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What To Do When You're Stopped By Police - The ACLU & Elon James White

What To Do When You're Stopped By Police - The ACLU & Elon James White

Know Anyone Who Thinks Racial Profiling Is Exaggerated? Watch This, And Tell Me When Your Jaw Drops.


This video clearly demonstrates how racist America is as a country and how far we have to go to become a country that is civilized and actually values equal justice. We must not rest until this goal is achieved. I do not want my great grandchildren to live in a country like we have today. I wish for them to live in a country where differences of race and culture are not ignored but valued as a part of what makes America great.

Saturday, April 11, 2026

Video of an ICE shooting shattered the agency’s story. Will it usher in accountability? | ICE (US Immigration and Customs Enforcement) | The Guardian

Video of an ICE shooting shattered the agency’s story. Will it usher in accountability?

"The case against two Venezuelan men in Minneapolis is the latest to fall apart. Now agents could face repercussions, but questions linger over whether it signals a real shift

A screengrab from the 14 January shooting of Sosa Celis in Minneapolis.
A screengrab from the 14 January shooting of Sosa Celis in Minneapolis. Photograph: City of Minneapolis

On 14 January, in the thick of Donald Trump’s massive anti-immigration crackdown in Minneapolis, two deportation officers from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) attempted to stop a car in traffic.

They had identified the owner as an unauthorized immigrant, according to an FBI affidavit. The driver, later identified as Alfredo Aljorna, a Venezuelan national, sped off, hitting speeds of 80mph and eventually crashed into a parked car. He then took off running toward an apartment building where his roommate, Julio Sosa Celis, stood at the entrance holding a broad-bladed snow shovel.

In the agency’s telling, what ensued next was a violent altercation in which ICE agents said they were attacked, and eventually fired at Sosa Celis. Both men were later charged with assaulting a federal officer. But the prosecution crumbled weeks later, as the evidence to support the claims of a violent altercation fell apart.

And this week, newly released surveillance camera footage publicly undermined the agent’s accounts, casting fresh scrutiny on an agency that has gained a reputation for a toxic combination of excessive force and dishonesty.

It was the latest case to fall apart in a string of prosecutions against people accused of assaulting ICE officers. It was also the third time video evidence had undermined ICE’s attempt to describe an officer-involved shooting in Minneapolis as the result of self-defense. Federal immigration agents’ fatal shootings of Renee Nicole Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, both of which were captured on cell phone videos by bystanders, appear so egregiously excessive, they prompted the White House to reorganize its leadership in the face of the mass deportation campaign’s plummeting popularity.

Video appears to contradict ICE account of officer shooting a man in Minneapolis

“In the long arc of our immigration enforcement history, Minnesota will be the major inflection point,” Muzaffar Chishti, a senior fellow with the non-partisan Migration Policy Institute, told the Guardian. “Accountability, at least the beginning of accountability, started in Minnesota after the death of Pretti.”

Now, the reckoning over ICE’s shooting of Sosa Celis has marked a stark shift for ICE. Instead of applauding the officers as heroes in the face of clear evidence casting doubt on their statements, as Kristi Noem, the recently ousted homeland security secretary, used to do, Todd Lyons, the ICE director, has said the officers involved were put on administrative leave and may face dismissal or criminal prosecution themselves for making false statements.

“Lying under oath is a serious federal offense,” an ICE spokesperson said in an emailed statement to the Guardian. “The U.S. Attorney’s Office is actively investigating these false statements. Upon conclusion of the investigation, the officers may face termination of employment, as well as potential criminal prosecution.”

The shift has cast a spotlight on accountability at an agency that gained notoriety for its recklessness and impunity over a year-long campaign targeting Democratic-led cities including Minneapolis, Los Angeles and Chicago.

“I would characterize it as baby steps and symbolic oversight, at least so far,” said Gabe Sanchez, a researcher at the Brookings Institution. “But it would appear that there is some movement toward accountability. We’re moving in the right direction.”

The question now hanging over the agency is whether those changes will signal a real shift toward greater accountability and transparency, or simply a softer tone coupled with goodwill gestures.

A case that fell apart

That the prosecution made it as far as it did highlights how little pushback ICE officers received from other agencies that investigated – and later brought charges – over the incident.

