Friday, June 05, 2026

OPINION | The Cow, the Gun and the Missing Story



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OPINION | The Cow, the Gun and the Missing Story


5 Jun 2026 • 9:30 AM MYT



An MB shooting down a cow. Image credit: The Vibes


The Cow, The Gun, and The Missing Story

By Mihar Dias June 2026


There are two stories in the Perlis cow-shooting incident. https://newswav.com/A2605_iWUwy3?s=A_7T6chJ9&language=en


Unfortunately, Malaysian journalism chose the easier one.


The report dutifully informs us that a sacrificial cow broke loose, became aggressive, was shot in the leg by the Menteri Besar, and was subsequently slaughtered. https://newswav.com/A2605_iWUwy3?s=A_7T6chJ9&language=en


We are given quotes. We are given assurances. We are given police statements. We are given the obligatory social media reference.



What we are not given is journalism.


The modern Malaysian news formula appears to be simple: something unusual happens, somebody important explains it, the explanation is printed almost verbatim, and everybody goes home before lunch.


A reader who still believes journalism is supposed to ask questions rather than merely record answers is left hungry.


The first question practically begs to be asked: why was the Menteri Besar carrying a shotgun at a korban event in the first place?


Was he participating as a licensed gun owner? Was security present? Was the firearm routinely carried? Had organisers anticipated problems with the livestock? Was this normal practice in Perlis or an extraordinary circumstance?


We do not know.


Apparently, nobody thought to ask.


The second question is even more obvious.


Who determined that shooting the animal was the safest available option?


Veterinarians deal with agitated livestock. Farmers deal with agitated livestock. Abattoirs deal with agitated livestock every day. Were any livestock experts consulted? Were there established protocols? Had attempts been made to corner or restrain the animal before a firearm was used?


Again, silence.


Instead, readers are invited to accept that the cow was aggressive and therefore a gun became necessary.



That may well be true.


But journalism is not the art of believing people.


It is the art of verifying them.


The third question concerns proportionality.


The Menteri Besar cited incidents elsewhere involving escaped buffaloes that killed or injured people. Fair enough. Risk assessment matters.


Yet a serious journalist would ask whether the cow in question was displaying behaviour comparable to those fatal incidents or whether those tragedies were being invoked after the fact to justify a controversial decision.



There is a difference between a genuinely dangerous animal charging into a crowd and a frightened animal running away.


One requires immediate intervention.


The other requires competent animal handling.


Readers deserve to know which occurred.


Instead, we are handed a statement and expected to nod solemnly.


The story also exposes another weakness of local reporting: our addiction to official voices.


Notice how everyone quoted possesses authority.


The Menteri Besar speaks.


The police speak.


The police speak again.



The public does not speak.


The event organisers do not speak.


The livestock handlers do not speak.


Veterinarians do not speak.


Animal welfare experts do not speak.


Eyewitnesses do not speak.


The cow, admittedly, cannot speak, but by the standards of Malaysian journalism it would probably have been interviewed only after the Menteri Besar had explained what it thought.


This dependence on authority has become a defining characteristic of much of our news industry. Reporters often function less as investigators and more as stenographers with press credentials.



The result is journalism that answers only the questions powerful people wish to answer.


The irony is that this story had all the ingredients for genuinely interesting reporting.


How common is firearm use during korban events?


What are the standard procedures for escaped sacrificial animals in Malaysia?


How do other Muslim-majority countries handle similar incidents?


What do veterinary experts recommend?


Have there been previous cases involving public officials personally intervening with firearms?


Those questions could have transformed a viral curiosity into a useful piece of public-interest journalism.



Instead, readers receive a collection of quotations arranged in roughly chronological order.


The problem is larger than one story.


Too much local reporting remains trapped in the mindset that journalism means recording what happened rather than explaining why it happened, whether it should have happened, and what can be learned from it.


A cow gets shot.


A politician explains.


Police investigate.


Article complete.


But journalism worthy of the name begins precisely where the official statement ends.


The public does not need reporters merely to relay explanations.



Facebook already does that.


The public needs reporters willing to ask the uncomfortable second question after everyone else is satisfied with the first answer.


Until that happens, the real victim of stories like this may not be the cow.


It may be the reader.


***






Israeli attacks kill at least 10 Palestinians in Gaza



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Israeli attacks kill at least 10 Palestinians in Gaza


5 Jun 2026 • 12:54 PM MYT



The Independent
The world’s most free-thinking newspaper







Israeli strikes in Gaza killed at least 10 Palestinians on Thursday, local hospitals said, even as much of the world’s attention was focused on the fighting between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon.


