Saturday, January 17, 2026

END of NATO? Europe Calls for 100,000-Strong Army to Replace 32-Member North Atlantic Alliance “Shaking” under Trump



Friday, January 16, 2026


END of NATO? Europe Calls for 100,000-Strong Army to Replace 32-Member North Atlantic Alliance “Shaking” under Trump


By Sumit Ahlawat



On 4 April 1949, the foreign ministers of 12 countries signed the North Atlantic Treaty in Washington, D.C.

NATO’s founding member countries were: Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, the United Kingdom, and the United States.

Today, 32 countries are members of NATO, two of them from North America (the US & Canada) and 30 from Europe (including Turkey).

Article 5 of NATO forms the bedrock of NATO security. It states that an armed attack against one or more NATO members is considered an attack against all, obligating members to assist the attacked party.

In its 76-year history, Article 5 has been invoked only once: following the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States.

However, NATO is now facing a new challenge. A challenge that none of the 12 founding members, or the 20 other states that joined later, anticipated.

What if one of the NATO member states attacks another member state from the bloc?

Who should the remaining 30 member states support then? Is each member state free to decide its support on the basis of its self-interest?

U.S. President Donald Trump’s threat to take over Greenland, an autonomous province of the Kingdom of Denmark, by financial or military means, is forcing NATO member states into precisely this dilemma.


Edited image of US President Donald Trump with European leaders in the background.


Incidentally, Denmark and the US are both founding members of NATO.

However, if statements by European leaders are anything to go by, one thing is certain: any military attack by the US on Greenland will mean the end of NATO, as we know it today.

Earlier this week, the European Commissioner for Defence and Space warned that any armed aggression against Greenland would mean the end of NATO.

“I agree with the Danish prime minister that it will be the end of NATO, but also among people it will be also very, very negative,” Commissioner Andrius Kubilius told Reuters at a security conference in Sweden.

Furthermore, just the apprehension of a US attack on the territory of a European country is triggering collective anxieties in Europe, and can cajole Europe, and the European Union (EU) into doing something that it has avoided doing for the last seven decades, enshrining a collective defense agreement in the EU charter, modeled on the lines of NATO’s Article 5.


Time For European NATO?

The EU is primarily considered a political and economic alliance, unlike NATO, which is primarily a collective defense treaty.

However, the EU already has in place a system that can be improved to better resemble NATO’s Article 5 collective mutual defense clause.

Article 42(7) of the Treaty on European Union (TEU) is the EU’s mutual assistance clause. It is part of the Common Security and Defence Policy (CSDP) framework introduced by the Lisbon Treaty in 2009.

The clause reads: “If a Member State is the victim of armed aggression on its territory, the other Member States shall have towards it an obligation of aid and assistance by all the means in their power, in accordance with Article 51 of the Charter of the United Nations. This shall not prejudice the specific character of the security and defence policy of certain Member States.”

Further, it adds, “Commitments and cooperation in this area shall be consistent with commitments under the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, which, for those States which are members of it, remains the foundation of their collective defence and the forum for its implementation.”

It creates a binding obligation for all EU member states to provide “aid and assistance by all the means in their power” if another member state is subject to armed aggression on its territory.

However, unlike NATO’s Article 5, it does not automatically treat an attack on one as an attack on all.

There is no automatic trigger for a collective military response in either clause; however, under NATO’s Article 5, there is a stronger expectation of a collective response. Whereas, under TEU Article 42(7), the obligation is to “aid and assistance,” which may or may not take the form of a military response.

Furthermore, it explicitly respects the neutrality or special security policies of certain states, such as Austria, Ireland, and Malta. There is no neutrality clause in NATO.

Clearly, there is a lot of wiggle room in the technical language of both treaties.

However, where NATO stands out is in its emphasis on collective defense framing, achieved through voluntary agreements, defense policy frameworks, regular war drills, and common defense objectives, such as the recent commitment to spend around 5% of GDP on defense.

NATO member countries have widely adopted (through voluntary agreements) Standardization Agreements (STANAGs), managed by the NATO Standardization Office (NSO).

These are not binding treaty clauses but formal agreements where member nations commit (fully, partially, or with reservations) to implement common standards to enable: Compatibility of weapons systems, Interchangeability of weapons and ammunition, and Commonality in designs and procedures.

For instance, STANAG 4172 mandates that member countries use the 5.56×45mm NATO cartridge as the standard small-arms round. There are various STANAGs in place about artillery (155mm), fuzes, propelling charges, and inductive fuze setting.

These measures ensure that NATO forces can share ammunition, spares, and logistics in joint operations and during emergency situations.

NATO countries also participate together in numerous war drills, synchronizing their war philosophies and tactics.

Due to these reasons, NATO appears to be a much more potent force.

However, EU countries can easily sign similar agreements on standardization and on the interchangeability of weapons and ammunition.

Notably, 23 of the 28 EU members are also part of NATO, and have already achieved a high degree of standardization and interoperability of weapons systems.

Besides, the EU is also considering raising a European Army, sourced from member countries.


File Image
A Joint European Army For European NATO


The European Commissioner for Defense and Space, Andrius Kubilius, has called for the creation of a 100,000-strong European Union army for its own defense and to replace US troops in Europe if necessary.