An account offered by an unnamed ICE agent, and described in the FBI affidavit, said Aljorna slipped a few feet from the door to the apartment building, allowing the officer to grab him. Sosa Celis then repeatedly struck the ICE officer in the face with a broom. The officer said a third, unidentified man then attacked him with a shovel. The fight lasted for about three minutes, according to the officer. When the officer drew his service pistol, the men tossed their broom and shovel and ran to the apartment building. The officer fired a single round as they fled, hitting Sosa Celis in the thigh.

But in Sosa Celis’s account, also described in the affidavit, no one attacked the ICE officer with the shovel. Sosa Celis acknowledged holding it when Aljorna arrived, but said he didn’t use it to strike the officer. Aljorna briefly scuffled with an ICE officer, perhaps hitting him with a broom. Sosa Celis pulled his friend away. As they fled, the ICE officer shot Sosa Celis in the leg.

A protest demanding ICE out of Minnesota in February, after agents swarmed the city during Operation Metro Surge.
A protest demanding ICE out of Minnesota in February, after agents swarmed the city during Operation Metro Surge. Photograph: Jérôme Gilles/NurPhoto/Shutterstock

The newly released surveillance video that captured the scene supports key details of Sosa Celis’s story, showing that there was no three-minute tussle in which either man repeatedly battered an ICE officer with a shovel or broomsticks. The overall confrontation appears to last around 12 seconds.

Jacob Frey, the Minneapolis mayor, said after the footage’s release: “The video makes it crystal clear that, just like in other situations during Operation Metro Surge, the federal government’s account of what happened simply does not match the facts.”

Timothy Schanz, an FBI special agent who interviewed the ICE officers and the two immigrants, mentioned viewing the CCTV footage in the affidavit he submitted in support of the federal criminal complaint against Sosa Celis and Aljorna. The affidavit says nothing about the video evidence contradicting the deportation officer’s story. The US attorney’s office for the district of Minnesota had the footage in its possession, but appeared to file criminal charges against Sosa Celis and Aljorna before reviewing it.

After prosecutors saw the footage, they took the unusual step of moving to dismiss their own case with prejudice in February, closing it permanently.

Prosecutions against federal law enforcement officers are exceedingly rare. US law sharply limits people from suing federal law enforcement officers for civil damages when their rights are violated. ICE is currently facing a lawsuit from the state of Minnesota for refusing to share evidence in all three of the agency’s officer-involved shootings.

ICE has not made it clear whether the officers on administrative leave were suspended with or without pay. The agency did not respond to a question from the Guardian.

Calls for accountability

Democrats have waged a pitched battle for months to avoid funding homeland security until securing more ways to hold ICE officers accountable, including body cameras. But given how few checks homeland security agencies have on their power, the most potent way to bring accountability to ICE officers would be to remove their qualified immunity from prosecution for civil rights violations, said Mike Fox, a legal fellow at the Cato Institute.

Federal agents with the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency stand guard during the immigration crackdown in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Federal agents with the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency stand guard during the immigration crackdown in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Photograph: Dave Decker/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock

“ICE and Border Patrol should get zero dollars in perpetuity, unless and until there’s a way to hold agents accountable,” Fox said. “A statute that allows federal officials to be sued in their personal capacity and individually liable when they violate people’s rights, and absent that we don’t fund these agencies at all. That should be the choice.”

If the officers involved in the Sosa Celis shooting did, in fact, lie about why one of them opened fire, prosecutors should consider charges more serious than making false statements, Fox said. Violating someone’s civil rights under the color of law is a federal crime punishable by up to 10 years if the action results in bodily harm.

ICE’s statements have not discussed whether a civil rights investigation would be warranted in this case. And the Trump administration has gutted the justice department’s civil rights division, whose job it would be to prosecute a case like that.

“I can’t say they committed a crime, but I also can’t say they didn’t,” Fox said of the officers involved in the Sosa Celis shooting. “You know who should get to decide in this case? A jury.”