Nine people were killed in at least four separate strikes overnight in Gaza City, according to Shifa Hospital, which received the bodies. The hospital said the victims included two women and two children.

Another strike in Gaza City on Thursday evening killed at least one person and wounded another, according to Saraya Field Hospital, operated by the Red Crescent.



Footage of one of the strikes showed a massive hole in an upper floor in what appeared to be a residential apartment building. The blast blew holes through interior walls and scattered blood-stained belongings across the room and into the street.

“They say the war has stopped, but the war has not stopped,” said Walid Shbeir, the uncle of one of the men killed in the strikes, as relatives mourned the victims at Shifa Hospital. “Every night there is killing, and we have martyrs. Every night, in the morning, in the evening, and at night, this killing is continuous for us.”


Israel's military claimed the overnight strikes in northern Gaza killed four militants, which it described as senior members of an apparatus responsible for protecting Hamas leaders and providing them with intelligence assessments. It was not clear what the evening strike was targeting, and the military didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment on it.

Last week, Israel killed Hamas’s top military leader, two weeks after killing his predecessor.




The fatalities were the latest in the occupied Palestinian territory since an October ceasefire deal attempted to halt more than two years of fighting between Israel and Hamas.

The supposed ceasefire has been marked by almost daily Israeli attacks, however. Israeli forces have carried out repeated airstrikes and frequently opened fire on Palestinians since the truce took effect, killing 936 people, according to Gaza’s health ministry.


In response, Palestinian fighters have carried out attacks on Israeli troops. Four Israeli soldiers have been killed in Gaza during the supposed ceasefire.

Israel launched a war on Gaza in October 2023 after a Hamas attack killed 1,195 people, including 828 civilians, in southern Israel. The Israeli war has killed nearly 73,000 Palestinians so far, injured over 172,000, reduced most of the besieged territory to rubble, and driven the majority of its 2.2 million inhabitants from their homes.


OPINION | Amanah Might End Up Taking the Fall for the Selangor Pig Farm Controversy



Malaysia's #1 Content Aggregator



OPINION | Amanah Might End Up Taking the Fall for the Selangor Pig Farm Controversy


5 Jun 2026 • 7:30 PM MYT



Image credit: Amanah X


As we all know, the decree to ban pig farming in Selangor originated from the Sultan of Selangor.


Now, there is a constitutional debate over what exactly a royal decree — or titah — amounts to within our constitutional framework. One side argues that a titah should be followed by governments elected by the people, while another argues that it is not necessarily legally binding.



Even the police appear uncertain about where the boundaries lie. This can be seen in the investigation involving Tony Pua, where constitutional experts are reportedly being sought by the men-in-blue to advise them on how to proceed with their investigation, after Tony shared the view that a royal titah does not necessarily have to be obeyed by state or federal governments.



But regardless of what the legal answer is, one thing is clear: royal decrees are politically powerful enough that almost nobody wants to openly say the rulers are wrong.


That is why when the Sultan expressed displeasure towards Seri Kembangan Assemblywoman Wong Siew Ki for suggesting that closed-system pig farming could still continue in Selangor despite the decree, and towards Ronnie Liu for defending her and urging DAP to give stronger support for pig farmers, Wong quickly made a post saying that she respected the Sultan’s decree and emphasised loyalty to the principles of constitutional monarchy while Ronnie Liu quickly visited Dataran Selangor to read Rukun Negara, as the Sultan had suggested to him.



But if you think the apologies from Wong and Ronnie, together with the legal scrutiny faced by Tony Pua, will close the issue, think again.


Because even when a Sultan’s titah is difficult to question directly, there remains another route available in politics — arguing that the ruler may have been misadvised.


Politically, this is a face-saving mechanism.


If the narrative shifts from “the Sultan was wrong” to “the Sultan was wrongfully advised,” then the policy can potentially be revisited without appearing disrespectful to the institution itself. The criticism simply moves to the advisers.



And even if the decision remains unchanged, the new narrative will still provide the disappointed Chinese community with somebody that they can channel their dissapointment towards.


So who is it that has been positioned to play the role of the “misadvisor”?


Well, according to recent exchanges, it may very well be the Amanah Selangor Chief and Selangor Agriculture and Infrastructure Exco Datuk Ir Izham Hashim and, by extension, the Amanah party itself.


Why?


Because through a facebook post, Ronnie Liu has directly pointed the finger for the issue at Izham.



