnacho also received criticism for wearing an Aston Villa shirt with Marcus Rashford’s name and number on
He joined Chelsea for £40million in the summer but has had a slow start to life with the Blues
This season, Garnacho has played 37 games in all competitions, netting eight goals. Nine of those games came in the Champions League.
He has found it hard going so far, starting 20 games, but Chelsea boss Liam Rosenior had some kind words for his man back in March.
‘Garna is a top player,’ he said. ‘I’ve changed a little bit tactically since I’ve come in; I’ve wanted to dominate midfield areas. That has meant at times I’ve only played with one winger, but Garna is an outstanding player.
‘What I’ve really liked in this period is his reaction to not starting. He’s been training very well and showed real positivity when he came on against Arsenal. He was also magnificent against Hull in the FA Cup and had a huge impact in the game against Arsenal when he scored two goals.
‘We have got to take into account that Garna is 21 – he’s got huge ability and huge potential.
‘For any young player, the biggest thing to be challenged is your consistency level, but he’s showing really good signs, not just in training but in meetings, that he’s on a really good track. He’s definitely going to get his opportunities to play with the schedule we’ve got coming up.’
Megan Fox and Machine Gun Kelly are currently facing significant challenges in their relationship, according to an exclusive source shared with Us Weekly.
“Things were improving between them, but once again, tensions have risen,” the insider revealed. “They are experiencing frequent disagreements and intense arguments. Their communication is particularly poor right now.”
The tumultuous relationship between Fox, 39, and MGK, 35, began in 2020, with several breakups and reconciliations over the years. Their most recent reunion was short-lived, as Fox announced her pregnancy, only for the couple to part ways permanently before the arrival of their daughter, Saga Blade, in March 2025.
“MGK is making efforts to reconcile with Megan, but she is not interested,” the source explained to Us. The source also mentioned that Fox was “very upset” when MGK recently posted photos of their daughter Saga on social media.
The high-profile romance between Megan Fox and Machine Gun Kelly has been both captivating and volatile. Although they separated in late 2024 during Fox’s pregnancy, there have been attempts to mend their relationship. However, insiders suggest that the road to reconciliation remains fraught with difficulties.
“1 🧁❤️🔥,” MGK (real name Colson Baker) wrote via Instagram on April 1, alongside multiple snaps of Saga. The toddler’s face was obscured by emojis in each pic.
The source, meanwhile, alleges that Fox believes that MGK “did it to spite her.”
“They had an agreement they wouldn’t share photos of their daughter,” the insider tells Us. “That was the last straw for Megan.”
Weeks earlier, MGK also publicly thirsted over Fox in the comments section of her latest solo uploads.
“Stoked we had a baby,” he replied to Fox’s March 3 snapshot from a photoshoot.
In another post, MGK commented, “Stoked I have your phone number.”
Megan Fox and Machine Gun Kelly’s relationship continues to be filled with highs and lows as they prepare to welcome a baby. “They broke up in late November,” a source exclusively told Us Weekly on Tuesday, December 10. “They were trying to make it work again after the pregnancy, but they are both too hot-headed […]
Saga is Fox and MGK’s rainbow baby after a previous pregnancy loss.
“I had never been through anything like that before in my life,” Fox said on Good Morning America in 2023, discussing her miscarriage. “I have three kids, so it was very difficult for both of us, and it sent us on a very wild journey together and separately and together and apart … trying to navigate, ‘What does this mean?’ and ‘Why did this happen?’”
Fox shares three children — Noah, 13, Bodhi, 11, and Journey, 9 — with ex-husband Brian Austin Green. MGK, for his part, is the father of daughter Casie, 16, from a previous relationship.
After Fox gave birth to Saga, MGK has publicly praised their coparenting efforts.
Megan Fox certainly knows how to break the internet. In her latest post, the Jennifer’s Body actress, 39, posed on all fours in a latex bra and a matching skirt with her thong popping out, pairing the racy getup with thigh-high boots. She completed her look with Andre Montana rimless sunglasses and a statement silver […]
“I had [Saga] with the person who is the greatest partner, like, the greatest partner to have had a child with, because she’s such a phenomenal mom,” MGK said onThe Jennifer Hudson Show in September 2025. “We go back and forth on who [Saga] looks like. Last month, she looked exactly like me, and now she looks exactly like her.”
The “Bloody Valentine” rapper further shared the meaningful backstory of Saga’s name.
“My family is Norwegian and there’s a Norwegian goddess named Saga, and it means epic story,” he told host Jennifer Hudson at the time. We named her Saga because to get her on this earth through highs and lows, it truly was an epic story of love, pain and a lot of magic.”
Later that month, MGK coyly revealed on The New York Times’ “Popcast” podcast that neither he nor Fox “have said anything” about where they stand romantically.
President Donald Trump gestures while speaking with reporters in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House, Monday, April 6, 2026, in Washington (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson).
An ongoing clash has erupted between Donald Trump and members of the Pulitzer Prize Board, with the former president now disclosing who will be facing his scrutiny behind closed doors next.
According to court documents assessed by Law&Crime, two notifications were made public on Thursday in the Florida state court. These documents reveal that Kathleen Carroll, a former executive editor at the Associated Press, and Kevin Merida, a former executive editor at the Los Angeles Times and a current board member, are scheduled for video depositions on April 15 and April 21, respectively.
While Carroll is not a named defendant, her prior role as a board member and former co-chair makes her a subject of interest. At this time, the specifics of her questioning remain unclear. Law&Crime has reached out to a Trump attorney for comments regarding the notice concerning Carroll.