Video of an ICE shooting shattered the agency’s story. Will it usher in accountability? | ICE (US Immigration and Customs Enforcement) | The Guardian

Thursday, April 09, 2026

Trump administration looks to sanitize George Washington’s slavery history

 

Trump administration looks to sanitize George Washington’s slavery history

“New renderings reveal the historical whitewashing that Trump’s White House is trying to impose at the President’s House Site in Philadelphia.

The Trump administration’s fragile white ego is in focus yet again thanks to newly proposed changes for an exhibit in Philadelphia centered on George Washington and slavery.

The administration is being sued by the city over its efforts to whitewash Washington’s history of slave ownership from the President’s House Site, the nation’s first official presidential residence. The push has been put on hold by a judge who compared it to the censorship depicted in George Orwell’s book “1984.”

The attempted alteration of the exhibit came after a Trump executive orderdemanded a review of national parks and museums to bar any displays that “inappropriately disparage Americans past or living.” Last year, Trump also lobbed a puerile complaint that Smithsonian musuems focus too much on “how bad” slavery was.

And all that kvetching provides context for the changes that Trump’s administration is seeking to impose at the President’s House Site — alterations that The Philadelphia Inquirer said places the first president’s slave ownership “in a more sympathetic light.”

The Inquirer flagged government renderings showing plans for new historical panels to be installed at the site, and it seems clear that the administration’s goal is to make Washington out to be a loving patriot or conscientious objector to slavery, rather than a racist slave driver.

First, note what the Inquirer said has been removed:

The panels taken down by the Park Service in January included displays titled ‘The Dirty Business of Slavery’ and ‘Life Under Slavery,’ as well as illustrations about the Fugitive Slave Act and Ona Judge, who was enslaved by Washington and later escaped.

So the administration wants to omit detailed references to Washington’s slavery history — which Black activists fought for years to include — while also promoting a whitewashed narrative that he was a fundamentally moral man despite the whole “claiming dominion over other human beings” thing. Per the Inquirer:

For instance, on one panel titled ‘Presidents Washington and Adams on Slavery,’ the Trump administration writes that ‘Caught between his private doubts about slavery and his public responsibilities as president, George Washington navigated a nation deeply divided over slavery.

‘Privately, George Washington often expressed discomfort with the institution and a desire to see it abolished,’ the panel continued. ‘Yet as a Virginia plantation owner, his wealth and livelihood were deeply tied to it.’

And another example:

And later in the same panel: ‘Slaves living in the President’s House experienced a greater modicum of autonomy than elsewhere in the South such as to explore the city and sometimes even attend the theater, with Washington buying the tickets.’

When a censorship regime like Trump’s sees fit to tout a slave owner’s generosity — and the “greater modicum of autonomy” he purportedly granted to those he subjected to brutal bondage and forced labor — it leaves little doubt that the fundamental goal is to sanitize history, rather than teach it thoroughly.

A White House spokesperson told the Inquirer that the administration wants to acknowledge “the full breadth of our nation’s history” and that “no piece of history should be washed away.”

But “whitewashing” truly is the most apt descriptor for a plan that includes touting George Washington as some kind of selfless, principled gift-giver while brushing past, or deliberately omitting, details about his well-documented — and extremely lucrative — history of enslaving human beings.“

‘The nuclear button for the Vatican’: Pope Leo steps into the political fray

‘The nuclear button for the Vatican’: Pope Leo steps into the political fray

"This week, Trump’s threats to end “civilization” in Iran prompted a move Vatican historians call extraordinarily rare.

A photo collage of President Donald Trump and Pope Leo XIV.
Pope Leo’s call for people to contact their political representatives to advocate for peace is “extremely rare,” one Vatican observer told MS NOW. Carson Elm-Picard / MS NOW; Tiziana FABI / AFP via Getty Images; Andrew Harnik / Getty Images

Pope Leo XIV has never shied away from denouncing injustice. But for months, he avoided anything explicitly political. Then, this week, President Donald Trump threatened to destroy an entire “civilization,” and the first American-born pope crossed a line he had never crossed: urging citizens to call their elected leaders.

“I would like to invite everyone to think in their hearts of so many innocent children, so many totally innocent elderly people who would also be victims of this escalation,” the pope said. “I would like to invite everyone to pray, but also to seek ways to communicate — perhaps with congressmen, with authorities, saying that we don’t want war; we want peace.”