During his speech at a security conference in Sweden on January 12, Kubilius said, “If the Americans leave Europe, how will we create a ‘European Pillar of NATO’? Who will be the European SACEUR (Supreme Allied Commander Europe – ed.)? What about the capabilities of the European command and control, the European staff? Most importantly, how will we replace the 100,000 US regular military forces that are the backbone of military power in Europe?”

He proposed creating a 100,000-strong European army and a European Security Council, composed of key permanent members and several rotating members.

Notably, the idea of creating an EU army is not new. In 2017, representatives of 23 of the 28 EU member states signed a declaration establishing the Permanent Structural Cooperation on Security and Defense (PESCO). Later, the rest of the EU members, except for Malta, joined the structure.

In 2018, French President Emmanuel Macron warned that “Europeans cannot be protected without a real European army.”

In 2022, following Russian missile attacks, the EU began building a unified air and missile defense system.

The EU is also financing joint weapons procurement for the first time.

The EU’s €800 billion “ReArm Europe” plan is a major initiative to boost European defense spending by unlocking significant national and EU funds, facilitating joint procurement, and streamlining regulations to strengthen the defense industry.

Furthermore, EU countries are calling for the deployment of a joint European force to protect Greenland against armed aggression.

Patrick Sensburg, chairman of the German Reservists Association, has called for a European brigade to be stationed in Greenland.

In an interview with Bild, he said that Europe must demonstrate a serious presence in the region.

Meanwhile, Kubilius said the EU could provide more security for Greenland, if Denmark requested it, including troops and military infrastructure such as warships and anti-drone capabilities.

“That’s for military people to say what Greenland or the Arctic defence needs. Everything is possible,” he said.

He also suggested that the EU countries could use NATO structures to create the European pillar of NATO.

“It will be a very big challenge to be ready to defend Europe, being independent, being without the United States,” he said.

“The question would be how we can use in that case NATO structures, how they can be, you know, become a basis for the European pillar of NATO.”
Clearly, the legal, financial, and military infrastructure for a European NATO is already in place. Trump’s threats on Greenland might just be the catalyst Europe needs to break its slumber and realize its collective military potential.



Sumit Ahlawat has over a decade of experience in news media. He has worked with Press Trust of India, Times Now, Zee News, Economic Times, and Microsoft News. He holds a Master’s Degree in International Media and Modern History from the University of Sheffield, UK.


Trump threatens tariffs over Greenland, calls it vital for security

 



Trump threatens tariffs over Greenland, calls it vital for security

Greenland’s location and resources make it vital to US security, Trump argues in his ongoing push for acquisition.



US President Donald Trump participates in a roundtable on rural health, at the White House in Washington, DC, US, January 16, 2026. [Nathan Howard/Reuters]

US President Donald Trump says he may impose tariffs on countries that do not support his plan to have the United States control Greenland.

“I may put a tariff on countries if they don’t go along with Greenland, because we need Greenland for national security,” Trump said at a health roundtable at the White House.

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Since Trump returned to the White House in January, he has repeatedly expressed his desire to take over Greenland, a demand Denmark and many other European nations have rejected.

Trump has said Greenland is vital to US security because of its strategic location and large supply of minerals, and has not ruled out the use of force ⁠to take it.

A bipartisan delegation of US lawmakers met the leaders of Denmark and Greenland in Copenhagen on Friday, seeking to “lower the temperature” with assurances of congressional support after President Donald Trump’s threats to seize the Arctic island.

European nations this week sent small numbers of military personnel to the island at Denmark’s request.

The 11-member US delegation, led by Democratic Senator Chris Coons, met Danish Prime ​Minister Mette Frederiksen and her Greenlandic counterpart Jens-Frederik Nielsen, as well as Danish and Greenlandic parliamentarians.

“There’s a lot of rhetoric, but there’s not a ‍lot of reality in the current discussion in Washington,” Coons told reporters following the meetings, saying the lawmakers would seek to “lower the temperature” on returning home.

Looking for a deal

Trump’s special envoy to Greenland also said on Friday he plans to visit the Danish territory in March and believes a deal can be made.

“I do believe that there’s a deal that should ‍and ⁠will be made once this plays out,” Jeff Landry told Fox News in an interview on Friday as a bipartisan ​delegation of ‌US lawmakers was set to meet leaders of Greenland and Denmark.

“The president is ‌serious. I think he’s laid ‌the markers down. He’s ⁠told Denmark what he’s looking for, and now it’s a matter ‌of having Secretary [of State Marco] Rubio and Vice President JD ‍Vance make a deal.”



***



If he sees and lusts after your wife, guess what the bullying S-Whole will do

Friday, January 16, 2026

Fighting Stops in Iran Following Backchannel Diplomacy; US Moves Forces in Gulf

 



Fighting Stops in Iran Following Backchannel Diplomacy; US Moves Forces in Gulf

 

Governments including Israel, Iran, and Russia have used indirect and secret messaging channels in recent weeks to communicate positions and reduce the risk of escalation, according to reporting by The Washington Post, citing unnamed sources. The messages were conveyed through intermediaries and did not involve public negotiations or formal agreements.

