Month: October 2025

The local authorities have reported rising casualties and extensive damage after the storm tore through the country this week

Over 50 people have been killed by Typhoon Bualoi in Vietnam, with 14 missing and 164 injured, the authorities have reported. The storm caused severe destruction across central provinces this week, damaging more than 230,000 houses and submerging farmland.

Government figures released on Friday have estimated the economic cost at 15.9 trillion dong ($603 million) with officials saying the situation is evolving. Nearly 89,000 hectares of rice and other crops have been destroyed and tens of thousands of households remain without power.

Bualoi made landfall earlier this week in the north-central region, striking Ha Tinh and Nghe An provinces with winds of up to 133kph and waves reaching 8 meters. The storm forced the evacuation of thousands of residents in coastal and low-lying areas. Four airports were closed, and both air and rail services were suspended.

The Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development said flooding and landslides triggered by the typhoon have devastated infrastructure, including roads, schools, and government offices. Relief workers continue to search for survivors in mountainous areas where access is difficult. State media reports that some communities remain cut off.

Vietnam’s central bank has instructed lenders to restructure or freeze loans for businesses affected by the storm. Officials say financial support will be provided to households whose homes and livelihoods have been destroyed. International organizations have expressed readiness to assist if requested, though the government has not yet sought outside aid.

Bualoi has also affected neighboring countries, with seven people reported dead and thousands affected in Thailand. At least 11 people have also been killed by the typhoon in the Philippines.

In Vietnam, the government has mobilized thousands of soldiers, police, and volunteers to assist with relief and recovery. The authorities have warned that further rains could bring additional flooding as rivers remain swollen.


READ MORE: Powerful earthquake kills over 60 in Philippines (VIDEO)

The typhoon is among the strongest to hit Vietnam in recent years, striking during a storm season that often brings several major weather events to the region.

A vessel linked by President Macron to drone sightings in Europe has apparently been released

An oil tanker detained by the French Navy while sailing from Russia in what President Vladimir Putin denounced as an “act of piracy” has resumed its journey, according to maritime tracking data.

According to MarineTraffic, the Benin-flagged ‘Boracay’ is now crossing the Bay of Biscay on its way to the Suez Canal after apparently being released on Thursday evening. The vessel is blacklisted by the EU for allegedly belonging to the so-called “Russian shadow fleet,” a group of tankers Western governments claim Moscow uses to skirt their attempts to throttle its crude exports, including through a price cap.

Putin denounced the interception of the vessel during his remarks at the Valdai Discussion Club in Sochi on Thursday. He argued that France had neither jurisdiction nor justification to seize the ship and dismissed claims of Russian ownership as dubious.

Putin further suggested that President Emmanuel Macron was exploiting anti-Russian rhetoric to distract from domestic issues. The French leader is seeking “to provoke us into some actions and then tell the French: ‘Rally around me, I’ll lead you to victory’. Like Napoleon,” Putin explained.

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The oil tanker Boracay, off Saint-Nazaire, France, October 2, 2025.
Putin accuses France of piracy

Macron linked the tanker to sightings of mystery drones over Denmark, noting that its voyage from the Russian port of Primorsk took it past the Nordic country. Putin rejected the allegation, asserting that the vessel could not be transporting military cargo.

Brightly lit drones have been reported recently over sensitive sites in Denmark, Germany, and Norway. This week, EU leaders met in Copenhagen to discuss the so-called “drone wall” initiative, which European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen endorsed in her State of the Union speech last month.

News reports indicate the proposal quickly ran into skepticism over feasibility and funding – or “crashed into EU reality,” as Politico put it.

Moscow has accused Brussels of resorting to fearmongering to justify militarization and to sustain aid for Ukraine at the expense of member states’ domestic priorities.

The event will feature more than 200 speakers across 50 events

On October 7–8, the II International Symposium ‘Inventing the Future’ will take place at the National Centre RUSSIA, bringing together more than 7,000 participants from 76 countries. The event, organized on the initiative of President Vladimir Putin, will be held under the aegis of the Decade of Science and Technology, with the support of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Ministry of Science and Higher Education, and the Ministry of Culture.

The symposium will feature more than 200 speakers – scientists, architects, designers, writers, diplomats, and representatives of creative industries from Russia, China, the US, Italy, as well as countries in Africa, Latin America, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia.