The remarks surprised Vatican observers, and marked a defining moment of Leo’s tenure, as his papacy nears the one-year mark.

Leo, who is widely viewed as more reserved and measured than his predecessor, has long spoken about migrants, poverty and war in moral terms. What’s different is his direct appeal to citizens to engage with their political representatives, a step that Vatican historians say is extraordinarily unusual for a sitting pontiff.

“It’s not normal at all,” said Massimo Faggioli, a Trinity College Dublin professor and author of several books on Catholicism. “This is the pope who is intervening in the democratic process, in the representation process of a modern political system: That is really extremely rare.”

“It’s the equivalent of the nuclear button for the Vatican,” Faggioli added. “They don’t do that — ever.”

The pope’s remarks came after Trump posted a stark warning to social media Tuesday. “A whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “I don’t want that to happen, but it probably will.” Uproar ensued in the international community, and White House officials did little to clarify whether the president’s warning suggested that he intended to deliberately kill innocent civilians in a military operation. Trump had previously threatened to destroy power plants and bridges.

Speaking with reporters that day, Leo condemned Trump’s statement without singling out the president by name. He characterized the threat as “truly unacceptable,” and called on “all people” to “reject war, especially a war which many people have said is an unjust war.” 

His words put him in direct tension with senior American officials who have framed the war in explicitly religious terms. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has repeatedly invoked God in connection with the U.S. military campaign, likening the rescue of a downed American pilot to the resurrection, and asking the American people to pray “every day, on bended knee” for a military victory in Iran “in the name of Jesus Christ.” On Wednesday, Hegseth said “tens of thousands of sorties, refuelings and strikes [have been] carried out under the protection of divine providence.”

In his Palm Sunday homily on March 29, Leo rejected such invocations. God “does not listen to the prayers of those who wage war, but rejects them,” Leo said, quoting from Isaiah 1:15: “Even though you make many prayers, I will not listen: your hands are full of blood.”

On Wednesday, the White House stood by Trump’s “civilization” threat without offering further clarification about whether he was threatening the lives of civilians.

“It was a very, very strong threat” that “led the Iranian regime to cave to their knees and ask for a ceasefire,” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said. “It was not an empty threat by any means. The Pentagon had a target list that they were ready to hit ‘go’ on at 8 p.m. last night.”

Asked for comment on the pope’s response to Trump’s remarks, White House spokesperson Anna Kelly told MS NOW that the president “will always stand with innocent civilians while annihilating the terrorists responsible for threatening our country and the entire world with a nuclear weapon. Greater destruction can be avoided if the regime understands the seriousness of this moment and makes a deal with the United States.”

Leo celebrated the announcement of a two-week ceasefire late Tuesday. The Vatican is also holding a vigil to pray for peace on Saturday, April 11, at St. Peter’s Basilica.

It is only within the past two weeks — amid the U.S.-Israel war with Iran — that Leo has mentioned Trump by name, according to Vanessa Corcoran, a church historian at Georgetown University. “I’m told that President Trump recently stated that he would like to end the war. Hopefully, he’s looking for an off-ramp,” Leo said last week.

Popes typically speak about global affairs in broad terms, avoiding direct criticism of specific heads of state. But Corcoran says Leo’s escalating intervention is consistent with the demands of his office.

“Advocating for peace and for the protection of the most vulnerable is inherent in the pope’s job description,” said Corcoran. “There are some that would say that he should focus on his pastoral role, but this is pastoral.”

The strain extends beyond the rhetorical. According to a report published Monday by The Free Press citing unnamed Vatican personnel, the Chicago-born pontiff is unlikely to visit the U.S. during Trump’s tenure, and tensions between the Holy See and the White House remain high. 

The office of Vice President JD Vance — the highest-ranking Catholic in the U.S. government, in a country where Catholics represent roughly 20% of adults — did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Leo’s remarks, but he has previously said that he tries “not to play the politicization of the pope game.”

On Tuesday, asked whether he believes God is on America’s side in the Iran war, Vance replied that his “attitude towards military conflict has always been to pray that we are on God’s side.”