Separately, the United States withdrew some military personnel from Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar, citing security concerns related to Iran. US officials said the move was a precautionary measure and did not announce a broader drawdown or change in US military posture in the region. President Trump stated recently that he was told the killing has stopped.

No government involved publicly disclosed the full contents of the backchannel communications or announced a formal diplomatic breakthrough during the period covered by the reporting based on anonymous sources.

Inside Iran, nationwide protests appeared to subside following a security crackdown, according to Israeli media. Iranian authorities accused the United States and Israel of encouraging unrest, according to Russian media. Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian warned publicly that foreign interference would be met with a response, while also calling for internal calm, according to the reports, which also claim that President Trump conveyed through the backchannels that the US was not preparing to strike Iran, according to unnamed officials familiar with the communication.

Lindsey Graham (R-SC) publicly urged stronger action against Iran, claiming the regime is still “killing protesters at an alarming rate,” despite the recent developments.

Burning Bright: In this accelerated phase of the awakening cycle, something both subtle and profound has shifted: the backchannels themselves are being publicly disclosed, even as the warmongers—perennial peddlers of perpetual strife—beat their drums loudest for escalation, many having been baited by Donald Trump into doing so to their own reputational detriment in full view of the Collective Mind.

Throughout history, great powers have relied on shadowed communications to avert catastrophe while their public rhetoric served the domestic game board.

Backchannels.

From the American side of the story ledger, Kennedy and Khrushchev are perhaps most infamous for this, having traded secret assurances amid the Cuban Missile Crisis en route to dismantling Jupiter missiles in Turkey through backchannels the public would only learn of decades later.

The need for such ‘translation layers,’ as I explored in ‘Temporal Trump Card’ in 2023 stemmed from the same toxic soil we till today: a geopolitical landscape wherein warmongers drape themselves in the skin suit of faux patriotism, stumping for mass murder and endless profit while the true sovereigns maneuver for peace on the edges of the board.

The key difference between then and now?

The Sovereign Alliance—anchored by the United States under Trump, Russia under Putin, China under Xi and a growing mesh of unlikely allies, some even this community is loath to consider—is no longer content to let these backchannels remain fully shadowed.

In surfacing them, deliberately and at the precise moment when NeoCons, warmongers and yes, elements in Tel Aviv and Brussels clamor loudest for kinetic intervention, they are holding up a dark mirror to the Invisible Enemy, now rendered corporeal to an awakening (and global) body politic.

And so, while we can’t know the truth inherent in these narrative deployments, the net effect remains as the peacemaking pincer closes: Trump on one flank, Putin on the other, squeezing the warmongers in the middle while the Collective Mind watches their escalation narratives deflate in real time, and perhaps (hopefully) their own engineered bloodlust.

This is the same pincer I mapped in ‘The Villains We Need’—wherein I discussed how Kremlin figures repeatedly reference backchannels with Trump, with Yuri Ushakov noting that public statements are weighed alongside “communication we receive through secure channels.”

They’re telling you the real story and the fake one at the same time.

It’s on you to discern the difference.

***

GhostofBasedPatrickHenry: My firm opinion on this Iran situation is that the evil elements of our government and the Israeli government attempted to launch a regime-change revolution, likely encouraged by the ongoing rhetoric of President Trump, and the recent raid that “kidnapped” Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.

We should note that once the protest activity took off, President Trump stepped up his rhetoric and really hammed it up for the cameras. He then took it a step further and declared that if anybody was killed, then the US military would likely intervene, all but assuring that we would soon hear about protesters being killed.

Mind you, none of these stories need to be real in order for Trump to follow through on his hypothetical promise. It merely has to look real to the audience, so that a public consensus can form supporting regime change via military intervention.

But the fact that President Trump was going full Hulk Hogan in his rhetoric should have been the indicator that he had no real intention of following through. Ten years ago he would regularly say that he would never telegraph such plans before an actual attack, mocking Obama for doing so.

We are now getting reports of horrific violence being conducted not by regime forces, but instead by the protesters. Decapitated police officers, hundreds of mosques and ambulances burned to ash, and molotov cocktails thrown at government buildings, are just a few examples of reported violence coming out of Iran. Honestly, it sounds like the work of ISIS.

“But wait a minute, Ghost. I thought ISIS worked for Iran?”

Wrong.

ISIS was created by the CIA, MI6, and Mossad to overthrow President Assad and the Syrian government. It is not an Iranian proxy—it doesn’t even champion the same religion. (ISIS is Sunni Islam; Iran is Shia Islam.)

What I think has happened is that these Mossad/CIA/ISIS operatives were baited into launching their color revolution playbook, and then the necessary support systems that were expected to deploy never actually did, leaving the radical provocateurs completely exposed.

The Iranian leadership is already beginning to disclose that Israeli and western intelligence have been involved, while Steve Witkoff advocates for diplomacy over military intervention and President Trump tells Iran that the US doesn’t actually intend to do anything.