“The proposal to shut down local pig farming came from him. The suggestion to relocate pig farms to Bukit Tagar also originated from him. Even the directive to move the pigs came from him,” Liu reportedly said in a Facebook post.


Liu also warned that Amanah could pay a heavy political price for Izham's action.


“Amanah may disappear in Selangor in the coming election because of him,” he reportedly wrote.


Personally, I think Ronnie’s attempt to frame Amanah as bearing responsibility for the controversy could have significant repercussions on Amanah.



Amanah is not a party with a large standalone support base. Much of its electoral viability has traditionally depended on broader coalition dynamics and support from non-Malay voters under the Pakatan Harapan banner.


If voters dissatisfied with the pig farming decision begin associating Amanah with the policy, the party could find itself squeezed politically — either it will be given fewer seat allocations or it will get much weaker support in the constituencies it contests.


The disappointment among parts of the non-Malay electorate, particularly among Chinese voters , will most certainly translate into electoral consequences if the perception takes hold that Amanah was central to the decision-making process.



Perhaps recognising this risk, Amanah has already pushed back strongly.


“Amanah Selangor also demands Ronnie Liu withdraw the statement and make an open apology. If not, we will not hesitate to take legal action,” its communications director Abbaes Salimi Azmi said.


Still, taking Ronnie to court may not be straightforward politically.


Amanah doesn't have a strong support amongst the Malays, although it is a Malay party.


But despite not being strongly supported by its own base, Amanah has managed to maintain a presence in our politics because it is supported by non-Malays who vote for its candidates when they stand on the PH ticket.



However, with Ronnie giving such a damning indictment of Amanah, it might be the case that Amanah may no longer be given as many seats by PH, who might doubt its chances of gaining non-Malay support if it is fielded, or it may lose the seats that it contests in because PH supporters might blame of for the pig farming fiasco.


And there is another complication.


If pressure mounts on Izham to publicly clarify his role as Agriculture Exco, he may find himself caught in a difficult position. Openly backing the decision risks political consequences. Distancing himself from it risks creating other sensitivities.



This is what makes politics interesting, isn't it.


Even when everybody agrees that certain institutions should not be questioned directly, politics often finds indirect ways to challenge outcomes without appearing to challenge institutions themselves.


That is why, I suppose, politics is often called the art of the possible.


***


Let us recall what PMX said on issue:











PM conveys govt's stance on pig farms to S'gor ruler - must be away from homes


Published: May 6, 2026 5:31 PM
Updated: 10:19 PM


Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim has conveyed Putrajaya’s stand on certain conditions for pig farms in Selangor during an audience with state ruler Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah, said government spokesperson Fahmi Fadzil.

Fahmi said Anwar briefed the cabinet on his audience with the sultan, which Selangor Menteri Besar Amirudin Shari also attended.

“The federal government maintained the position that pig farming can only be implemented in new areas located far from residential areas, or critical sources such as water supply.

“(Pig farms) should also adopt the use of the latest technology that is capable of managing waste and pollution issues very well,” Fahmi told a press conference.

This comes after the sultan withheld his consent for pig farming in the state, citing pollution and limited land resources.

In a statement in February, the Selangor Royal Office said: “His Royal Highness suggests that the government grant licences for the importation of pork to meet the demand and needs of non-Muslims, particularly the Chinese community, in Selangor”.
A day before the royal decree was issued, Anwar said that while the rights of pork consumers were respected, pig farming should not be in areas that could cause public concern.

‘Everybody hates you now’: Trump’s ‘crazy’ rebuke undercuts Netanyahu at a critical moment





‘Everybody hates you now’: Trump’s ‘crazy’ rebuke undercuts Netanyahu at a critical moment



This combination of pictures created on June 3, 2026 shows (from left) Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem on March 19, 2026 and US President Donald Trump in Morristown, New Jersey, on May 22, 2026. Trump and Netanyahu’s relationship is under strain after the US president reportedly called the Israeli premier ‘crazy.’ — Various sources/AFP pix

Friday, 05 Jun 2026 7:21 PM MYT


  • Leaked Trump call exposes strains with Netanyahu
  • Episode dents Netanyahu’s image before election
  • Friction focuses on Lebanon strikes, war strategy
  • Allies insist ties intact despite tensions


WASHINGTON, June 5 — Benjamin Netanyahu has long portrayed himself to the Israeli public as being uniquely adept in dealing with ‌Donald Trump, capable of winning and sustaining the US president’s backing.