Trump is actively gathering evidence to support his claim that the Pulitzer board neglected its esteemed standards by failing to revoke several 2018 awards. These awards were given to the Washington Post and New York Times for their coverage of the Mueller investigation, Michael Flynn, the Steele Dossier, former FBI director James Comey, Donald Trump Jr., a 2016 Trump Tower meeting with a Russian lawyer, and Russian troll operations.
The recent notices come on the heels of several other depositions and Trump’s recent demand for documents from Pulitzer board member and New Yorker editor David Remnick. Trump seeks Remnick’s “communications” with the co-founders of Fusion GPS, the organization behind the Steele dossier. The court filing references an August 2016 meeting between Remnick, Glenn Simpson, and Peter Fritsch, requesting details of the discussion and subsequent events over the next six years. Among various articles by Jane Mayer, the New Yorker published a 2019 interview where the co-founders defended their investigative work.
A separate but failed Trump lawsuit explained Trump’s interest in this area, alleging Fusion GPS and his then-opponent Hillary Clinton conspired in a racketeering scheme to cook up a “fraudulent ‘dossier’” that would harm his campaign, his business interests, and cast a cloud over his first term.
The board has made waves of its own in discovery with requests for Trump’s tax returns, records on “medical and/or psychological health” and “any prescription medications,” and for a “complete and unredacted copy” of Mueller’s report, putting to the test Trump’s claims that a “defamatory” board statement backing Russia probe reporting awards harmed his reputation.
Just as Mueller’s former law firm recently opposed a Trump executive order as retaliation for its employment and views of the former special counsel, the board has argued that it took the president’s claims seriously, investigated them, and had the articles independently reviewed — only to be punished with a lawsuit for declining to rewrite history.
After the board resisted the president’s look into its “internal deliberations and review” and lost a long-shot bid to halt the lawsuit in its entirety until he’s out of office, Trump forced Stephen J. Adler, the “independent reviewer” the board relied on, to sit for a deposition. Semafor identified Adler as the reviewer in January.
In 2022, the board released the statement Trump claimed was defamatory, rebuffing his demands to rescind the awards. The statement cited “two independent reviews” of the Times and Post’s reporting — Adler’s conclusions that the prizes “stand,” as “no” aspects of the award-winning articles were “discredited.”
Once his investigation concluded, Mueller famously testified before Congress that Trump was not “exculpated” even though the former special counsel did not allege a grand conspiracy between the Trump campaign and Russia or obstruction offenses. Trump submits that makes the Russia probe a “Collusion Hoax” and its boosters defamers, even as the special counsel’s report identified “numerous links between the Russian government and the Trump campaign.”
Warning: This article contains content that may be distressing to some readers.
A woman has come forward to CNN, accusing Democratic politician Eric Swalwell of sexual misconduct. She recounted a 2024 incident, claiming that after she had left her position in Swalwell’s office, he engaged in unwanted sexual contact. “I was pushing him off of me, saying no,” she recalled. “He didn’t stop.”
The woman alleged this was not an isolated incident. She recounted an earlier episode in 2019 when, after a night of heavy drinking, she allegedly woke up naked in a hotel room with Swalwell while still employed by him. She had no recollection of the night’s events but felt certain they had engaged in sexual activity.
Eric Swalwell has denied the accusations made against him. (CNN)
Three additional women have made similar allegations to CNN, accusing Swalwell of various forms of sexual misconduct. Their claims include receiving unsolicited explicit messages and nude photographs from the politician.
One of these women described meeting Swalwell through shared interests in Democratic politics. She recounted an evening where she ended up highly intoxicated in his hotel room. Earlier that night, while at a bar, she said Swalwell had kissed her and touched her leg without her consent, leaving her with only a vague memory of the night’s events.
Another woman, who described receiving unsolicited nude messages from Swalwell, was social media creator Ally Sammarco. She said she initially reached out to the politician on Twitter to discuss politics. “I truly never thought he would respond – I had like 1000 followers at the time,” she said. “And he actually responded.”
Swalwell denied the women’s allegations.
“These allegations are false and come on the eve of an election against the frontrunner for governor,” Swalwell said in a statement to CNN. “For nearly 20 years, I have served the public – as a prosecutor and a politician and have always protected women. I will defend myself with the facts and where necessary bring legal action. My focus in the coming days is to be with my wife and children and defend our decades of service against these lies.”
An attorney for Swalwell sent two of the women CNN spoke with cease-and-desist letters on Thursday, a day after CNN first reached out to his campaign to request comment, according to copies of the letters they provided CNN. The letters called the women’s accounts “false,” ordered them to retract their statements and warned of potential legal action if they continue speaking out.
The letters said the women’s claims were “undermined” by their “voluntary and cooperative relationship with Mr. Swalwell over the course of many years” following the alleged incidents, including the former staffer asking him for job references.
His attorney also sent CNN a letter denying that Swalwell has ever had nonconsensual sex with any woman or ever had sexual relations with any member of his staff.
One member of Swalwell’s staff said they quit immediately after receiving CNN’s detailed list of questions about the allegations.
CNN found corroboration for key elements of each of the women’s claims, including the former staffer who said she was sexually assaulted. Two family members and a friend said in interviews with CNN that she told them about the alleged 2024 assault in the following days, and CNN also reviewed text messages she sent two friends describing her allegations at the same time. “I was sexually assaulted on Thursday,” she wrote to one of her friends, adding: “By Eric.”