This is not the first time Leo has criticized the Trump administration’s positions. Leo has said “deep reflection” is necessary in the U.S. for the treatment of migrants, and expressed opposition to Trump’s mass deportation campaign.

In January, the pope cited a historic 1965 visit by Pope Paul VI to the United Nations when he delivered an address calling for peace in the war zones of Ukraine and Gaza, where conflicts continue.

The sweep of his interventions suggests that a pope who came to office hoping to tend his flock quietly has found that the world will not allow it.

“The international situation has pushed him towards a second beginning of his pontificate, when the stakes are higher,” Faggioli said. “We have seen in the first few months, his attempt really to be more cautious compared to Pope Francis, to stay outside of the news cycle.”

“Now, we see a more outspoken pope because he has to,” he said."


‘The nuclear button for the Vatican’: Pope Leo steps into the political fray

Middle East crisis live: Netanyahu says ‘no ceasefire in Lebanon’ as Israel attacks ‘Hezbollah launch sites’

Middle East crisis live: Netanyahu says ‘no ceasefire in Lebanon’ as Israel attacks ‘Hezbollah launch sites’

Israeli prime minister’s remarks come shortly after Trump told US media he had asked Netanyahu to be more ‘low-key’; IDF says it is attacking Hezbollah targets

A bulldozer clears rubble from a building destroyed in Beirut, Lebanon, a day earlier.
A bulldozer clears rubble from a building destroyed in Beirut, Lebanon, a day earlier. Photograph: Chris McGrath/Getty Images

Netanyahu says 'no ceasefire in Lebanon'

“I wish to inform you: There is no ceasefire in Lebanon,” Prime MinisterBenjamin Netanyahu told Israelis in a short video address posted on X. He said Israel was “continuing to strike Hezbollah with full force, and we will not stop until we restore your security.”

His comments come shortly after President Trump said he had asked Netanyahu to be “more low-key” in Lebanon, as the US seeks to negotiate with Iran to bring the war to an end.

Netanyahu added that he had instructed his government to “open direct negotiations with Lebanon as soon as possible.” The talks will focus on the disarmament of Hezbollah and the establishment of peaceful relations between Israel and Lebanon, he added.

A former Iranian foreign minister, Kamal Kharazi, has died from wounds inflicted in US-Israeli strikes on 1 April, Iranian media are reporting.

Kharazi, 81, had been serving as the head of the Strategic Council for International Relations, which is part of the foreign ministry.

The veteran diplomat, “who was injured in a terrorist attack carried out by the American-Zionist enemy a few days ago, died a martyr tonight”, the Mehr and Isna agencies reported on Telegram.

Iranian foreign minister Kamal Kharazi addresses reporters at a 1999 press conference in Tehran.
Iranian foreign minister Kamal Kharazi addresses reporters at a 1999 press conference in Tehran. Photograph: Atta Kenare/EPA

His wife was killed in the strike on their home in Tehran, media reported.

Kharazi was Iran’s envoy at the United Nations in New York and then became foreign minister from 1997 to 2005, under reformist president Mohammad Khatami.

Trump says Iran 'better not be' charging tanker fees in strait of Hormuz

Donald Trump has warned Iran it “better not be” charging fees to tankers travelling through the strait of Hormuz, after hearing “reports” that Tehran was doing so.

“They better not be and, if they are, they better stop now!” Trump said in a post on his Truth Social platform.

Iran has said it has halted shipping traffic in the key waterway in retaliation for Israel’s strikes on Lebanon.

The day so far

  • Donald Trump said he is “very optimistic” a peace deal with Iran was within reach as a diplomatic delegation led by his vice-president JD Vance prepared to head to Pakistan for high-stakes talks aimed at ending the war this weekend. Iran’s leaders “talk much differently when you’re at a meeting than they do to the press. They’re much more reasonable,” the US president said, in line with his administration’s narrative that there’s a disconnect between what Tehran says publicly and privately. Trump went on: “They’re agreeing to all the things that they have to agree to. Remember, they’ve been conquered. They have no military. If they don’t make a deal, it’s going to be very painful.”