But an acrimonious phone call this week where the president called the prime minister “f***ing crazy”, first leaked to the media and later publicly confirmed by Trump himself, laid bare the strains that have at times emerged between the two leaders.

Israeli officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, acknowledged the call was among the most heated the premier has had with Trump. One of the officials said the leak had damaged Netanyahu politically ahead of this year’s national election.

The US website Axios broke news of the call on Monday, saying Trump had angrily confronted Netanyahu ‌over Israeli threats to resume air strikes on Beirut’s southern suburbs. “Everybody hates you now. Everybody hates Israel because of this,” Trump was quoted as saying.

The US president told Netanyahu not to target Beirut after Iran had warned that Israeli strikes in Lebanon were undermining talks to end the war, which began with joint US-Israeli attacks and which is deeply unpopular among Americans.


US-Israel differences ‘now very public’, says think-tank head

A senior Israeli official told Reuters that Netanyahu had made clear to Trump that any pause in Israeli plans to strike Beirut would only work if Hezbollah stopped hitting northern Israel. Trump was receptive to this position, the official said.

Following their call, Trump said Israel and Hezbollah had agreed to stop shooting each other, prompting accusations by Netanyahu’s political opponents, and some within his own government, that he had ceded Israel’s sovereignty to the US

“A total protectorate,” said opposition leader Yair Lapid, suggesting Netanyahu had put Israel in the position of an American client state.

Netanyahu, Israel’s longest serving prime minister, has repeatedly clashed with Republican and Democratic administrations. Yet, Israel has remained Washington’s closest Middle East ally.

Nimrod Goren, the president of Mitvim, an Israeli think tank, said “the differences are now very public”, unlike in the past when they were usually quietly managed behind closed doors.

Trump told the New York Post on Wednesday that he was “a little bit perturbed” by Netanyahu constantly attacking Lebanon, but added: “We’ve worked very well together.”

Trump’s decision to join Israel in striking Iran, not once but twice in the space of a year, appeared to mark a major victory for Netanyahu, who had spent decades urging Washington to use its military power to halt Tehran’s nuclear programme.

But Trump has also taken a series of steps that many in Israel have viewed as cutting against the country’s interests, including ending US strikes on Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthis, lifting sanctions on Syria’s President Ahmed al-Sharaa, and ordering a halt to Israel’s 12-day war with Iran ‌in June 2025.


Israel not directly involved in US-Iran peace talks

And while the United States and Israel jointly launched the campaign against Iran in February, Israel has not been directly involved in the US-Iran talks to end the war. Those negotiations have been conducted through Pakistan, ⁠a rare intermediary that has no formal diplomatic ties with Israel.

The wars with Iran and Hezbollah have been widely popular in Israel, including ⁠among supporters of Netanyahu’s political rivals, and much of the public wants the fighting to continue.


That stands in contrast to the US, where many voters -including members of Trump’s conservative base — ⁠oppose the war.

Trump has repeatedly said that the US was close to an agreement ⁠with Iran on ending the war. Tehran insists any deal include ⁠Israel halting attacks on its ally Hezbollah in Lebanon.

“We are basically being forced to stop,” said Israeli pollster Mitchell Barak. “We don’t have a say in this anymore.”

At the start of this year’s war with Iran, Netanyahu said that the Iranian government would be toppled, and its nuclear and missile programmes destroyed. He has also said that Hezbollah, which attacked Israel in March in support of Iran, must be disarmed in southern Lebanon. So far, none of these goals have been achieved.

Recent domestic polls have repeatedly shown that Netanyahu’s coalition government, the most right-wing in the ⁠country’s history, would fail to win a majority at the next election.

Netanyahu, Goren said, was working to accommodate Trump’s demands because the Israeli premier will need the president’s support closer to the elections, including a possible visit by the US leader to Israel. Before the war with Iran, Trump was widely expected in Israel to visit in April to be awarded the state’s highest civilian honour. He last visited in October.


Notion of Trump-Netanyahu rift overstated, ex-adviser says

But some Israelis were not comfortable with the extent that Trump appears able to influence Israeli military decisions, Goren said. In contrast, in the US, some Trump critics say that Netanyahu has outsized influence on US foreign policy.

Itamar Ben-Gvir, Netanyahu’s national security minister said yesterday that there are times when an Israeli leader must know how to say “no” even to the US president.

Nadav Strauchler, a former Netanyahu adviser, said the Israeli premier was counting on Trump’s support in the election.

“The way the war (with Iran and Hezbollah) will end will affect, more than anything, the result of the election.”