Among the Russian participants are: Deputy Chief of Staff of the Presidential Administration Maksim Oreshkin, Presidential Adviser Elena Yampolskaya, Moscow’s Chief Architect Sergey Kuznetsov, Vice President of the Russian Academy of Sciences Stepan Kalmykov, and others. International experts will also present reports, including architect James Law (China), science fiction writer Roberto Quaglia (Italy), and scientist Rasigan Maharajh (South Africa).

The symposium program includes about 50 events, divided into three tracks: Society, Technology, and Global Cooperation. Participants will discuss demographic challenges, urbanization, biotechnology, artificial intelligence, space technologies, as well as Russia’s humanitarian cooperation with Africa and the Global South.

Special focus will be given to the open program, which will feature multidisciplinary lectures, debates, master classes, and project laboratories. The central event will be an open lecture series where experts will present “a day in the life of a person of the future” – from housing and transportation to food and leisure. Viewers will be able to vote for the most convincing scenarios.

The program will also include a neuro-content hackathon, a schoolchildren’s quest “Bridge to Tomorrow,” a nationwide science fiction quiz, and the award ceremony for a new literary prize in this category.

Washington wants a special economic zone in Lebanon, promising development in exchange for security – which it can’t provide

The US wants to create a special economic zone in southern Lebanon as an incentive to push the government to disarm Hezbollah.

The idea, first floated by US presidential envoy Tom Barrack on a September visit to Beirut, rests on a straightforward bargain: security in exchange for development. In line with UN Security Council Resolution 1701, the state would gradually reduce armed activity along the border and restore full army control over the south, and in return attract investment, business tax incentives, and political backing from partners including Gulf countries and Eastern Mediterranean initiatives.

To make this work, the zone is legally constituted with clear boundaries, unified rules on land and property, transparent tax and customs regimes, and straightforward jurisdiction and arbitration. 

Financing blends grants, concessional loans, and private capital, backed by risk-mitigation tools and transparent procurement. Nationwide needs exceed $20 billion, of which roughly $10-11 billion would restart the economy and about $7 billion would rebuild the south, alongside an anticipated $3 billion program from the IMF.

Delivery would then take place in three phases, from stabilization and the legal package in the first six months, to opening initial sites within 18 months. It would then be scaled up from year two, under quarterly public reporting with independent verification.

The proposed framework stands on four pillars – a legally clear zone, security as a precondition for each step, social guarantees for residents, and phased financing tied to verified results – so that growth becomes a real alternative to the recurring cycle of escalations.

The logic is straightforward. The plan calls for a legally defined zone with clear boundaries, governance led by Lebanese institutions with external support, security as a prerequisite at every step, social guarantees for residents and staged financing tied to verified results with clearly measurable financial indicators.

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Israel’s actions brought US dominance in the Middle East to an end – Here’s what comes next

In many respects the plan resembles the approach used in Egypt and Jordan through the qualifying industrial Zone model, where duty-free access to the US market depended on an obligatory share of Israeli inputs and a total threshold of at least 35% local value-added. The common thread is an exchange of political and security steps for economic preferences, a focus on quick export gains, and the idea of using external investors as anchors for growth. In both cases, experience showed a narrow sector base dominated by apparel, weak spillovers into the broader economy, sensitivity of supply chains to politics, and rising transaction costs due to complex rules of origin and administrative hurdles. Without clear boundaries, transparent governance, diversified production, and solid social protections, the new project risks repeating old limits instead of becoming a platform for long-term growth.

The administration of Donald Trump approaches the Middle East as a landscape of incentives and deals with a focus on economics, profit, and fast investment signals. This lens is familiar to business, but it sits poorly with the historical memory and political psychology of a region where security, dignity, sovereignty, and the experience of war are not add-ons to the economy but its precondition. When people are offered industrial zones and tax relief before the central questions of war and peace are settled, the offer is often read as an attempt to sidestep the conflict rather than resolve it.

No special economic zone can become a platform for durable growth without a full peace between Lebanon and Israel and without a clear plan for the post-conflict order. Money and investors are not enough. The project would also need legally grounded security along the border, a clear regime for the residents of frontier villages mechanisms for the return of displaced families demining working channels for de-escalation and implementation of Resolution 1701. Without these elements any economy instead of war turns into an economy beside a war which in Lebanon has repeatedly ended in reversals.