Eric Swalwell is a prominent California Democrat. (CNN)
The woman also shared medical records related to her receiving STD and pregnancy testing after the alleged assault.
For the woman who connected online with Swalwell over Democratic politics, a family member and two friends confirmed she told them last year about the incident where she ended up intoxicated in his hotel room. CNN also reviewed messages between her and Swalwell, including a photo he sent her that matches footage of him during a CNN interview in her city on the night they met in person.
The women described a similar pattern of events: Swalwell, who is married and has three children, showed close interest in their lives when they were in their twenties and finding their footing professionally, making them feel special and even starstruck. Then, they said, he would send them increasingly sexual messages. Many said they reciprocated and engaged with him in part because of his position of power. In some cases, those inappropriate exchanges escalated to alleged unwanted physical touch or sexual assault, often tied to episodes of heavy drinking.
The women asked not to be named out of fear of retaliation by Swalwell or professional consequences for speaking out against him.
CNN reviewed screenshots of dozens of messages Swalwell exchanged with the women, many of which are flirtatious in nature. None of the messages reviewed by CNN are sexually explicit. The women said Swalwell generally sent more graphic messages via Snapchat, where messages are automatically deleted after short periods of time. Snapchat also warns senders if screenshots are captured.
The allegations come as Swalwell – a politician from the San Francisco Bay Area, former presidential candidate, and fixture on cable news – has ascended in the polls in California’s competitive governor’s race.
Rumours about misbehaviour by Swalwell have circulated on social media in recent weeks, broadcast by a group of progressive social media influencers. Most of the women who spoke to CNN initially reached out to one of these influencers, and said that before the social media attention, they had assumed they were alone in their experiences with Swalwell.
Three key influencers told CNN that they were not being paid by other campaigns and had not coordinated directly with them in publicising claims about Swalwell.
“This has always been about getting justice for these women and exposing the truth,” said Cheyenne Hunt, a lawyer and former congressional candidate who has shared messages highlighting allegations about Swalwell on social media.
CNN also spoke to other women who worked for Swalwell and said that they had never had any inappropriate interactions with him, with some of them describing him as a supportive and caring boss.
But several of the women who made allegations about Swalwell said that the politician’s actions had long-term implications on their lives, leaving them confused, distraught and scared. They said they decided to come forward after hearing rumours that they were not alone in their experiences with the politician.
“I always felt like if I came forward, I was going to suffer the consequences because he was so powerful,” the former staffer who accused Swalwell of assaulting her said, adding, “I’ve lived in fear every single day.”
‘It just became a secret that I lived with’ The former Swalwell staffer said she started interning for him in 2019 when she was 20 years old and fresh out of university. At the time, Swalwell was a rising star in the Democratic party. A former prosecutor who had defeated a 40-year incumbent to win his suburban San Francisco Bay Area congressional seat, Swalwell made a name for himself as a member of the House Intelligence Committee and an outspoken opponent of President Donald Trump.
In April 2019, Swalwell launched an underdog presidential bid, pitching himself as a generational change agent. Inspired by his focus on gun control, the woman moved to California to join Swalwell’s campaign as a junior staffer. “I just believed in what he had to offer so much,” she said.
After Swalwell dropped out of the presidential race in July 2019, she moved to a job in his district office.
Eric Swalwell has been a leading Democratic figure in Congress in recent years. (CNN)
As the woman, who was by then 21, began to work more closely with Swalwell, planning events, arranging his travel, and driving him around his district, he struck up a personal relationship with her. She said that Swalwell, who was 38, praised her work in the office, bringing her to meetings and introducing her to political figures.
“When he talked to you, it was like the sun was shining on you,” she said. “You felt like the coolest person in the room.”
The two began messaging each other on Snapchat, she said. On that platform, she said, Swalwell began making sexual comments and sent her photos of his penis and of him shirtless. He also asked her to send him photos of herself, including nude photos, which she did. She said she found the attention flattering, but also felt nervous because he was her boss.
The woman’s mother told CNN that her daughter told her some months later that Swalwell was communicating with her over Snapchat, and she and her husband found it inappropriate. But the woman didn’t tell her parents at that time that the messages were sexual, the mother said.
Because the messages on Snapchat were automatically deleted, she said she has no screenshots of their exchanges on the app.
“There was Eric the Snapchatting guy, and then there was Eric my boss,” the former staffer said. “It was like two different people completely.”
In 2019, when she was driving Swalwell around his district as part of her staff duties, he told her to stop in a car park, pulled out his penis, and asked her to give him oral sex, she said. She said she briefly complied, before stopping and telling Swalwell she was uncomfortable.
“He said to me, ‘You’re right, it’s probably not good for a politician to be caught with his pants down,’” she told CNN.
In September 2019, she was alone with Swalwell at a bar in his district after a casual gathering with staffers, she said. “I was really, really drunk,” she said.
She said she remembers getting an Uber, and then the next thing she remembered, she woke up in Swalwell’s hotel room the following morning, naked in bed with him.
“I know that there was sexual contact because when I woke up in the morning, I could feel that there was,” she said. Swalwell told her that “last night was great” but she should get going, she said.
That day, she was scheduled to accompany Swalwell to a “hike with your politician” event at a local park; a listing for the event appears on Swalwell’s congressional Facebook page. At the event, she remembered, “I could still feel physically what had happened to me,” but she said Swalwell ignored her, treating her like “someone who he had never seen before in his life.”