When the MSM asserted that Iran was going to start hanging [presumably innocent] protesters, both President Trump and Iranian President Pezeshkian came forward and rebuked those claims. Now we have Lady Lindsey Graham scurrying over to Tel Aviv to grovel at the feet of his masters, as he defies President Trump and flagrantly contradicts Trump’s claims about the hangings not happening.

Just listen to this dejected man and look at his pathetic demeanor.

He’s like a heroin addict who has fallen into a deep hole after a long weekend of riding the train.

We have foreign allies like Serbian President Vucic and Colonel Douglas Macgregor saying that the CIA and Mossad are behind the failing revolution.

So now that the CIA/Mossad/MI6 has deployed their op and it is failing, the chances of the Iranian government recovering hard evidence that those parties were involved seems very high.

What will happen when that evidence is presented to the world and to the American People?

The question facing PKR’s leadership: what now?


FMT:

The question facing PKR’s leadership: what now?


No one is immortal and, sooner or later, PKR must decide what it stands for above and beyond being Anwar Ibrahim’s party





From Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad


After a tumultous history — born in Malaysia’s political wilderness in 1999, a merger with the leftist Parti Rakyat Malaysia as well as numerous setbacks, defections and splits — PKR is now, finally, in the country’s driver’s seat.


Anwar Ibrahim is prime minister and the emergence of a sure-fire challenger to this position is far from certain.

PKR emerged as arguably the biggest “winner” in the Cabinet reshuffle last month. Discounting the promotion of deputy ministers, the only real “new” minister was from PKR, namely Taufiq Johari as youth and sports minister.


And while these things are of course subjective, the party also was seen as having gained “strategic” portfolios such as human resources (R Ramanan) and Sabah and Sarawak affairs (Mustapha Sakmud).

Besides Anwar being prime minister and finance minister (and ongoing criticism by civil society of him holding both posts, something Pakatan Harapan [PH] was also opposed to in the past), key posts like home affairs, economy, education, communications as well as science, technology and innovation are all held by PKR members.

Perhaps sensing the restlessness of his base over the perceived slow pace of institutional reform, Anwar marked the New Year by announcing a slew of potential reforms, including some long sought-after changes like separating the roles of the attorney-general and public prosecutor (which proponents argue will make criminal prosecutions more independent and transparent) as well as, significantly, term limits for the prime minister’s post.


Anwar and his supporters previously rebutted criticisms of the slow pace of reforms by broadly arguing that PH is constrained given that the government he leads is essentially a grand coalition of coalitions that are not only ideologically different but virulently opposed to each other not so long ago.


He has also cited the need to repair Malaysia’s economy from the dislocations of Covid-19 and current uncertainties, while warning that reforms need to be sequenced.

Nevertheless, the fact is that PKR is, like it or not, now part of Malaysia’s political establishment, if not at its very head.

This was the culmination of a process that began with the watershed 2008 general elections when it won an unprecedented 31 parliamentary seats as well as control of the wealthy Selangor state, among others.

There is some truth to Rafizi Ramli’s contention that the party is facing the “test of power”. Power, as the old adage goes, corrupts.


How Malaysia’s former grand old party Umno lost touch with the rapidly evolving Malay ground, losing its once-unassailable grip on the community here and there to PAS, PKR and Bersatu, is well known.

Even Bersatu and PAS’s current difficulties over who will lead Perikatan Nasional (PN) can be seen as an example of the infighting that being in power can cause.

While Anwar’s personal magnetism remains relevant, the perhaps rosy picture outlined for PKR at the start cannot easily be assigned to anything else but the weakness of its opponents and belies the serious faultlines the party and its coalition face.

Unhappiness over the slow pace of reform, even perceived backsliding in areas such as corruption and impunity, have been discussed umpteenth times.

The fact that PKR and PH have made no real electoral gains since 2022 is telling. Despite having Anwar at the helm, PH arguably lost ground in the 2023 state elections. Its victories in the various by-elections were all defensive.

The prospect of making further gains in the four PN-governed states (Perlis, Kedah, Kelantan and Terengganu) remain uncertain.

And regardless of the reasons why urban Sabah voters swung to Warisan, the fact remains PH was massively defeated there with only one PKR candidate winning a seat.

This is to say nothing of the divisive 2025 PKR party elections, which, among other things, saw controversy over the conduct of the division polls and a bitter contest for the deputy presidency which saw Anwar’s daughter, Nurul Izzah, defeating Rafizi.

To be fair, the PKR component of the Cabinet reshuffle suggests that Anwar understands the importance of presenting a united front.

Strategy-wise, the lack of return on investment of Anwar’s attempts to triangulate conservative Malay-Muslim voters by treading cautiously on institutional reform and social policy has also caused anxiety over the possible drift of PH supporters.

The loss of more moderate urban voters and the non-Malay PH base, if not to other parties or coalitions than to absenteeism, is potentially fatal. This is made worse with our first-past-the-post electoral system.

But PKR can also be said to be over-reliant on its allies. Its engagements with the non-Malay demographic appear to have largely been assigned, for better or worse, to DAP, which is puzzling when PKR is supposed to be a multiracial party.

These are serious, existential weaknesses which must be addressed sooner or later, not only to ensure PKR and PH keep their pole position in the next general election (GE16), but also to define itself politically, especially in an era where voters are at risk of being disillusioned at what they perceive is the cartelisation of politics.