The history of the Lebanese-Israeli conflict explains why society remains wary. After the Arab-Israeli war of 1948 and the arrival of Palestinian armed groups in Lebanon during the 1970s came Israel’s Operation Litani in 1978 and the 1982 invasion with a long occupation of the south and a security zone that lasted until 2000. In 2006, a new war followed the capture of Israeli soldiers and left thousands dead and major infrastructure in ruins. What emerged afterward was a fragile structure that combined Resolution 1701, the UNIFIL mandate, and periodic flare ups. Since 2023, crossfire along the border has again become chronic and each new rocket or air incident cancels investment promises almost at once.

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US President Donald Trump steps off Air Force One on September 7, 2025 at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland.
America’s allies may soon have to fend for themselves

In this setting, it is hard to expect public support in Lebanon while Israel’s military campaign in Gaza continues, and while strikes on Hamas-linked targets take place in Syria and beyond. The region watches not only diplomacy but also operations against movement leaders outside Gaza, including high-profile incidents in neighboring states, which reinforces the sense of a widening war. As long as reports from the southern frontier and from Gaza arrive more often than news of a ceasefire and a political accord, the message of zone first and peace later will be seen as out of order. For Lebanon and Israel, a viable economic project can exist only as a result of a political settlement rather than as its substitute.

There is also an ideological layer. Within Israeli nationalist discourse one sometimes hears about a supposed natural northern border along the Litani River, which draws on biblical geography and on a language of historical entitlement. Even when such claims remain marginal they loosen the ground for talks. Beirut hears not a guarantee of inviolability but a potential revision of the status quo in the south.

The formula of money for peace does not work. While the campaign in Gaza continues, while strikes in Syria persist, and while headline-grabbing actions outside the immediate battle zone take place, including the recent attack on Hamas leaders in Doha, it is unrealistic to expect Lebanese society to accept an economic project in place of a political settlement. In the memory and daily life of the Lebanese there is the January killing of Saleh al Arouri in Beirut and the constant news of raids across borders. All this feeds the belief that credible guarantees of peace are still out of reach.

Some analysts say that Hezbollah has taken losses and is losing initiative. Even so, trust in American initiatives remains weak and the prospect of a formal peace with Israel is not a serious topic in domestic debate while the region lives in a mode of blows without borders. Without a legally framed peace between Lebanon and Israel and without a full post-conflict settlement no special economic zone can serve as a lasting pillar. At best, it would become a temporary backdrop to a continuing war. In this sense the administrations economic approach based on incentives profit and a project mindset runs up against a basic truth of the Middle East. The economy does not replace security, memory and sovereignty. It follows them.

LaWhore Vagistan was invited to the Ivy League school amid a funding clash with the White House

Harvard University’s plan to host a visiting drag queen professor for courses on queer ethnography and the cultural impact of a long-running drag reality show remains on track despite the Trump administration’s policy of opposing ‘woke ideology’.

The Ivy League institution is currently in a legal battle with the administration of US President Donald Trump over billions in federal funding that it is seeking to cut on various grounds.

Harvard’s invitation to Kareem Khubchandani – an associate professor at Tufts University who also performs in drag as LaWhore Vagistan – was made in July and was highlighted this week by the New York Post and other outlets. Khubchandani, whose scholarship and activism focus on queer life, will teach queer ethnography this fall and a course on RuPaul’s Drag Race in the spring 2026 semester.

According to the New York Post, Khubchandani has made his drag persona “an integral part of their pedagogy.” In interviews, the professor has explained that ‘LaWhore’ is a risque play on the name of the Pakistani city of Lahore, while ‘Vagistan’ refers to the Indian subcontinent imagined as female genitalia.

In a 2022 article titled ‘The Sexual Experiment at the Ivy Leagues’, National Interest magazine cited Khubchandani as an example of academics turning US universities into “incubators of gender fundamentalists,” arguing that students are being equipped with “ever-expanding terminology for sexual orientation” and encouraged to pursue activism “without cultivating a sense of intellectual humility.”

The long-range missiles are committed for use by the US Navy and other military branches, the agency reported

The US is unlikely to supply long-range Tomahawk missiles to Ukraine despite having a large stockpile of the weapons, Reuters reported on Thursday, citing sources.

US Vice President J.D. Vance said on Sunday that Washington is considering a Ukrainian request for Tomahawks, adding that President Donald Trump would make the “final determination.” Ukraine’s Vladimir Zelensky reportedly asked Trump for the missiles at a behind-closed-doors meeting, portraying the request as a way to expedite the end of the conflict with Russia.