Later on Snapchat, she said, Swalwell was much friendlier, telling her how nice their sexual encounter was. “I said to him, ‘I really don’t remember it at all,’” she said. “And he was like, ‘Well, next time, we have to make sure you remember it.’”
The former staffer said that she didn’t tell anyone about either of the incidents with Swalwell at the time. “I just felt so dirty and gross, and it just became a secret that I lived with,” she said. She said it wasn’t clear to her at the time that she had been sexually assaulted, but that she later realized that the encounter was not consensual because she had been so intoxicated.
Eric Swalwell is the leading Democrat in polling for the California gubernatorial race. (CNN)
Swalwell gradually began Snapchatting her less frequently, she said. She moved to a new job in Swalwell’s Washington, DC, office, and left for a new job about a year later. But Swalwell stayed in touch with her, she said, recommending her for jobs and messaging with her from time to time. The former staffer said she tried to stay in touch with Swalwell because of his status as a politician.
Then in April 2024, when the former staffer was 25, Swalwell was invited to speak at a gala in New York City that she attended. CNN reviewed video of Swalwell’s speech at the event, and a photo of the woman there. The woman said she decided to get drinks with Swalwell because he was a powerful person in her field.
The two got drinks at Swalwell’s hotel and a nearby bar, and Swalwell was totally professional, she said. Federal campaign spending records show that Swalwell’s congressional campaign frequently made purchases at both locations she named.
After the gala, she said met up with some colleagues and then sent Swalwell a Snapchat message inviting him to get another drink. One of the colleagues she was with told CNN that she told them at the time that she was going to get a drink with Swalwell. The colleague asked not to be named.
When Swalwell came in a car to pick her up, he put his hand on her leg. “I said, ‘No funny business, like, that’s not what this is,’” she remembered. “And he was like, ‘Okay, okay.’”
But then over drinks, Swalwell told the former staffer that he’d been obsessed with her and he’d never cheated on his wife except with her, she said. “I guess I liked the attention, but I never wanted to sleep with him,” she remembered.
As the night progressed, she said, the two went to another bar and continued drinking. She said she was heavily intoxicated and doesn’t remember leaving the bar.
The next thing the former staffer remembered, she was in bed with Swalwell in his hotel room and he was having sex with her, she said. She said she remembers “flashes of that evening, of him on top of me, me pushing him off, him grabbing me.”
“I was pushing him off of me, saying no,” she said. “He didn’t stop.”
The former staffer woke up in Swalwell’s hotel room the next morning alone and “completely confused,” she said. She had been wearing a dress she needed someone else to zip, so she wrapped herself in a blanket, ran out of the hotel, and took the first cab she saw back to her own hotel, she said. She said she quickly called her mother, who confirmed her account in an interview with CNN.
“My vagina was bleeding the next day after the sex, I had cuts and bruises on my body,” she said. When she looked in the mirror later, “I could see the bruises of where his hand had been on my rib cage and on my legs and near my thighs,” she remembered.
Swalwell messaged her on Snapchat that day saying that the previous night was great and that he hoped she remembered it this time, and telling her not to tell anyone, she said.
She told her partner that Swalwell had assaulted her when she returned home that day, her partner confirmed in an interview with CNN, saying that “she was just so distraught.” She also told two other friends about being assaulted by Swalwell over the following days, according to screenshots of text messages she shared with CNN and an interview with one of the friends. In both text message chains, she referred to the same thing happening to her in the past, writing in one message, “this happened one other time when I was working for him… same pattern: I blacked out and he had sex with me.” Her partner, mother and friend asked not to be named.
Eric Swalwell ran for president in the 2020 primaries but dropped out early. (AAP)
Several days later, she went to a health clinic and got an STD test, and provided screenshots showing that appointment to CNN. She said she told her medical provider that she had been assaulted by a politician, and the provider at the clinic referred to her as “a survivor” in an online message about her test results, a screenshot shows.
She said she never confronted Swalwell directly about the assault or reported it to the police in part because she believed him when he told her he hadn’t made sexual advances toward other women.
“I kept figuring out ways to blame myself: I shouldn’t have reached out to him at all, I should have left, I should have done this,” she said. “Well, Eric shouldn’t have raped me.”
In February, as his campaign for governor was picking up steam, Swalwell and his campaign manager both texted her, offering her work for his campaign, screenshots she provided to CNN show. She declined.
“I’ve always lived with a huge secret,” she said. “I’m not speaking up because I’m looking to ruin Eric Swalwell. The only person who could ruin Eric Swalwell is Eric Swalwell.”
‘All you did was harm me’ Another woman, who had an interest in Democratic politics, said she began messaging with Swalwell online in 2025 after responding to one of his Instagram stories, joking that she might run for office herself. A couple days later, she said, Swalwell followed her and encouraged her to get involved in politics. He later sent her his phone number.
The woman and Swalwell began texting over several weeks, including late at night, discussing politics and their previous work experience as bartenders, screenshots of messages she shared with CNN show. She said she was shocked that a politician was paying her attention. “I kind of almost felt like I was getting catfished,” she said.
In spring 2025, Swalwell said he happened to be coming to her city and asked to meet. He asked for her suggestions for a hotel and places to go, the messages show.
Swalwell and the woman met for dinner and drinks at a steakhouse. She said she told her mother about the meeting with Swalwell in advance, and her mother confirmed that in an interview with CNN. Swalwell asked her about her work history in what seemed almost like a job interview, she recalled.