This is crucial if PKR is to be able to chart a course for itself post-Anwar.

Again, criticisms of its overreliance on his charisma, not only electorally but even in the business of government, need not be repeated here.

Suffice to say that while he undeniably and masterfully navigated the reality of decades-long coalition politics successfully, the regrettable fact is that no one is immortal and that sooner or later, PKR must decide what it stands for above and beyond being Anwar’s party.

The continuing breakdown of the certainties that marked Malaysian coalitional politics from 2015 onwards (when the conflict between PAS and DAP brought Pakatan Rakyat to its end) also means that this direction must be set with even greater urgency.

This is not even a question of personnel so much as what the “reforms” the party has said are its lodestar really means.

Malaysian voters deserve this certainty. It will help not only PKR and PH’s base, but even those sitting on the fence to make their choices. Authenticity and clarity are not an asset to be scoffed at.

What does PKR stand for? And where does it want to go? The question facing its leadership is the “what now”?



Nik Nazmi Nik Ahmad is MP for Setiawangsa. He was a PKR vice-president and natural resources and environmental sustainability minister.


What happens if “no more pork from Selangor” becomes reality?





OPINION | What happens if “no more pork from Selangor” becomes reality?


16 Jan 2026 • 8:00 PM MYT


AM World
A writer capturing headlines & hidden places, turning moments into words


Photo by Nish Gupta on Unsplash


Have you ever wondered what would happen if no more pork came from Selangor? That question went from fringe chatter to serious debate after African swine fever (ASF) devastated pig farms in the state, leading to mass culls and tightening restrictions on pork movement. The idea now spreads on social media, in rural markets, and even in policy circles. What would it really mean for Malaysians and the region if this hypothetical becomes reality?


Have you noticed empty pork counters and whispered rumours that Selangor might be running out of pork altogether as locals scramble for substitutes in markets and supermarkets? This anxiety reflects a real and growing crisis for consumers and farmers alike. Recent outbreaks of African Swine Fever (ASF) in key farming regions have not only disrupted supply but also fueled fear about the future of pork in one of Malaysia’s most populous states. (The Straits Times)


Selangor used to be one of Malaysia’s pig-farming hotspots. But ASF has changed the landscape. In 2025, Selangor’s Department of Veterinary Services reported that around 76,000 pigs across 56 farms in Kuala Langat and Sepang tested positive for ASF, triggering massive culls to contain the disease. Malaymail


That’s not a small outbreak. It’s a farm-to-table crisis. African swine fever does not infect humans, but it kills pigs with near-100% mortality and no vaccine exists. (The Straits Times) As a result, Selangor’s pork output has slumped, sparking price spikes and supply fears.


The ripple effects hit kitchens and wallets fast. Pork prices in Malaysia jumped sharply as ASF spread. In areas like Penang, live pig prices surged from around RM1,300 - RM1,400 per 100kg to about RM1,800. (Malay Mail) That means bak kut teh, char siu rice, and siew yuk come at a heftier cost for consumers.


But numbers tell a bigger story. Malaysia’s pork self-sufficiency ratio dropped from above 93% in 2021 to just under 70% in 2023, largely due to ASF pressure. (CodeBlue) This means the country relies more on imported pork to meet demand. If Selangor’s production vanished entirely, that reliance would deepen.


Imagine: restaurants pushing up prices, families spending more on weekly groceries, food producers scrambling for raw materials. This isn’t just about hunger for pork. It’s about inflation pressures in a food staple consumed by millions.


In early 2025, Selangor’s pig farms in Kuala Langat and Sepang became ground zero for multiple African Swine Fever outbreaks, a disease lethal to pigs though harmless to humans. Within weeks thousands of animals were culled and restrictions tightened in an effort to stop further spread. (Malay Mail)


This isn’t just a health scare, it’s a supply shock. Pork prices have climbed sharply in markets across Selangor and beyond. At Petaling Jaya’s Old Town market, customers once buying a full kilogram of pork belly now settle for half a kilo as prices hit multi-year highs. (The Straits Times)


The question now is unsettling: What happens if “no more pork from Selangor” becomes reality?


From Farm to Fork: What’s Happening on the Ground


Outbreak spread and cull numbers


State veterinary authorities reported ASF presence across dozens of farms and conducted large-scale culling to contain it. Older figures cited around 14,000 pigs culled while earlier reports claimed numbers near 76,000, underlining the scale and confusion of the response. (Malay Mail)


Pig farming clusters in Sepang and Kuala Langat proved particularly vulnerable due to their proximity and biosecurity challenges, making containment difficult and urgent. (Malay Mail)


Rising prices and market strain


The disruption escalated costs. Stallholders and consumers alike confirm sharp price rises for fresh pork. One butcher told reporters buying patterns have shifted as buyers cut down on pork purchases to balance budgets. (The Straits Times)


External responses


In Sarawak, authorities preemptively blocked imports of live pigs, pork, and pork products from Peninsula Malaysia over ASF fears, reflecting the seriousness of the threat beyond Selangor. (The Star)