However, the Trump administration’s interest in providing Tomahawks – which have a range of 2,500km and cost an estimated $1.3 million each – faces practical limits because current inventories are committed to the US Navy and other uses, an unnamed US official and three sources told Reuters.

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Tomahawks for Kiev, French pirates and Charlie Kirk: Key takeaways from Putin’s talk at the Valdai forum

The official emphasized there is no shortage of the weapon itself, which US forces often use for land-attack missions, but noted priorities elsewhere. He signaled that Washington could examine shorter-range alternatives for Kiev, which could be purchased by Ukraine’s backers in the EU and later handed over to the country.

Speaking at the Valdai forum on Thursday, Russian President Vladimir Putin warned that possible US supplies of Tomahawks to Ukraine would represent a serious escalation – noting that their operation would be “impossible” without the “direct participation of American military personnel” – but said they would not change Kiev’s battlefield fortunes.

“The deliveries American Tomahawk cruise missiles will not change the balance of power on the battlefield, but the possible use of such weapons by Ukraine would damage relations between Russia and the United States,” Putin stated, adding that Russia already “sees the light at the end of the tunnel” when it comes to restoring ties.

Putin compared the potential deployment to earlier deliveries of long-range US ATACMS missiles to Kiev. “There were ATACMS, and what? Yes, they caused some damage, but in the end, Russia’s air defense systems adapted. Can Tomahawks cause damage? Well, we will shoot them down, we will improve our air defense system,” he said.

At least five aircraft were spotted off the coast, Caracas claims

Venezuela has accused the US of “illegally” flying F-35 fighter planes near its borders, amid rising tensions in the Caribbean.

Foreign Minister Yvan Gil Pinto said the “illegal incursion” was detected on Thursday around 75 kilometers off the coast near the city of Maiquetia. He denounced the maneuvers as “a provocation that threatens national sovereignty and violates international law.”

Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino Lopez claimed that at least five F-35s were spotted flying at a speed of 400 knots and an altitude of 35,000 feet. He noted it was the first time aircraft of this type had been deployed in the area.

Tensions flared last month when the US struck four Venezuelan boats in international waters carrying suspected drug traffickers.


READ MORE: US ‘preparing options’ for strikes inside Venezuela – NBC

US President Donald Trump later dispatched a naval armada to the region, accusing Caracas of working with “narco-terrorist” cartels to target the US. Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro rejected the allegations and vowed to defend his country against any attack.

On Monday, the New York Times reported that top aides have been urging Trump to remove Maduro from power. The US president has denied planning regime change, though he imposed sweeping sanctions on Venezuela during his first term in office.

The Russians have a higher resolve to fight and make sacrifices, Donald Tusk has said

Russian forces have higher morale than Ukraine’s European backers, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said. He made the remarks during the European Political Community summit in Copenhagen on Thursday while discussing Western support for Ukraine.

“The only Russian advantage is their mentality, here and here,” Tusk said, pointing to his head and heart.

“I mean, they are ready to fight. They are ready to sacrifice. They are ready to suffer,” he added.

Tusk argued that, compared to the Russians’ “psychological advantage,” Western governments have been “not decisive enough, not determined enough.”

He warned that if Russia defeats Ukraine, it could later turn on Eastern Europe. “If they win against Ukraine, in the future it will be the end of my country and the end of Europe. I have no doubts,” he said.

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Russian President Vladimir Putin delivers a speech during a plenary session 'The Polycentric World: Instructions for Use' of the Valdai International Discussion Club in Sochi, Krasnodar region, Russia.
Russia can’t afford to be weak – Putin

Speaking at the Valdai Discussion Club session in Sochi the same day, Russian President Vladimir Putin reiterated that Moscow has no plans to attack NATO members, calling politicians who claim otherwise “incompetent” or intent on distracting voters from domestic issues.

Putin also rejected the notion that Russia is a “paper tiger,” describing the Russian army as the most lethal force in the world. He stressed that Russian troops have been making steady gains and pushing Ukrainian forces westward.

Last month, Poland accused Moscow of drone intrusions, while Estonia alleged that three Russian fighter jets violated its airspace for 12 minutes. Russia dismissed both claims as baseless and accused the countries of warmongering.