Partway through their conversation, Swalwell told her that he had to do a CNN interview, and went back to his hotel room. As he was waiting for his live TV hit, Swalwell texted her a photo asking her how he looked, according to a screenshot she provided to CNN. That photo matched Swalwell’s appearance in the interview, and Swalwell also told the CNN anchor that he was visiting the city where the woman lived, according to CNN’s recording.
Afterward, Swalwell took the woman to another bar, where they sat in a back booth, she said. “He was sitting against me, and so I kind of moved away from him, and every time that I would move away from him, he would get closer to me,” she remembered. He touched her leg and ordered a drink for her.
The woman said she tried to turn the conversation to her partner and Swalwell’s wife and children, but Swalwell continued to touch her. She began to get more intoxicated and felt “really fuzzy,” even accidentally walking into the men’s bathroom in the bar, she said.
After she returned to the booth, Swalwell kissed her, she said. “I was shocked that he would do that right in the middle of a public bar,” she said. She said he told him it was wrong, but didn’t want to burn a bridge with a prominent politician, so she stayed at the bar even as she was getting more intoxicated.
The woman said she then ended up in Swalwell’s hotel room without any memory of how she got there. She said that her memory of what happened in Swalwell’s hotel room is “a blur.” She ended up leaving the hotel at 5:41am, according to a screenshot of an Uber receipt she provided to CNN.
The next day, she said, Swalwell sent her disappearing iPhone voice messages saying that he wanted to ensure that his wife didn’t find out about what happened, she said.
She felt emotionally vulnerable and distraught in the following weeks, she said, telling her mother about a month after the fact about what had happened, and later telling two close friends. All three confirmed to CNN in interviews that she had shared her story with them. One friend said that she told them about her experience with Swalwell in December 2025, while the other said she could not remember when specifically she was told.
She said she told Swalwell that she felt “really disgusted and ashamed” about what happened, but he continued contacting her, including offering to use his position to help her renew her passport or saying he could write her a letter of recommendation for her law school applications.
A few days before he announced his gubernatorial bid in November, he texted her, asking how she was, according to screenshots she provided to CNN. The following month, she sent him a long message telling him that “all you did was harm me,” and asking him not to contact her again.
“I won’t bother you again!” Swalwell responded. “Sorry.”
The woman said she continued to stay in touch with Swalwell after that, however, exchanging some friendly messages with him, in what she likened to Stockholm syndrome.
In the cease-and-desist letter to the woman, Swalwell’s lawyer argued that some of these text messages, including one in which she said “you would be an amazing governor,” raised doubt about her account.
The woman told CNN she decided to speak out about what happened to her after hearing rumours about other women accusing Swalwell of misconduct, and realizing she wasn’t alone.
“I suffered a lot in silence… I had no desire to ever come after him or ever come out saying something,” she said. But she concluded that Swalwell “used my vulnerabilities and the fact that I looked up to him to be able to get something from it,” she added.
Explicit messages and nudes Two other women told CNN that Swalwell had sent them unsolicited photos of his penis and other sexual messages on Snapchat after connecting on social media in 2021.
Sammarco said she first connected with Swalwell after messaging him on Twitter in August 2021, asking him about his history of growing up in a Republican family.
Swalwell sent her friendly messages on Twitter, screenshots she provided to CNN show, asking her about her life and work in politics, and sent her his phone number. They began texting, and he offered to share her resume with other congressional offices to help her get a job on Capitol Hill.
Eventually, Sammarco said, Swalwell started texting her late at night to ask personal questions. He sent her a photo of himself drinking wine at home. One screenshot she provided to CNN shows Swalwell musing whether he should “pour a nightcap,” and telling the influencer “now you’re the bad angel tempting me” when she said he should. In another message she showed CNN, he asked, “are you on snap?”
Starting in September 2021, Sammarco said, she and Swalwell exchanged messages on Snapchat almost every day. Swalwell “became very inappropriate, like saying about how hot he thought I was, insinuating we should get together and hook up,” she said. “He was always like drunk texting me, saying, ‘Oh, I’m having a drink. What are you doing?’ And I’m like, ‘I am out with my friends.’ Like, I’m 24.”
The politician sent Sammarco selfies of himself in bed or shirtless, as well as unsolicited photos of his penis, she said.
Swalwell asked Sammarco where she lived, she said, and then ran by her apartment building several times, stopping to say hi and giving her hugs but not coming inside. Swalwell also gave her a personal tour of the Capitol, she said.
Their contacts fizzled off when Sammarco met her boyfriend, now her husband, in December 2021, she said. Swalwell “tried multiple times to message me on Snapchat again… and I just, like, won’t respond,” she said. They maintained some contact in the subsequent years, according to messages reviewed by CNN.
Then in November 2025, the same month Swalwell announced his gubernatorial run, he messaged Sammarco again, congratulating her on her “social media dominance,” according to a screenshot she provided to CNN.
Another woman, who works in marketing, said Swalwell first reached out to her on Twitter in April 2021, when she was 27, after she liked several of his posts. “When someone like him starts to talk to you – it’s like, why is he interested in me?” she said.
They began messaging on Snapchat, and the conversation became flirty and sexual after about a month, she said. Swalwell often requested swimsuit or nude photos of the woman, which she sometimes sent. He sent her several videos of his penis, which she did not ask for, she said.
She two never met in person, but messaged on and off for four years, she said. She said Swalwell usually initiated contact. At some points, Swalwell offered to help her with her career, though she said she never took him up on it.