  • Trump also confirmed that he had asked Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday to be “more low-key” in Lebanon to help ensure the success of the upcoming US-Iran negotiations in Islamabad. “I spoke with Bibi and he’s going to low-key it. I just think we have to be sort of a little more low-key,” Trump told NBC News, adding that he believed Israel was “scaling back” its operations in Lebanon (there’s been no evidence of that yet – see the next few points).

  • Netanyahu said he had instructed his cabinet to begin direct negotiations with Lebanon aimed at disarming Hezbollah – all the while insisting that “there is no ceasefire” in Lebanon and that Israel will “continue to strike Hezbollah with force”.

  • Israel has since launched a fresh wave of strikes against what it called “Hezbollah launch sites” in Lebanon, after the IDF earlier ordered people to flee Beirut’s densely populated southern suburbs. Later in the day, Hezbollah said it had fired a rocket salvo towards northern Israeli settlements.

  • While Israel continues to insist that the war will go on and “talks will be held under fire”, Lebanon is demanding a ceasefire before direct negotiations can begin. Joseph Aoun, the Lebanese president, said this was “the only solution”. Lebanon is also insisting that it needs the US as a mediator and guarantor of any agreement. Those talks will reportedly take place next week, hosted by the US state department in Washington.

  • Iran’s ⁠president ⁠Masoud Pezeshkian said ⁠Israeli strikes on ⁠Lebanon violate the ceasefire agreement and would render ‌negotiations meaningless, adding that Iran would not abandon the Lebanese people.

  • The speaker of the Iranian parliament, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, said Lebanon forms “an inseparable part of the ceasefire” deal. In a post on X, he said “there is no room for denial and backtracking”.

  • Pakistani prime minister Shehbaz Sharif condemned Israel’s “ongoing aggression against Lebanon” on Thursday, ahead of the expected US-Iran talks in Islamabad. “The prime minister said that Pakistan was engaged in sincere efforts for regional peace and it was in this spirit that the peace talks between Iran and the US were being convened,” Sharif’s office said in a statement.

  • Keir Starmer also said that Israel’s continued attacks on Lebanon “shouldn’t be happening”. The British prime minister also dismissed an argument put forward by US vice-president JD Vance on Wednesday that there had been “a legitimate misunderstanding”, saying the issue “isn’t a technical one of whether it’s a breach of the agreement or not”. It is “a matter of principles as far as I’m concerned”, Starmer said.

  • A statement attributed to Mojtaba Khamenei, Iran’s supreme leader, said Iran will take management of the strait of Hormuz into a new phase, but did not elaborate on what that would be. In the statement, read out on state tv, he also said Iran remains determined to “take revenge” for his father, who was assassinated on the first day of the war, and all those killed in the war. “We will certainly demand compensation for each and every damage inflicted, and the blood price of the martyrs and the compensation for the wounded of this war,” he said.

  • Iran’s foreign minister Abbas Araghchi suggested that Netanyahu is resisting a ceasefire because of his corruption trial, and urged Trump not to “crater” the US economy by allowing the Israeli prime minister to jeopardise ongoing diplomatic efforts to stop the war. Araghchi said on X: “Netanyahu’s criminal trial resumes on Sun. A region-wide ceasefire, incl in Lebanon, would hasten his jailing.”

  • Lebanon held a day of mourning after a punishing wave of Israeli attacks killed more than 300 people and injured more than 1,000 in a single day on Wednesday, prompting worldwide condemnation.

Keir Starmer and Donald Trump have said they’re at the “next stage of finding a resolution” for reopening the strait of Hormuz, Downing Street has said.

In a statement, No 10 said that the British prime minister discussed with Trump the UK’s “efforts to convene partners to agree a viable plan” to reopen the critical shipping lane.

“They agreed that now there is a ceasefire in place and agreement to open the Strait, we are at the next stage of finding a resolution,” the statement said.

“The leaders discussed the need for a practical plan to get shipping moving again as quickly as possible,” it went on, adding Trump and Starmer would speak again soon.

Iran’s foreign minister says Netanyahu delaying ceasefire to avoid corruption trial

Iran’s foreign minister Abbas Araghchi has suggested that Benjamin Netanyahuis resisting a ceasefire because of his corruption trial, and urged Donald Trump not to “crater” the US economy by allowing the Israeli prime minister to jeopardise ongoing diplomatic efforts to stop the war.

