The U.S. president’s claims, which were made with few details, come as he’s told protesting Iranians in recent days that “help is on the way” and that his administration would “act accordingly” to respond to the Iranian government.

But Trump has not offered any details about how the U.S. might respond and it wasn’t clear if his comments Wednesday indicated he would hold off on action.

The Islamic Republic shut its airspace to commercial flights early Thursday morning for about two hours, without explanation, a notice to pilots read.

Earlier Wednesday, Gholamhossein Mohseni-Ejei, Iran’s judiciary chief, said the government must act quickly to punish more than 18,000 people who have been detained through rapid trials and executions.

The security force crackdown on the demonstrations has killed at least 2,586, the U.S.-based Human Rights Activists News Agency reported. The death toll exceeds that of any other round of protest or unrest in Iran in decades and recalls the chaos surrounding the country’s 1979 Islamic Revolution.

Here is the latest:
U.S. Embassy in Qatar urges `increased caution’

The U.S. Embassy in Qatar issued a notice early Thursday, saying it had “advised its personnel to exercise increased caution and limit nonessential travel” to Al Udeid Air Base.

“We recommend U.S. citizens in Qatar do the same,” it added.

Some personnel at a key U.S. military base in Qatar were advised to evacuate by Wednesday evening, according to a U.S. official and the Gulf country.
Execution of protester delayed, family says

A 26-year-old protester who was detained last week by Iranian authorities has had his execution postponed but has not been released, according to one of his relatives.

Activists said that Erfan Soltani, a clothing shop employee, was among the thousands of Iranians who were rounded up in the last week after nationwide protests sparked by economic distress turned into days of deadly anti-government unrest.

Somayeh, a 45-year-old close relative of Soltani who is living abroad and asked to be identified by first name only for fear of government reprisal, told The Associated Press on Wednesday that his family had been told his execution would be set for Wednesday but it was postponed when they got to the prison in Karaj, a city north-west of Tehran.

The relative said that his family has spent the last six days in agony over what could happen to him and now are left with even more uncertainty.
Iran closes airspace

Iran issued an order early Thursday to close its airspace, without explanation.

The order came amid heightened tensions over its bloody crackdown on protesters during nationwide protests and the possibility of American strikes in response.

The flight-tracking website FlightRadar24.com noted the order closed Iran’s airspace for a little more than two hours.
Iranian foreign minister urges U.S. to choose diplomacy

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said in an interview with Fox News Channel’s “Special Report” that Iran is “ready for negotiation” and has been for the past 20 years. He urged the U.S. to find a solution through negotiation, and said “diplomacy is much better than war.”

Araghchi blamed terrorist groups for the violence as part of an “Israeli plot” to “drag (Trump) into the conflict.”


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‘Canada is right in the middle’: What Trump’s Greenland threats mean for #Canada.

For people living in Canada’s Arctic, rhetoric that once seemed absurd has quickly become frightening.

“In the beginning when (U.S. President) Donald Trump said he wanted to buy Greenland, I just laughed it off because it was so absurd,” says Aaju Peter, a Greenlander who now lives in Iqaluit. “I (now) find it unsettling, and I don’t know the word in English but it’s really a threat.”

Peter is not only worried for her native Greenland, but also for all Inuit people who live throughout the Arctic. She believes if the United States is successful in annexing Greenland, that Canada’s north could be next.

“Canada is right in the middle, between Greenland and the United States,” she says. “And he is going to want to take over Canada. Seeing a threat being made to the Inuit in Greenland is also a threat to us in Arctic Canada.”

The Trump administration says controlling Greenland is necessary for U.S. security. Today, U.S. Ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra was asked by CJAD Talk 800 host Elias Makos if Trump has his sights set on Canada’s Arctic territory next.

“We’re not moving to a point where are disagreeing on how to protect the north,” Hoekstra said. “We are actually moving to a point where we are in lockstep.” Hoekstra cited a deal between Canada, the U.S. and Finland to build icebreakers as an example of the two countries working together.

While Ottawa has pledged billions of dollars in new defence spending, including money to protect the north, experts say asserting security – and sovereignty – must also include efforts to build and grow strong communities.

“It’s really a whole of society approach,” says Gaëlle Rivard Piché, executive director of the CDA Institute, a security think-tank. “Working with northerners, governments, Indigenous People who live in the region and make sure they have the same services.”

In its national security strategy, the Trump administration laid out its plans to restore American dominance in the Western Hemisphere.

“After years of neglect, the United States will reassert and enforce the Monroe Doctrine to restore American pre-eminence in the Western Hemisphere, and to protect our homeland and our access to key geographies throughout the region,” the document says.

And while Trump’s actions in Venezuela and threats against Colombia and Mexico are examples of a changing U.S. foreign policy, some experts warn his sabre-rattling against NATO member Denmark, of which Greenland is an autonomous territory, poses a significant risk to international security.