Trump has often lavished public praise on Netanyahu ⁠and has publicly lobbied Israel’s president to pardon the prime minister, who is on trial in Israel on corruption-related charges.

But Trump has also publicly emphasised how much, he says, Israel needs Washington, and has used expletives in the past when talking about Israel, including publicly saying last year that Israel and Iran “don’t know what the f*** they are doing.”

For his part, Netanyahu describes Trump as “the greatest friend Israel has ever had in the White House”, offering the kind of ⁠public praise that resonates with the Republican president, who is known to prize personal loyalty and validation.

Since the US and Israel opened the war with Iran, Netanyahu has at times said that he speaks with Trump almost daily, often characterising their relationship to the Israeli public as one between ⁠peers who make decisions together.

Asked about ⁠the call in an interview with CNBC on Wednesday, Netanyahu said that like in the “best of families” there at times had been “tactical disagreements” with the US president.

A US official told Reuters the phone call was one of several in which the president has been very direct with Netanyahu but that the two remain friends and close allies.

“Their conversations are pretty direct,” the official said.

The official, and another Israeli source briefed on the US-Israel relationship, dismissed any suggestion of a material change in the relationship between Netanyahu and Trump.

However, the Israeli source acknowledged that the leak of the call — and Trump’s subsequent confirmation of it — ‌was not helpful to Netanyahu ahead of an election that he is polling to lose.

 Strauchler, the former adviser to Netanyahu, said the perception of a rift with Trump was overstated and that the two leaders still appeared to remain aligned on most major issues.

But an abrupt end to the wars with Iran and Hezbollah, however, would pose a “huge problem”: for Netanyahu, he said, as many Israelis would see it as Trump having forced his hand.

“No one wants here to feel like we are another star on the (US) flag.  We want to feel independence,” Strauchler said. — Reuters


No discussions on reviving Muafakat Nasional 2.0, says Zahid






No discussions on reviving Muafakat Nasional 2.0, says Zahid



Datuk Seri Ahmad Zahid Hamidi said Barisan Nasional remains committed to the unity government formed with Pakatan Harapan and parties from Sabah and Sarawak. — Bernama pic

Friday, 05 Jun 2026 7:26 PM MYT


PUTRAJAYA, June 5 — Umno president Datuk Seri Ahmad Zahid Hamidi today dismissed suggestions of reviving Muafakat Nasional (MN) 2.0, saying there have been no discussions on the matter between Umno and PAS.

“There have been no discussions on that,” he told reporters after visiting the exhibition site for National Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) Day 2026 at Dataran Putrajaya here today.

Ahmad Zahid, who is also deputy prime minister, said Umno and Barisan Nasional’s (BN) priority remains ensuring political stability through the unity government formed with Pakatan Harapan (PH) and parties from Sabah and Sarawak.

“The most important thing is to ensure that the current government remains intact until the end of the 15th Parliament’s term,” he said.

Yesterday, PAS Youth proposed that Umno revive political cooperation through Muafakat Nasional ahead of the upcoming Johor state election.

On a separate matter, Ahmad Zahid said a political meeting involving Umno and PAS leaders held last night did not involve the presidents of either party and was focused on political collaboration and national issues.

He said politics is dynamic and BN remains open to political discussions and deliberations on national matters in the interest of preserving the country’s stability. — Bernama

BN open to continuing unity government with Pakatan in Negeri Sembilan, says Zahid






BN open to continuing unity government with Pakatan in Negeri Sembilan, says Zahid



Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Ahmad Zahid Hamidi mingles with visitors during the National TVET Day Carnival 2026 at Dataran Putrajaya in Putrajaya June 5, 2026. — Bernama pic

Friday, 05 Jun 2026 7:02 PM MYT


PUTRAJAYA, June 5 — Barisan Nasional (BN) is ready for the Negeri Sembilan state election and remains open to continuing its cooperation with Pakatan Harapan (PH) to retain the unity government in the state, its chairman Datuk Seri Ahmad Zahid Hamidi said today.

However, Ahmad Zahid said it was still too early to hold formal discussions on any electoral cooperation between the two coalitions.

“We are prepared for the Negeri Sembilan state election and, of course, remain very open to continuing the unity government in the state,” he told reporters after visiting the exhibition site for National Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) Day 2026 at Dataran Putrajaya here today.

The deputy prime minister’s remarks came a day after Negeri Sembilan Menteri Besar Datuk Seri Aminuddin Harun announced the dissolution of the 36-seat State Legislative Assembly to pave the way for the 16th state election.