In one flirty exchange reviewed by CNN, Swalwell complimented her on a swimsuit photo she’d shared on Instagram and said it had been too long since they’d last messaged, according to screenshots she provided to CNN. “That swimsuit. Fuck,” he wrote.
CNN spoke with two friends who said the woman told them about Swalwell sending her images of his penis and sexually explicit messages at the time it was happening. One friend also said they reviewed a Snapchat video that wasn’t sexually explicit that Swalwell sent to her.
The woman said she felt “embarrassed and kind of ashamed” about her exchanges with Swalwell.
“When you’re getting unsolicited dick videos sent to you, it just makes you feel like I’m lesser than a person,” she said. “I just wish I’d never answered him.”
Support is available from the National Sexual Assault, Domestic and Family Violence Counselling Service at 1800RESPECT (1800 737 732)
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The political aspirations of California Representative Eric Swalwell are facing a significant hurdle as he contends with allegations of sexual misconduct. A former aide has come forward, accusing Swalwell of sexually assaulting her twice during her tenure. This revelation has sent shockwaves through his campaign for the governorship, causing a ripple effect among his team.
The allegations, as detailed in a report by The San Francisco Chronicle, involve claims from a woman who served under Swalwell for two years. She asserts that the encounters occurred while she was incapacitated due to intoxication and unable to provide consent. These serious accusations have placed Swalwell, a prominent Democratic figure in the gubernatorial race, under intense scrutiny.
In response to these claims, Swalwell has categorically denied any wrongdoing. However, the ramifications of the allegations are already manifesting within his campaign infrastructure. According to Politico’s report, at least four key staff members have abruptly resigned, signaling potential instability and unrest within his team as they grapple with the unfolding controversy.
Swalwell issued a blanket denial.
Politico then reported that at least four staffers on Swalwell’s gubernatorial campaign have abruptly departed.
Rumors have swirled online for days that something discrediting about Swalwell was about to be exposed.
It comes as Swalwell appeared to be pushing through a crowded field of Democrats ahead of California’s nonpartisan June 2 primary.
Swalwell suggested the allegations were timed to tank his rising campaign.
Representative Eric Swalwell, who is running for California governor, was accused of sexually assaulting a former staffer twice when she was too intoxicated to give consent. He’s issued a blanket denial
‘These allegations are false and come on the eve of an election against the frontrunner for governor,’ he said in a statement. ‘For nearly 20 years, I have served the public – as a prosecutor and a congressman and have always protected women.’
‘I will defend myself with the facts and, where necessary, bring legal action,’ he continued. ‘My focus in the coming days is to be with my wife and children and defend our decades of service against these lies.’
The Democratic congressman has been married to Brittany Ann Watts since 2016 and the couple has three children.
Before the sexual assault allegations came out, Swalwell had appeared to be benefiting politically from another salacious story about him in the news.
Late last month, FBI Director Kash Patel was exposed for trying to resurrect an investigation into a suspected Chinese spy who laid a ‘honey trap’ and targeted Swalwell more than a decade ago.
Patel was trying to have documents released about the investigation.
The Washington Post first reported on the scheme, noting how highly unusual it would be for the FBI to release files from an investigation that didn’t result in charges.
There was no evidence of wrongdoing on Swalwell’s part.
California gubernatorial candidate, Representative Eric Swalwell, lost several members of his staff as allegations of sexual impropriety were being revealed to the public on Friday
What Swalwell had done is criticize President Donald Trump and serve as an impeachment manager amid the President’s second impeachment, which revolved around his role in the January 6 Capitol attack.
The Democratic congressman was also listed as one of Patel’s ‘government gangsters’ in the FBI Director’s 2023 book.
Once Swalwell’s team caught wind of the story, his legal people demanded that the FBI halt any release of the documents and threatened to pursue legal action if the bureau didn’t agree to do so, the Post said.
Appearing to be targeted by Trump’s FBI chief gave Swalwell clout with some of California’s Democratic voters.
The latest allegations, however, could tank his campaign.
Politico tracked that members of Swalwell’s senior leadership team are already out the door including Courtni Pugh, a strategic adviser who helped the Democrat get a boost among labor groups.
On Thursday night, Swalwell scrapped a town hall event with Representative Raul Ruiz, blaming illness.
Bracing for allegations to surface, his Democratic opponents had already started attacking the congressman, suggesting he’s a hypocrite for slamming men like Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, whose confirmation was nearly derailed by sexual misconduct allegations.
Several senators withdrew their support of Swalwell following the allegations against him
Others have withdrawn their endorsements and support of Swalwell just months ahead of the gubernatorial primary in June, including multiple senators.
‘I have read the San Francisco Chronicle’s account and I am deeply distressed by its allegations,’ California Senator Adam Schiff wrote on X.
‘This woman was brave to come forward, and we should take her story seriously. I am withdrawing my endorsement immediately, and believe that he should withdraw from the race.’
‘I’ve read the San Francisco Chronicle’s reporting and I take it seriously. What is described is indefensible,’ Arizona Senator Ruben Gallego said.
‘Women who come forward with accounts like this deserve to be heard with respect, not questioned or dismissed.’
Representative Ro Khanna called for ‘appropriate law enforcement investigations and House ethics investigations.’ Fellow candidate Tom Steyer said Swalwell ‘should be nowhere near any position of power.’
Representative Jimmy Gomez announced he was ‘stepping down’ from Swalwell’s campaign.