Araghchi said on X:

Netanyahu’s criminal trial resumes on Sun. A region-wide ceasefire, incl in Lebanon, would hasten his jailing.

If the US wishes to crater its economy by letting Netanyahu kill diplomacy, that would ultimately be its choice. We think that would be dumb but are prepared for it.

Netanyahu’s long-running trial will resume on Sunday, an Israeli courts’ spokesperson said on Thursday.

The first sitting Israeli prime minister to be charged with a crime, Netanyahu denies charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust brought in 2019 after years of investigations. His trial, which began in 2020 and could lead to prison terms, has been repeatedly ​delayed due to his ​official commitments, with ⁠no end date in sight.

Benjamin Netanyahu stands at a podium flanked by two Israeli flags, at a press conference in Jerusalem
Benjamin Netanyahu gives a press conference in Jerusalem on 19 March. Photograph: Ronen Zvulun/AFP/Getty Images

US state department to host Israel-Lebanon talks in Washington next week

Talks between Lebanon and Israel will take place next week in Washington DC, a US State Department official has confirmed to AFP.

We can confirm that the Department will host a meeting next week to discuss ongoing ceasefire negotiations with Israel and Lebanon.

We earlier brought you that report from Axios.

Earlier today, the Guardian’s Peter Beaumont wrote this analysis about Israel’s continued attacks on Lebanon – asking: What was the point of surprise mass strikes that killed more than 300 people and drew widespread international condemnation?

Here’s more from Peter’s piece:

Prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other officials have claimed the largest strike against Hezbollah during the month-long war against Iran was carefully aimed at members of the armed group.

Others have speculated that the attack – without warning and initially hitting more than 100 targets in 10 minutes including in densely populated residential areas in central Beirut – was aimed at undermining the US-Iran ceasefire that many see as being imposed on an unhappy Netanyahu.

The version being briefed in the Israeli media is that Hezbollah had sought to move command posts to civilian areas outside its historical centres, such as the sprawling Dahieh suburb, to better conceal and protect them – a claim Israel has previously made about Hamas in Gaza.

Netanyahu says 'no ceasefire in Lebanon'

“I wish to inform you: There is no ceasefire in Lebanon,” Prime MinisterBenjamin Netanyahu told Israelis in a short video address posted on X. He said Israel was “continuing to strike Hezbollah with full force, and we will not stop until we restore your security.”

His comments come shortly after President Trump said he had asked Netanyahu to be “more low-key” in Lebanon, as the US seeks to negotiate with Iran to bring the war to an end.

Netanyahu added that he had instructed his government to “open direct negotiations with Lebanon as soon as possible.” The talks will focus on the disarmament of Hezbollah and the establishment of peaceful relations between Israel and Lebanon, he added.

Israel says it is attacking 'Hezbollah launch sites' in Lebanon

A few moments ago, the IDF said in a brief post on Telegram that it had started begun striking “Hezbollah launch sites in Lebanon”.

The Israeli army earlier ordered people to flee from Beirut’s southern suburbs as it warned of further strikes.

This is all as Lebanon says that a ceasefire must be in place before it can enter into negotiations with Israel, whereas Tel Aviv insists “talks will be held under fire”.

It is also despite Donald Trump telling Benjamin Netanyahu to scale back his attacks on Lebanon, ahead of high stakes talks with Iran this weekend.

I’ll bring you more on this as we get it.

Supreme leader says Iran will take management of strait of Hormuz 'into new phase'

A statement attributed to Mojtaba Khamenei, Iran’s supreme leader, who has still not been seen or heard from in public, has just been read out across state media – his first since the fragile ceasefire was announced.

He said Iran remains determined to “take revenge” for his father, who was assassinated on the first day of the war, and all those killed in the war:

We will certainly demand compensation for each and every damage inflicted, and the blood price of the martyrs and the compensation for the wounded of this war.

He was also quoting as saying that Iran will take management of the strait of Hormuz into a new phase, but did not elaborate on what that would be.

Khamenei also called on pro-regime protesters to take to the streets because “your voices raised in public squares have an impact on the outcome of the negotiations”.

He added:

Iran is not seeking war but will not forfeit its rights and considers all resistance fronts as a unified entity.