Government and Industry Perspectives


State policy shifts



Rather than banning pork entirely, Selangor’s government has taken regulatory steps to restructure pig farming. From 2026, all pig-farming activities will be consolidated to a designated zone in Tanjung Sepat to improve disease control and environmental management. (Media Selangor)


Longer term, plans are underway to centralise modern, high-biosecurity pig farming at Bukit Tagar by 2030, intended to protect local food supply while mitigating health and environmental risks. (The Sun Malaysia)


Federal and consumer voices


The federal Agriculture Minister acknowledged that farms hit by ASF would likely push prices up nationally, particularly affecting non-Muslim communities for whom pork is a dietary mainstay. (Malay Mail)


Industry groups, including butchers associations, have expressed concern that unchecked price inflation could make Malaysian pork among the world’s most expensive, urging stronger government measures to stabilise supply. (Reddit)


Cultural and Social Context


In Malaysia, pork is more than protein, it is part of social and cultural life for many communities. Disruptions in supply resonate far beyond economics. Hawker stalls, festive meals, and family dinners that centre on pork can become flashpoints for tension when supplies dry up or prices soar.


Meanwhile, regulatory debates flare over food labelling. Religious authorities have reminded businesses that signs claiming “No pork, no lard” are prohibited without halal certification, to avoid misleading consumers about halal status, a rule that has stirred legal confusion among diners and shop owners. (The Sun Malaysia)


This controversy touches on deeper debates about identity, inclusivity, and economic survival in a multicultural society still negotiating how food markets operate across cultural lines.


Wider Regional Effects


Other parts of Malaysia and neighbouring countries feel the ripple effects. Singapore’s food safety agency said ASF in Selangor does not impact Singapore’s pork imports due to existing controls, but urged consumers to remain flexible, suggesting alternatives such as frozen pork or other proteins. (AsiaOne)


These reactions show that international food systems are interconnected. A disease in a farming district here can nudge consumption and supply chains elsewhere, affecting pricing, sourcing, and trade decisions.


Butchers, Chefs, and Families



On the ground, butchers feel the pinch first. Many have already reported price hikes, reduced stock, and consumers buying smaller portions. (The Straits Times) Chefs at hawker stalls and restaurants watch costs climb and margins shrink. Some adapt by tweaking menus, others reluctantly raise prices.


For families, this is felt at dinner tables. Pork dishes are staples in many Malaysian homes, from Sunday lunches to festive celebrations. Higher prices or limited supply could change eating habits, push consumers to substitute proteins, or even turn to cheaper imported meat of uncertain quality.


A Fragile Food Chain


If Selangor’s pork supply were to drop to zero, Malaysia’s food system would be under stress. Imports would fill the gap, but at a cost:


• Imported pork may carry biosecurity risks and raise safety concerns if standards differ.


• Long supply chains mean higher transport costs and price volatility.


• Small producers and butchers may struggle against cheaper imports.


• Regional trade tensions could arise over sourcing and health claims.


The ASF outbreak teaches a hard lesson: a local disease can have national and international economic and cultural effects.


What Can Be Done Now?


This is not a doomsday. There are practical strategies to mitigate the impact:

  • Strengthen Biosecurity: Expand closed-farm systems and disease monitoring to prevent future outbreaks.
  • Diversify Supply Sources: Develop partnerships with trusted domestic and regional producers to cushion against shocks.
  • Support Farmers: Provide training, subsidies, and incentives for modern pig farming practices.
  • Promote Transparency: Help consumers trace pork origins and understand safety standards.
  • Engage Communities: Involve local voices in planning farming zones to avoid social friction.


Countries that have faced livestock disease outbreaks show that transparent communication and targeted support can rebuild confidence and supply over time. There is no simple fix but thoughtful policies make a difference.


Debate and Misinformation


Public discourse has been rife with social media narratives exaggerating bans or worst-case scenarios. Claims such as the state banning pork entirely from markets are unsubstantiated; instead the situation is one of tightening controls and biosecurity measures for resilience.


Still, misinformation thrives when fear and uncertainty rise. Community forums teem with anecdotal claims about price spikes or policy intentions, revealing a public hungry for clarity as official communication lags behind murky conversation online.


Lessons and Solutions


One clear lesson is that disease preparedness in agriculture is not optional. Experts stress that improved farm biosecurity, regular surveillance, and investment into disease research are essential if the industry is to survive future outbreaks.


Investing in biosecure farming systems helps prevent pathogens from spreading, safeguarding both animal health and human livelihoods. Modern facilities with strict hygiene protocols can reduce risks and build trust in supply chains.


Diversifying supply is another practical step. Allowing safe imports from ASF-free regions or developing strategic reserves for key commodities like pork can soften price shocks and give consumers breathing room during crises.


Government and industry must also communicate clearly. Transparent updates on disease status, realistic supply forecasts, and guidance for consumers can counter misinformation and help market actors adjust without panic.


What do you think? I’d love to hear your opinion in the comments section.


No, Selangor is not out of pork forever. But the crisis shines a spotlight on vulnerabilities that were always there. Disease outbreaks, environmental concerns, cultural expectations, and regulatory complexity collide in ways that challenge policymakers and citizens alike.