‘The congressman should leave the race now so there can be full accountability without doubt, distraction or delay,’ he said.
Former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa called on Swalwell via social media to ‘withdraw from the governor’s race and immediately resign from Congress.’
The California Teachers’ Association retracted its endorsements as the California Federation of Labor Unions said it was ‘acting urgently’ to determine ‘next steps.’
Iran’s negotiating team has arrived in Pakistan for peace talks with the United States on ending the war in the Middle East.
Peace demands have been laid out by Iran including the unblocking of assets and a ceasefire in Lebanon.
Iran’s delegation has touched down in Islamabad to engage in peace discussions with the United States. However, Iran has emphasized several preliminary issues it believes need resolution, casting uncertainty over the planned talks in Pakistan.
On Tuesday, US President Donald Trump declared a two-week ceasefire in the ongoing six-week conflict in the Middle East. This announcement came just hours before a looming deadline, after which Trump had warned of devastating consequences for Iran.
The ceasefire has paused both US and Israeli airstrikes on Iran. Nevertheless, it has failed to lift Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, a situation that has caused unprecedented disruptions in global energy supplies. The ceasefire has also not quelled the concurrent conflict between Israel and the Iran-supported group Hezbollah in Lebanon.
Iran’s parliamentary speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf said on X that Washington had previously agreed to unblock Iranian assets and to a ceasefire in Lebanon, and added that talks would not start until those pledges are fulfilled.
Iranian state media reported that Qalibaf arrived in Islamabad on Friday local time and the delegation includes senior political, military and economic officials, including Iran’s foreign minister, defence council secretary, central bank governor and several members of parliament.
While there was no immediate comment from the White House on the Iranian demands, Trump said in a social media post that the only reason the Iranians were alive was to negotiate a deal.
“The Iranians don’t seem to realise they have no cards, other than a short term extortion of the World by using International Waterways. The only reason they are alive today is to negotiate!” he said.
US vice president JD Vance, who will lead the US delegation, said he expected a positive outcome as he headed to Pakistan, but added: “If they’re going to try to play us, then they’re going to find the negotiating team is not that receptive.”
US vice president JD Vance will lead the US delegation in peace talks with Iran. Source: Getty / Jacquelyn Martin-Pool
Iran has been unable to obtain tens of billions of dollars of its assets in foreign banks, mainly from exports of oil and gas, due to US sanctions on its banking and energy sectors.
Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, in a national address on Friday night, laid out the stakes of the talks.
“The permanent ceasefire is the next difficult phase, which is to resolve the complicated issues through negotiation. This, as called in English, is a make-or-break phase,” Sharif said.
Israeli fighting with Hezbollah continues
Israel and the US have said the campaign against militant group Hezbollah in Lebanon is not part of the agreed ceasefire.
Lebanon’s presidency said Lebanon and Israel held a telephone call between their ambassadors in Washington on Friday. It said the call was part of efforts to secure a ceasefire and launch negotiations, adding that the two sides agreed to hold a first meeting on Tuesday at the US state department under US mediation.
Israel launched the biggest attack of the war hours after the ceasefire was announced, killing more than 350 people in surprise strikes on heavily populated areas, Lebanese authorities said.
Israeli strikes continued across southern Lebanon on Friday. One strike on a government building in the city of Nabatieh killed 13 members of Lebanon’s state security forces, President Joseph Aoun said in a statement.
Hezbollah said in a statement on its Telegram channel that it fired rocket salvos at northern Israeli towns in response.
Lebanese authorities say at least 1,953 people have been killed in Israeli strikes since 2 March.
Trump tells Europe to ‘get your own oil’ as Iran conflict fuels shortages
President Trump has ramped up efforts to pressure Iran by coordinating joint military strikes with Israel, focusing on nuclear facilities in Isfahan. In a newly released video, the attacks are prominently featured as part of the campaign against Iran’s nuclear ambitions. Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo emphasized the necessity for Iran to alter its conduct. Meanwhile, Jennifer Runyan, the FBI’s Special Agent in Charge in Detroit, disclosed that a recent attack on a Michigan synagogue, dated March 12, was motivated by Hezbollah. This revelation has heightened concerns about domestic terrorism, particularly as debates over Department of Homeland Security funding continue.
As Iran finds itself increasingly isolated from its Gulf neighbors, it appears to be strengthening alliances elsewhere. Reports indicate that Tehran has been cultivating closer relations with the Republic of Georgia in the South Caucasus region.
Historically viewed as a prospective candidate for the European Union and NATO membership, the former Soviet republic of Georgia seems to be aligning more closely with Iran. Giorgi Kandelaki, a former member of the Georgian Parliament, explained to Fox News Digital that Iran has established a significant influence in Georgia. This includes operations linked to entities sanctioned by the U.S. for extremist connections, often perceived in Washington as fronts for Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
In a related development, an anti-war protestor in London carried an Iranian flag during a demonstration organized by the Stop the War Coalition. The march, held on March 7, 2026, called for an end to hostilities amid the ongoing U.S.-Israeli tensions with Iran. (Photo by Jack Taylor/Reuters)
An anti-war activist holds an Iranian flag during a march organized by Stop the War Coalition, calling for an end to hostilities amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, in London on March 7, 2026.(Jack Taylor/Reuters)
Kandelaki, co-author of a recent report with the Hudson Institute titled Georgia’s Iranian Turn: Tehran’s Rapid Expansion of Influence in a Once-Committed U.S. Ally, said that Tbilisi’s turn toward Iran is bad for Georgians but also bad for U.S. interests in the region.