In the 2023 state election, PH and BN formed the Negeri Sembilan government after securing a combined 31 of the 36 seats contested.

PH won 17 seats, followed by BN with 14, while Perikatan Nasional (PN) secured five seats.

Negeri Sembilan became the second state to dissolve its legislative assembly for a fresh election after Johor, which dissolved its State Legislative Assembly on Monday. — Bernama


Trump Softens Red Line: 'No Reason' To Retrieve Iran's Nuclear 'Dust' As It's Effectively 'Entombed'






😂😂😂



by Tyler Durden
Friday, Jun 05, 2026 - 05:59 AM

Summary:

  • Trump remarks suggest the fate of Iran's stockpile of enriched uranium is no longer be the central issue it once was.
  • Hezbollah chief rejects outcome of Lebanon-Israel talks, insisting that a truce must encompass whole country.
  • WSJ reports that the White House intends to maintain a ceasefire with Iran unless American troops are killed; oil drops also after Trump states on TS
  • Trump lashes out after House War Powers votes passes Wednesday evening, attacking especially four Republicans who voted in favor.
  • Trump downplayed Iran's attacks on US bases in Kuwait & Bahrain, saying "they were slightly provoked...so they were reciprocating."US x Iran permanent peace deal by June 30, 2026?






* * *


Trump Suggests Enriched Uranium No Longer a Central Issue for Him

Trump's Thursday late afternoon remarks to reporters suggested that the fate of Iran's stockpile of enriched uranium may no longer be the central issue it once was. Asked about reports that the US could attempt to seize or recover Iran's remaining nuclear material, Trump repeatedly downplayed the prospect, saying there was "no reason" to retrieve what he called Iran's nuclear "dust" because it is now effectively "entombed."

The president stressed that Washington is "not considering" any covert operation to seize Iran's uranium, adding that the US already has "powerful cameras watching Iran's uranium" and remains confident in its ability to monitor the situation. While Trump at one point boasted that America and China are the only countries capable of recovering the material and suggested "we'll get Iran's nuclear dust," his broader message now seems that the stockpile no longer represents an urgent concern. Instead, Trump framed the dispute around a much simpler objective: ensuring that Iran never obtains a nuclear weapon. He reiterated that the "main part" of any agreement would be that Iran "can't have a nuclear weapon," while adding that a broader deal could also include guarantees regarding the Strait of Hormuz remaining open to global commerce.

Expressing optimism about diplomacy, Trump again said talks with Tehran are "going well" and suggested that a successful agreement could even lead to a personal meeting with Iran's supreme leader. "I would be honored to meet the Ayatollah," he remarked, adding that if a deal is reached, Iran "won't have a nuclear weapon."

At the same time, Trump declared in an oddly stated reference that the US would ultimately prevail "on paper, or militarily." He warned that any future attack resulting in the deaths of American troops would trigger a rapid return to hostilities, while asserting that Iran's military capabilities have been severely degraded. Trump claimed Tehran has only a handful of missiles remaining, reiterated that Iran effectively has "no navy" and "no air force," and even said the US possesses photographs of sunken Iranian vessels. He further boasted that Washington had "wiped out almost all" of Iran's leadership during the conflict.

On regional tensions, Trump linked developments in Lebanon directly to the broader confrontation with Iran, saying the various fronts are "interconnected." He disclosed conversations with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu regarding Lebanon and expressed hope that the country could finally enjoy "some peace." Trump also claimed that Hezbollah had contacted the United States during the crisis.


IAEA: Iran Nuclear Risk Higher than When War Began

Stating the obvious:


According to Bloomberg, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has published a “restricted” document which reveals that the nuclear risk posed by Iran is now higher today than it was before the war began. Specifically, prior to the war, the IAEA was allowed to inspect Iranian enriched uranium, but such inspections have since largely halted. However, it should be noted that the IAEA was always only inspected where the IRGC told them they were allowed to, and many suspected that nuclear proliferation was happening behind the scenes, in facilities that were not accessible to the IAEA.
Hezbollah Rejects Outcome of Lebanon-Israel Talks: Secretary General

Hezbollah Secretary General Naim Qassem in new speech rejects the Washington-mediated conclusion to direct Lebanon-Israel talks:


Naim Qassem has warned that Israeli areas across the border will remain under threat as long as the Lebanese people and villages come under attack from the Israeli army.

He also rejected attempts to tie the group’s deployment to wider political arrangements, saying the group refuses any link between Hezbollah’s presence and a ceasefire, or Israel’s withdrawal.