This period offers an opportunity to reframe how livestock industries operate, how diverse societies share food spaces, and how governments respond to shocks. It is a story of adaptation, not surrender.


Malaysian Actress Goes Missing in Saudi Arabia, Sent Chilling “I Met a Stranger” Message Before Vanishing






Malaysian Actress Goes Missing in Saudi Arabia, Sent Chilling “I Met a Stranger” Message Before Vanishing




Published 7 hours ago
January 16, 2026


By Renushara


Source: 123RF & Harian Metro



Malaysian actress Nadia Kesuma, who starred in films such as Syaitan Munafik and Kudeta, has reportedly gone missing after arriving at the King Abdulaziz International Airport in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.


The news shared by her close friend, the President of Gagasan Transformasi Anak Seni (GTAS) and fellow actress, Anne Abdullah.



Source: Nadia Kesuma



Malaysian actress goes missing in Saudi Arabia


According to a report by Harian Metro, Anne shared that Nadia had boarded a flight on Wednesday night (14 January) through a travel agency for a special Umrah package to the Holy Land, which included a subsequent trip to London.


“As soon as she arrived in Jeddah, she messaged her husband to inform him that she had arrived safely. After that, she was supposed to board a plane to London.”

However, the travel agency revealed that she did not board her flight to London, and her phone has been unreachable.


“Her husband is worried and contacted me. So now, the question is, is she in Jeddah, and where is she? Because she did not board the plane to London. She travelled alone. I have checked near Jeddah. It is true that her name is there, but she did not even check in to go to London,” Anne added.


A package to multiple countries

Anne has not ruled out the possibility that Nadia faced problems while at the airport.



Source: 123RF
This image is for illustration purposes only.


“But, before that, she had messaged her husband, she said something like ‘I met a stranger‘, then there was no news. Now, both of her cellphones are receiving messages, but she has not responded. Since yesterday, her husband has been worried and calling me. I was surprised because I thought that she had gone with her husband.”

“Apparently, she went alone with a travel agency. The package she took was an Umrah pilgrimage (package), like a package to go to Paris with London included. She was supposed to go to Jeddah, Mecca, Paris, and London. Now, many people do that,” she added.

Anne has since shared that she will file a police report as soon as possible, in hopes of tracking down Nadia’s whereabouts.


Is KJ Prime Minister Material?





OPINION | Is KJ Prime Minister Material?


16 Jan 2026 • 7:00 AM MYT


Fa Abdul
FA ABDUL is a former columnist of Malaysiakini & Free Malaysia Today (FMT)


Photo credit: Focus Malaysia


Recently, Ong Kian Ming publicly endorsed former Umno Youth chief Khairy Jamaluddin as a future prime minister. Kian Ming said he is ready to campaign for KJ at the next general election, regardless of party, and is even willing to serve in KJ’s Cabinet if asked. KJ described the endorsement as a reminder that “friendships endure through fair winds and stormy seas,” highlighting a rare bond across political lines.


Kian Ming’s public endorsement of KJ clearly sparked conversation and it inspired Tajuddin Rasdi’s recent opinion piece in Free Malaysia Today, “KJ–Ong: the third force Malaysians desperately need?”. Written with hope, Tajuddin is tired of race and religion politics. Many of us are too. He imagines a fresh option, something new, something that could move Malaysia forward. That feeling is real, and it is shared by many Malaysians. But hope alone is not enough.


Tajuddin is excited by the idea of Kian Ming teaming up with KJ. He sees it as a way out of the endless Anwar–Zahid and Muhyiddin–Hadi cycle. He believes this pairing could offer a calmer, more progressive future.


But the question is not whether this idea sounds nice. The question is whether it is honest.


You see, a true third force must break clearly from the past. Not in tone. Not in branding. But in values and actions.


The truth is, KJ did not just come from Umno - he rose in it. During the 1MDB scandal, he defended Najib Razak and urged party members to stand together. He did not leave Umno over corruption or principle. He was expelled much later for other reasons. This matters. If Umno had not sacked him, there is no strong reason to believe he would not still be there today.


Reinvention is easy when circumstances force it. Moral courage is harder when it costs power. Calling this a “third force” without addressing that history feels like asking Malaysians to move on without first being honest about what happened.


Supporters of the KJ–Ong idea often say they are smart, capable, able to govern, speak well, and are not extreme. All of that may be true. But Malaysia does not suffer from a lack of smart people. We suffer from a lack of accountability. Kian Ming is often seen as principled and thoughtful. Yet he has also spoken about political “resets” and moving forward, even when that risks softening accountability for corruption.


When justice becomes something that can be negotiated for stability, trust breaks down. A third force cannot be built on asking people to forget.


Tajuddin says Malaysia needs to move away from race and religion politics. That is true. But the hard question remains: has KJ ever truly rejected race-based politics, or has he only managed it more gently?


There is a big difference between ending a system and making it more polite. Malaysians have seen polite corruption before. We have seen calm speeches alongside serious wrongdoing. Without a clear break from racialised policies, elite protection, selective justice, and economic systems that favour the few, there is no real change - only a softer version of the same problems.