Trump confirms he asked Netanyahu to be 'more low-key' on Lebanon

In that interview with NBC News, Donald Trump also confirmed that he asked Benjamin Netanyahu to be “more low-key” in Lebanon as the US seeks to negotiate with Iran to bring the war to an end.

I spoke with Bibi and he’s going to low-key it. I just think we have to be sort of a little more low-key,” Trump said, adding that he believed Israel was “scaling back” its operations in Lebanon (again, there’s been no evidence of that yet).

Earlier, I brought you CNN’s report that the US president had made the request to the Israeli prime minister. NBC News heard the same, reporting that Trump asked Netanyahu to pull back on the strikes to help ensure the success of the upcoming negotiations in Islamabad.

Israel’s attacks on Lebanon should not be happening, says Starmer

Peter Walker and Jamie Grierson

Israel’s continued attacks on Lebanon “shouldn’t be happening”, Keir Starmerhas said on his visit to the region, echoing criticisms by Yvette Cooper, his foreign secretary; and John Healey, his defence secretary, and emphasising a potentially widening gap between the UK and Donald Trump’s US over the war on Iran and its aftermath.

As well as the condemnation over Lebanon, Starmer and his ministers have been adamant that the strait of Hormuz must be free of any sort of tolls or levies, after Trump mooted the idea of a “joint venture” between the US and Iran to do this.

Speaking in Bahrain on a trip in which he has also held talks in Saudi Arabia and the UAE on shoring up the tentative ceasefire between Iran, the US and Israel, and fully reopening the strait of Hormuz to commercial shipping, Starmer criticised Israel’s intensified bombing in Lebanon, which killed more than 300 people on Wednesday.

He told ITV:

That shouldn’t be happening. That should stop. That’s my strong view.

As we’ve been reporting, while Israel has announced it will begin talks with Lebanon, both Israel and the US have denied that ending attacks on Lebanon was part of the ceasefire. JD Vance, Trump’s vice-president, argued that there had been “a legitimate misunderstanding”.

Starmer dismissed this argument, saying the issue “isn’t a technical one of whether it’s a breach of the agreement or not”, calling it “a matter of principles as far as I’m concerned”.

UK ministers have refused to directly condemn Trump, even after the US president shocked the world by saying Iran’s “whole civilisation will die” if Tehran did not meet US demands before the ceasefire.

In the ITV interview, Starmer was obliquely critical of the language, saying:

They are not words I would use, ever use, because I come at this with our British values and principles.

Read the full report here:

Trump ‘optimistic’ about Iran peace deal even as ceasefire appears strained

Donald Trump has told NBC News that he is “very optimistic” a peace deal with Iran was within reach as a diplomatic delegation led by his vice-president JD Vance prepared to head to Pakistan for high-stakes talks aimed at ending the war this weekend.

Iran’s leaders “talk much differently when you’re at a meeting than they do to the press. They’re much more reasonable,” the US president said, in line with his administration’s narrative that there’s a disconnect between what Tehran says publicly and privately.

Trump went on:

They’re agreeing to all the things that they have to agree to. Remember, they’ve been conquered. They have no military.

If they don’t make a deal, it’s going to be very painful.

In line with what Reuters and others are hearing, a Lebanese official has told Al Jazeera that talks with Israel would take place under US oversight.

They said Lebanon is seeking a ceasefire before agreeing to enter direct negotiations, and that those negotiations would be led by former Lebanese ambassador Simon Karam.

13.31 EDTLebanese president says 'only solution' is ceasefire before talks with Israel

As we’ve been reporting, Lebanon wants a ceasefire from Israel before direct negotiations can begin, while Israel says the “talks will be held under fire”.

Earlier, Lebanese president Joseph Aoun said that a ceasefire first was the “only solution”.

In a statement posted on X, he said:

The only solution to the situation Lebanon is experiencing is to achieve a ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon, followed by direct negotiations between them.

He added that Lebanon’s security forces have been “carrying out their work fully to enforce security and stability”, despite the “difficult circumstances they are facing”.


Middle East crisis live: Netanyahu says ‘no ceasefire in Lebanon’ as Israel attacks ‘Hezbollah launch sites’