Some highlights from Qassem's address:

  • 'The revolution in Iran was launched from an Islamic background on the principles of resisting injustice and occupation, and it announced that it is neither Eastern nor Western"
  • 'The West and America will not accept Iran as a model of righteousness and justice; rather, they want it to be subordinate to their interests and their tyranny."
  • 'Thanks to Iran for helping us to regain our land and our right to confront the Israeli-American aggression despite its major confrontations"; describes direct negotiations as "absurd and humiliating" for Lebanon.
  • As long as Israel is in Lebanon, resistance will continue.
  • Northern Israel will remain at risk as long as Lebanese villages are being bombed.
  • "We are only concerned with ending the comprehensive aggression—with a ceasefire and the withdrawal of “Israel""
  • As long as the occupation exists, the resistance will continue.
  • "We have not given any commitment to anyone not to resist the aggression and respond to it. And as long as the aggression continues, we will confront it with all the power we have."
  • "The main objective must be the withdrawal from Lebanese territories so that the army spreads in the south of the Litani River and the liberation of the detainees"
  • "We do not accept any link between the existence of the resistance, the cessation of aggression and the withdrawal of "Israel"

Iran's foreign ministry is also still insisting that the broader US-Iran ceasefire must incorporate Lebanon.


Oil Prices Fall As Trump to Maintain Iran Ceasefire Unless American Troops Are Killed




President Trump in an early Thursday morning Truth Social post has said the United States is "in the middle of my final negotiations to end the War" - while blasting the Republicans who voted the night prior to limit war powers "GRANDSTANDERS" and "unpatriotic".

Even though Iran is denying that any direct negotiations are taking place, following a big flare-up this week in new tit-for-tat fighting which involved Iran sending more missiles and drones on Gulf states, especially Kuwait, the reference to 'final negotiations' was possibly enough to get oil prices to react, with a drop in crude. There was also a report that the White House intends to maintain a ceasefire with Iran unless American troops are killed.



Trump's new apparent strategy to just wait things out with no new planned military attacks has been featured in The Wall Street Journal as follows:


President Trump has told aides privately that he would consider ending the ceasefire with Iran if Tehran kills American troops, U.S. officials said, insisting that the weekslong pause in airstrikes remains intact despite a steady stream of violent skirmishes.

The president’s reluctance to reignite the war suggests he might be willing to withstand smaller flare-ups for weeks—or even months—to avoid a broader conflict in the Middle East.

And Rubio appeared to second this in fielding questions about this week's violence:


Secretary of State Marco Rubio described the tit-for-tat attacks as purely defensive in nature and not a renewed outbreak of full-scale war.

“They are happening in response to an Iranian action,” Rubio said in a House hearing Wednesday. “If they don’t shoot at those ships, we don’t shoot, but we have to respond.”

More evidence of Trump's apparently high tolerance for what he deems a violation of ceasefire:


House War Powers Vote Wed. Evening

As for the House vote, it was seen as a rare direct rebuke of Trump and the fact that this war - which the American public was promised would be a 'short' military action of possibly a few 'days' or 'weeks' - is now approaching 100 days, and the war powers passed 215-208, with the four Republicans joining all Democrats in voting yes being Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania, Thomas Massie of Kentucky, Tom Barrett of Michigan and Warren Davidson of Ohio.





Pushing Lebanon Truce Toward Goal Line

In Lebanon, there is some remotely positive news, with Lebanon ‌and Israel ​saying had ⁠agreed ​to implement ⁠a ceasefire during talks in Washington and overseen by the US; however, once again the deal is contingent on Hezbollah agreeing to the ceasefire.

"That cease-fire is conditional on Hezbollah also stopping fighting, but in theory, the news helps to take out a key sticking point in the U.S.-Iran talks that was holding up a deal. So that’s seen oil prices reverse a run of three [days of] consecutive gains," Deutsche Bank analyst Henry Allen stated in a research note.

Trump rages at House's successful War Powers vote, which could portend a political shake-up going into this Fall's midterm elections:


Some More Latest Developments

via Al Jazeera:

  • Hezbollah boss warns north Israel won’t be safe if Lebanon bombed
  • Several people have been wounded in an Israeli drone attack on a vehicle after Israel and Lebanon officials agreed to halt the war during a series of meetings in Washington, DC.
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Penang undersea tunnel trial: CZBUCG received advantage from earlier meetings with state — MACC IO





Penang undersea tunnel trial: CZBUCG received advantage from earlier meetings with state — MACC IO


By Hafiz Yatim / theedgemalaysia.com
04 Jun 2026, 05:35 pm





KUALA LUMPUR (June 4): A Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) investigating officer (IO) told the Sessions Court on Thursday that Consortium Zenith BUCG Sdn Bhd (CZBUCG) received an advantage compared to other companies in the Penang undersea tunnel project, as it had received individual briefings from the state government.