This is why the KJ–Ong idea makes many people uneasy. It feels like old politics with new faces, elite comfort dressed up as reform, asking ordinary Malaysians to be patient again.


A third force should not begin with personalities. It should begin with values. With clear lines. With honesty about the past.


Malaysia does need a new political path. That much is clear. But that path cannot be built on selective memory.


Before asking Malaysians to believe again, leaders must first show they understand why trust was broken. Until then, calling something “new” does not make it so.


Sometimes, the hardest part of moving forward is admitting who helped keep us stuck.


Russia SEIZES $3 Billion in Arctic Vessels — The Power Shift That Changes Everything!



North Wave News


Russia SEIZES $3 Billion in Arctic Vessels — The Power Shift That Changes Everything!….bcc


January 11, 2026




 1 MIN AGO: Russia SEIZES $3 Billion in Arctic Vessels — The Power Shift That Changes Everything!


Washington woke up to a jolt of geopolitical shock as reports surfaced that Russia has taken control of a dozen commercial vessels operating in Arctic waters, assets collectively valued at an estimated $3 billion and linked to Western energy and shipping interests.

The Kremlin framed the move as a matter of “security enforcement” in sensitive northern zones, but the timing and scale immediately sent alarm bells ringing across capitals, boardrooms, and maritime hubs around the world. Whether temporary detention or something more permanent, the action is already being described by analysts as a turning point in the rapidly escalating contest for Arctic dominance.




According to Russian officials, the vessels were operating in areas now subject to heightened oversight under newly emphasized navigation and security regulations. Moscow insists the seizures are legal, procedural, and defensive—part of what it calls a necessary response to growing military and commercial activity near its northern coastline. Western governments, however, see something far more strategic unfolding: a calculated display of power meant to redraw the rules of access in one of the world’s most critical emerging trade corridors.

The immediate impact has been dramatic. Shipping insurers reportedly moved to reassess risk premiums within hours, while logistics firms scrambled to reroute cargo away from contested Arctic passages. Energy companies with stakes in polar exploration and transport now face the prospect of frozen assets, delayed deliveries, and cascading contract penalties. “This isn’t just about a few ships,” one maritime analyst said. “It’s about control—control of routes, resources, and the future of Arctic commerce.”





Behind the scenes, diplomats are racing to understand what triggered the escalation. Some observers point to recent incidents involving tanker inspections and detentions carried out by Western-aligned authorities elsewhere, arguing that Moscow’s move may represent strategic mirroring—a signal that any pressure applied to Russian shipping will be met in kind. Russian media commentators have openly framed the seizures as a warning shot: a reminder that sanctions and enforcement actions cut both ways.

The Arctic has long been viewed as the next great frontier of global trade and energy extraction. As ice recedes, new shipping lanes promise to slash transit times between Europe and Asia, while vast reserves of oil, gas, and minerals lie beneath the seabed. Russia, with the longest Arctic coastline and a heavily militarized northern presence, has invested aggressively in icebreakers, ports, and surveillance infrastructure. Control of Arctic traffic is not just economic leverage—it’s a cornerstone of national strategy.

For the United States and its allies, the episode exposes uncomfortable vulnerabilities. Western sanctions have aimed to constrain Russia’s economic reach, but enforcement has often relied on access to global finance and shipping networks. If Moscow can effectively counter by asserting dominance over physical chokepoints, the balance of power shifts. “Sanctions assume freedom of movement,” a former trade official noted. “The Arctic challenges that assumption.”

Political ramifications are already rippling outward. Critics argue the incident undercuts claims that Washington has restored deterrence and global leadership. Supporters counter that escalation was inevitable given the crowded and contested nature of the Arctic, and that cooler heads will prevail through negotiation. Still, comparisons to earlier maritime standoffs are growing louder, with commentators warning of a tit-for-tat cycle that could entangle civilian commerce in great-power rivalry.



Markets reacted cautiously but unmistakably. Shares of shipping and energy firms with Arctic exposure dipped amid uncertainty, while defense and security stocks saw a modest uptick. Analysts emphasized that much depends on what happens next: Will the vessels be released after inspections and fines, or will Russia hold them as bargaining chips in a broader geopolitical game? The lack of clarity is itself destabilizing.

Adding to the tension is the political backdrop in the United States. With election season looming and debates raging over foreign policy strength, any perceived loss of leverage becomes ammunition. Some voices are already framing the episode as evidence that adversaries are testing boundaries, while others warn against overreaction that could spiral into a wider confrontation.

What’s clear is that the Arctic is no longer a quiet backwater. It has become a frontline where law, commerce, and power collide. Every move is watched, interpreted, and amplified. Every seizure or inspection carries symbolic weight far beyond the ice and water where it occurs.

As diplomatic channels buzz and shipping firms await guidance, one question dominates: Is this a temporary enforcement action—or the opening act of a new Arctic order? If the latter, the implications stretch far beyond twelve vessels. They touch the foundations of global trade, the future of sanctions as a tool of statecraft, and the delicate balance of power in a warming world.

For now, the situation remains fluid. Officials speak carefully. Analysts speculate. And the world watches the High North, where ice, steel, and strategy are colliding in ways that may reshape geopolitics for years to come.