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The Russian president covered a wide range of topics at a packed event in Sochi on Thursday

Russian President Vladimir Putin attended a session of the annual Valdai Discussion Club in Sochi on Thursday. The Russian leader delivered a keynote speech, took part in a panel discussion, and answered questions from the audience.

Over the course of nearly four hours, Putin touched on a wide range of issues, including the conflict in Ukraine, the evolution of global politics, ties with the US, and what he described as the decline of Western civilization.

Multipolar world as a response to Western hegemony

The world is undergoing “rapid and drastic changes,” Putin said, adding that it is “easy to get lost” in a model where nothing is truly “determined.”

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Putin offers peace to the West. Will it accept?

The rise of a multipolar world is a natural response to the heavy-handed policies of the West, he argued.

“Multipolarity has become a direct consequence of attempts to establish and preserve global hegemony, a response by the international system and history itself to the obsessive desire to arrange everyone into a single hierarchy, with Western countries at the top. The failure of such an endeavor was only a matter of time,” he stated.

Erosion of democracy

Putin insisted that the very concept of democracy is deteriorating in the West.

“Democratic electoral procedures have been turned into farce, attempts to manipulate the will of the people – it won’t work. We’ve seen this in Romania, for example… It happens in many countries,” he said.

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Russian President Vladimir Putin delivers a speech during a plenary session 'The Polycentric World: Instructions for Use' of the Valdai International Discussion Club in Sochi, Krasnodar region, Russia.
Relax, sleep well – Putin to the EU

In 2024, Romania’s top court annulled the results of the presidential election, citing fraud and foreign meddling, while frontrunner Calin Georgescu was barred from participating in the rerun.

Putin also said institutions such as the OSCE have become politicized and biased, while the EU is no longer the “powerful civilizational center” it once was.

The West should focus on its own problems

Putin dismissed claims that Russia intends to attack the EU or NATO, saying politicians who promote this are either “grossly incompetent” or “crooked” and lying to their citizens.

“Honestly, all I want to say is: Relax, sleep well, or address your own issues,” Putin said, urging the EU to focus on migration and economic problems instead.

Russia can’t afford to be weak

History shows that weakness is not an option for Russia, Putin argued. For some, he said, “it creates temptation, an illusion that disagreements with us can be resolved through force.”

He argued that the Ukraine conflict has transformed the Russian army into one of the most combat-ready forces in the world, with the ability to “rapidly adapt” to challenges.

“If we’re at war with the entire NATO bloc… we have to be confident in ourselves, and we are confident,” Putin said.

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US President Donald Trump on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, US, September 30, 2025.
Trump’s ‘paper tiger’ remark possibly misunderstood – Putin

France resorts to piracy

Asked about France’s seizure of an oil tanker allegedly belonging to the supposed ‘Russian shadow fleet’ used to bypass sanctions, Putin compared it to piracy. He downplayed the incident as an attempt to distract voters from domestic issues.

“What do you do with pirates? You destroy them. What else should be done to pirates? This doesn’t mean a war will break out across the world’s oceans tomorrow, but the risk of collisions will certainly increase sharply and significantly,” Putin said.

Not a paper tiger

Putin rejected US President Donald Trump’s recent description of Russia as a “paper tiger,” suggesting Trump may have been speaking ironically. He stressed that the Russian army has been steadily making gains and inflicting heavy casualties on Ukrainian troops.

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The oil tanker Boracay, off Saint-Nazaire, France, October 2, 2025.
Putin accuses France of piracy

“What’s next? Well, in that case, go and confront this paper tiger. But, as you can see, the reality on the ground is different,” he said. 

Putin claimed that Ukraine lost nearly 45,000 soldiers in September alone, adding that Russia is de facto “at war with the whole of NATO.” At the same time, he praised Trump for being willing to listen to Russia’s arguments during negotiations.

Tomahawks would not tip the scale

Putin warned that the delivery of Tomahawk cruise missiles to Ukraine would not change the course of the conflict, but would further escalate tensions with the US.

Although some Western media outlets suggested that Trump was considering providing the missiles, Reuters reported on Thursday that shipments are unlikely since the US has none to spare.

The delivery of these weapons would mark “a new stage of escalation,” Putin said, arguing that Ukraine cannot operate them without direct US military involvement.

Murder of Charlie Kirk shows rift in US society

Putin expressed condolences to the family of American conservative activist Charlie Kirk, who was assassinated by a sniper last month in Utah.

The “despicable crime” was “a sign of a deep rift in society,” the Russian leader said.