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The World Daily Brief: Iran, Israel appear to be standing down after unprecedented strikes

Israeli Iron Dome air defense system launches to intercept missiles fired from Iran, in central Israel, Sunday, April 14, 2024. Iran launched its first direct military attack against Israel on Saturday. (AP Photo/Tomer Neuberg)
Israeli Iron Dome air defense system launches to intercept missiles fired from Iran, in central Israel, Sunday, April 14, 2024. Iran launched its first direct military attack against Israel on Saturday. (AP Photo/Tomer Neuberg)
Armstrong Williams one of the new owners of The Baltimore Sun. (Lloyd Fox/Staff photo)

Coming up this week

  • The Philippines and the U.S. begin annual joint military exercises today, but this time the exercises take place far from Philippine territorial waters in a part of the central South China Sea claimed by China. Though international law allows the exercises to take place there, China will see them as a provocation. READ MORE
  • Passover begins at sundown today and ends at sundown next Tuesday.
  • North Macedonia votes for president on Wednesday. READ MORE
  • U.S. SecState Blinken will visit China this week with a warning to Beijing to stop Chinese companies from helping Russia make military hardware. READ MORE

Commodity Prices

  • Aluminum: $2,669/ton
  • Antimony (ingot min. 99.65% fob China): $14,200/ton
  • Cobalt: $27,830/ton
  • Copper: $9,876/ton
  • Gold: $2,337/toz
  • Lead: $2,219/ton
  • Natural Gas (Nymex): $1.77/MMbtu
  • WTI Crude Oil (Nymex): $82.77/barrel
  • Zinc: $2,852/ton

International News

Iran and Israel

  • Both Iran and Israel seem to be standing down after their tit-for-tat exchange of unprecedented direct strikes last week. Iran downplayed Israel’s drone strike on Friday and seems content to let it be the last shot in this volley. READ MORE
  • Israel’s Friday strike hit a defensive battery near some of Iran’s most important nuclear infrastructure. Western officials said Israel’s objective was to show that it could penetrate Iranian defenses undetected – and it apparently did on Friday. READ MORE
  • Some Israeli media reports suggest Israel used a supersonic “Rampage” missile in that final strike on Friday. Neither Israel nor Iran are confirming those reports: Iranian officials are happy to let the public believe the foreign minister’s comment that the weapons deployed agaisnt Isfahan were “like toys our children play with” rather than a high-tech, 1,250 lb (567 kg) missile. READ MORE
  • Separately, Iraq’s pro-Iran Popular Mobilisation Forces accused the U.S. of striking one of its bases near Baghdad, killing one militant. READ MORE

Gaza

  • The U.S. is reportedly planning to slap sanctions on the Israel Defence Forces’ Netzah Yehuda Battalion for alleged human rights violations it committed in the West Bank. PM Netanyahu vowed to “fight” the sanctions, which would suspend U.S. funding and training for the unit. READ MORE
  • Israel’s head of military intelligence, Aharon Haliva, became the first senior official to resign over the failure to foresee and prevent Hamas’s Oct. 7 attacks. The attacks happened over six months ago, but as protests against PM Netanyahu’s handling of the war grow, critics want heads to roll. READ MORE

Ukraine

  • After much delay and politicking, the U.S. House approved a long-stalled $95 billion foreign aid bill for Ukraine, Israel, and Taiwan. Ukraine celebrated the news: $61 billion of the total is earmarked for it, including $14 billion for weapons. The Kremlin warned that the bill’s passage would “further ruin” Ukraine. READ MORE

Venezuela

  • Saturday was the deadline for swapping candidates on the ballot for Venezuela’s July presidential election. READ MORE
  • The opposition had hoped to put its unity leader, Maria Corina Machado, on the ballot, but she’s still barred from running under a politically-motivated technicality, so all 10 parties in the main opposition coalition aligned behind a relatively unknown former diplomat, Edmundo González, as their candidate. READ MORE

Myanmar

  • Recently-united rebel groups are rapidly retaking territory from government forces in Myanmar. Rebels now control over half the country. READ MORE

China

  • The Maldives’ pro-China ruling People’s National Congress (PNC) party won a decisive victory in this weekend’s parliamentary elections, with enough seats to secure an outright majority. READ MORE
  • The PNC’s leader, incumbent president Muizzu, steered the country closer to China but has been restrained by a pro-India party’s control of the legislature. Now that the PNC controls the legislature too, we’ll likely see the Maldives pivot more sharply towards China. READ MORE

Sahel

  • The U.S. reluctantly confirmed that it will withdraw its ~1,100 troops stationed – but unwelcome – in Niger. READ MORE
  • Diplomats tried to persuade the junta to revive the military cooperation deal its civilian predecessors signed, but the junta seems more interested in no-strings-attached support from Russia and (to a lesser extent) China. READ MORE
  • It’s not clear what will happen to the drone base housing the troops, which the U.S. spent $100-110 million to build. The base has been mostly dormant since the July 2023 coup: the only drones operating there lately are surveillance drones supporting U.S. positions. READ MORE

North Korea

  • A U.S.-based cyber sleuth found evidence to suggest North Korean animators helped draw television cartoons for upcoming shows on Amazon and HBO Max. The work had been subcontracted to China, so Amazon and HBO were almost certainly unaware that their art was coming from North Korea. READ MORE

The World Daily Brief is composed daily by former CIA and Intelligence officers.

Armstrong Williams (www.armstrongwilliams.com; @arightside) is a political analyst, syndicated columnist and owner of the broadcasting company, Howard Stirk Holdings. He is also part owner of The Baltimore Sun.