“Georgia has an overwhelmingly pro-U.S. public opinion committed to Western values with it also being viewed as a traditional U.S. ally in Washington. This reality presents a terrible precedent and reversing this trajectory is in the interest of both the U.S. but also Georgian society,” he added.
While Georgia has remained diplomatically neutral, the Hudson report details the budding ties between the two countries and how Iran uses Georgia as a network for intelligence infrastructure, penetrating Georgia’s religious, educational and cultural institutions to impact society.
Supporters of the ruling Georgian Dream party attend a rally in the center of Tbilisi, Georgia, Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2024.(Shakh Aivazov/AP)
As far back as 2007, Iran opened the Georgian branch of Al-Mustafa University, which is considered one of Iran’s main arms for the dissemination of Islamic Republic founder Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini’s ideology abroad, according to United Against a Nuclear Iran.
The U.S. Treasury Department stated in 2020 that Iran’s IRGC-Quds Force uses Al-Mustafa University in Georgia as an international recruitment network for Iran and acts as a conduit for the Islamic Republic’s ideological and security interests.
“Al-Mustafa has facilitated unwitting tourists from Western countries to come to Iran, from whom IRGC-Qud’s Force members sought to collect intelligence,” the Treasury Department said. It also said that the university facilitated student exchanges with foreign universities to develop intelligence sources.
A portrait of the late Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei sits at the entrance to the Iranian embassy in Tbilisi on March 6, 2026. (Vano Shlamov / AFP via Getty Images)
A report from the Foundation for Defense of Democracies estimated the university’s annual budget is $100 million and has trained tens of thousands of emissaries across the world who spread Iran’s revolutionary ideology.
Iran has utilized sympathetic Georgians to commit international crimes to advance its domestic agenda.
While no links have ever been made with the Tbilisi government, a Georgian national, Agil Aslanov, who had ties to organized crime, was reportedly recruited by the Quds Forces to assassinate a prominent Jewish leader in Azerbaijan in 2022. In another case in 2025, Georgian national Polad Omarov was indicted in federal court in New York City and sentenced to 25 years in prison for attempting to assassinate prominent Iranian activist Masih Alinejad, a vocal critic of the Islamic Republic’s use of violence against peaceful protesters.
Georgia once made significant inroads to foster political and security ties with the United States following the Rose Revolution in 2003, becoming a bedrock of regional security in the Black Sea region. After decades of Soviet rule, Georgia aligned itself with the United States, contributing to missions in Iraq and Afghanistan, and eventually signed a Strategic Partnership Charter with the United States in 2009.
In this photo taken from video released by Georgian Dream Party on Sunday, Oct. 27, 2024, Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze speaks after the parliamentary election in Tbilisi, Georgia.(Georgian Dream Party/AP)
Tbilisi’s ties with Tehran have been expanded under the pro-Russia Georgian Dream party that took power in 2012. That bond, according to analysts, has tightened after Georgia’s pro-Western President Salome Zourabichvili finished her six-year term in office in 2024 and was replaced by Mikheil Kavelashvili, who was chosen as her successor by a newly established electoral college reportedly dominated by Georgian Dream supporters.
Kavelashvili’s installment followed parliamentary elections in Oct. 2024 marred by some irregularities, according to the U.S. embassy in Tbilisi, in which the Georgian Dream declared victory.
A billboard depicting Iran’s supreme leaders since 1979: (L to R) Ayatollahs Ruhollah Khomeini (until 1989), Ali Khamenei (until 2026), and Mojtaba Khamenei (incumbent) is displayed above a highway in Tehran on March 10, 2026. Iran marked the appointment of Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei to replace his father as its supreme leader on March 9, 2026.(AFP via Getty Images)
Leadership ties between both countries have steadily grown since the Georgian Dream’s disputed 2024 parliamentary victory.
Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze visited Iran in May 2024 for the funeral of Iranian President Ibrahim Raisi, who died in a helicopter accident, and again in July to attend the inauguration of Iran’s current president, Masoud Pezeshkian, where Iranian news agencies reported both leaders praised the growing relationship between the two countries.
Many Georgian companies are also importing oil and petroleum products from Iran, a key economic lifeline for the regime and its regional war efforts, according to Georgian NGO Civic IDEA. In 2024, Iranian oil export revenue was approximately $43 billion, which accounts for roughly 57% of Iran’s total export revenue.
Iranian flags fly as fire and smoke from an Israeli attack on Sharan Oil depot rise, following Israeli strikes in Tehran, Iran, June 15, 2025.(Majid Asgaripour/WANA)
According to Civic IDEA, between 2022 and 2025, 72 companies registered in Georgia imported Iranian oil and petroleum, including eight inked to donors of the ruling Georgian Dream party, boosting Iran’s revenue stream even while heavily sanctioned by Western nations.
“Georgia has become Iran’s primary sanctions-evasion hub . . . funneling hard currency back to Tehran’s war machine and the IRGC through specific schemes in oil imports,” Nicholas Chkhaidze, national security and strategic communications analyst based in Tbilisi, told Fox News Digital.
Chkhaidze said these Georgian companies that import Iranian oil pay in cash and can bypass international banking sanctions.
“The scale is massive, as Tehran uses the revenue from these schemes to fund its regional operations,” Chkhaidze claimed.
Telephone and email requests for comment sent to the government of Georgia were not returned. A spokesman for Iran’s mission to the United Nations would not comment on the relations between the two countries.