Zulhilmi Ramli, 34, said in his investigations, this provided the company leverage.


“In my investigations, Consortium Zenith BUCG Sdn received technical and financial advantages. This follows, [since] there is discussion between the company and the Penang government without the attendance of others who may bid for the tender.


“Initially, the project was awarded via direct tender. However, the Penang government reverted to an open tender,” he added.


Zulhilmi was asked further by counsel Haijan Omar of Messrs Haijan Omar & Co (representing former Penang chief minister Lim Guan Eng) whether, in his investigations during the three meetings from May to July 2011, the company had received technical information and forecasts with regards to the three main roads and a tunnel.


“This is over the cost and forecast… and this provided the company (CZBUCG) to offer a lower price compared to other companies who tendered for the project. Hence, CZBUCG received the technical advantage and hence won the tender,” the MACC IO said.


Zulhilmi, who is the 38th and final prosecution witness in the Penang undersea tunnel graft trial, told the court that he had not obtained CZBUCG’s draft request for proposal (RFPs) for the project, but based his findings on the minutes he had obtained from the three meetings held on May 10, May 19 and July 11, 2011, as well as from interviewing witnesses, including CZBUCG director Datuk Zarul Ahmad Mohd Zulkifli.


He agreed with Haijan that Lim had not attended the three meetings in question, where prior to that, the Penang state government had signed two memoranda of understanding with regards to the project with Beijing Urban Construction Group (BUCG), a China state-owned company.


Haijan had asked how the company had received material advantage with regards to the project, since even though the project had initially been awarded via direct negotiation, the Penang government later wanted the bid to be done via open tender.
Zarul Ahmad told court firm had distinct advantage


Prior to this, in his testimony in 2025, Zarul Ahmad said that CZBUCG had received a distinct advantage from the Penang government and its then-chief minister, when it bid for the project, as he was initially the broker for BUCG to bid for the project.


Zarul Ahmad testified that his company had been involved in direct negotiations for the project, but the Penang government subsequently decided to change it from direct negotiation to an open tender system.


The star witness said that despite the change to an open tender and despite several companies having to bid for the project by submitting their RFPs, Lim had assured him that his company would get the project as the former Penang chief minister had preferred the construction of a tunnel rather than a third bridge from the mainland to Penang island.


“Lim told me that a tunnel would require less approval from the federal government, and, being an Opposition state (at that time), this was something that it wanted to avoid (the involvement of the federal government). Furthermore, Lim told me [to get] my company to bid for the tunnel project,” Zarul Ahmad had testified.


The construction of the tunnel and expansion of the three main roads is to alleviate the traffic congestion to the Penang island, following a study done in the 1990’s showing the prospect.


Despite the proposal initially for the construction of the tunnel, Haijan said the federal government had turned down its construction. Zulhilmi replied that he was not aware of this.


Zulhilmi said that when he took over as IO, the four investigation papers opened by the MACC had focused on the false claim, feasibility study and detailed design of the project, the purported graft and acceptance by Lim, Lim’s abuse of power as Penang CM, and finally a further investigation on Datuk G Gnanaraja.


At the last hearing, the MACC IO had told the court that the initial probe into the case had shown no further action to be taken on Lim, but when he took over the case, he recommended that a charge be preferred on the DAP politician.


Lim is on trial for using his position as then-Penang chief minister to solicit a 10% cut in the RM6.3 billion undersea tunnel project’s profits from Zarul Ahmad, in return for aiding Zarul Ahmad’s company to secure the project.


The 65-year-old former finance minister, who is the current Bagan member of Parliament and Ayer Putih assemblyman, is also accused of getting RM3.3 million in kickbacks. A purported RM2 million paid on Aug 18, 2017 and Aug 29, 2017, via Gnanaraja, is said to be part of the RM3.3 million.


Lim, who is currently an adviser to DAP, also faces two counts of dishonest misappropriation of property, in the release of two plots of state-owned land, cumulatively worth RM208.75 million, to Ewein Zenith Sdn Bhd and Zenith Urban Development — two property companies linked to the controversial undersea tunnel project.


The trial continues before Sessions Court judge Azura Alwi on Friday (June 5).


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