“This is very in-line with his modus-operandi, but it is going to come at a terrible cost,” says Andrea Charron, director of the Centre for Defence and Security Studies at the University of Manitoba.

“It calls into question the trust that is essential to a collective defence alliance like NATO continuing to exist and creates a rupture between the allies,” she says.

Charron adds it could also lead other countries to move on their own ambitions within their regions.

“It really sends a signal to adversaries that we are in chaos and now is the time to take control of your spheres of influence,” Charron says. “This is sending the wrong message to what we call the CRINKs (China, Russia, Iran and North Korea).”

As Danish and Greenlandic leaders urge the United States to end its threats to annex the territory, France and Germany plan to send troops to the territory at the request of Denmark. Canada also has troops in Greenland, but the Ministry of Defence says Canadian Forces members are participating in a previously planned training exercise that takes place every year in Greenland, not because of the ongoing threats.


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Qatar says some personnel departing U.S. base over ‘regional tensions’. The decision comes after Washington threatened to respond to an Iranian government crackdown on protests while Tehran has said it would strike U.S. military and shipping assets in the event of a new attack.

The measure was taken “in response to the current regional tensions”, Qatar’s International Media Office said in a statement.

“Qatar continues to implement all necessary measures to safeguard the security and safety ... including actions related to the protection of critical infrastructure and military facilities,” it added.

A diplomatic source told AFP earlier that a number of personnel were asked to leave the base by Wednesday evening.

A second source confirmed the information, also on condition of anonymity.

The U.S. Embassy in Qatar declined to comment on personnel movement at Al Udeid.

In June, Iran targeted the United States’ Al Udeid military base in Qatar in response to earlier American strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities.

Ali Shamkhani, a senior adviser to Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, warned U.S. President Donald Trump on Wednesday that the strike on the base had demonstrated “Iran’s will and capability to respond to any attack.”

Doha was able to leverage the unprecedented attack on its soil to help deliver a speedy truce between Washington and Tehran.

Washington has repeatedly said the United States is considering air strikes on Iran to stop a crackdown on protesters.

Trump on Tuesday said in a CBS News interview that the United States would act if Iran began hanging protesters.

Iranian authorities called the American warnings a “pretext for military intervention.”

Mass protests in Iran since Thursday have posed one of the biggest challenges to the clerical leadership since the 1979 Islamic revolution ousted the shah.

Norway-based NGO Iran Human Rights said it had confirmed 734 people killed during the protests, including nine minors, but warned the death toll was likely far higher.

“The real number of those killed is likely in the thousands,” IHR’s director Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam said.


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Trump set to lead largest-ever U.S. delegation to World Economic Forum in Davos next week.


The Geneva-based think tank says Trump, whose assertive foreign policy on issues as diverse as Venezuela and Greenland in recent months has stirred concerns among U.S. friends and foes alike, will be accompanied by five Cabinet secretaries and other top officials for the event running from Monday through Jan. 23.

A total of 850 CEOs and chairs of the world’s top companies will be among the 3,000 participants from 130 countries expected in the Alpine resort this year, the forum says.

Forum President Borge Brende says six of the Group of Seven leaders — including Trump — will attend, as well as presidents Volodymyr Zelenskky of Ukraine, Ahmad al-Sharaa of Syria and others. A total of 64 heads of state or government are expected so far — also a record — though that number could increase before the start of the event, he said.

China’s delegation will be headed by Vice Premier He Lifeng, Beijing’s top trade official, Brende said.

Among the scores of other high-profile attendees expected are European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, World Trade Organization Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala as well as tech industry titans Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia, and Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella.

Brende said the U.S. delegation will include Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, along with Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner and special envoy Steve Witkoff.

The forum, which held its first annual meeting in 1971, has long been a hub of dialogue, debate and deal-making. Trump has already attended twice while president, and was beamed in by video last year just days after being inaugurated for his second term.

Critics call it a venue for the world’s elites to hobnob and do business that sometimes comes at the expense of workers, the impoverished or people on the margins of society. The forum counters that its stated goal is “improving the state of the world” and insists many advocacy groups, academics and cultural leaders have an important role too.

This year’s edition will be the first annual meeting not headed by forum founder Klaus Schwab, who resigned last year. He’s been succeeded by interim co-chairs Larry Fink, chairman and CEO of New York-based investment management company BlackRock, and Andre Hoffmann, the vice chairman of Swiss pharmaceuticals company Roche Holdings.


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Israeli police issues arrest warrant against former Netanyahu aide.

Israeli police issued an arrest warrant for a former aide to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday, accusing him of being implicated in two affairs involving the premier’s office.

Israel Einhorn, a former campaign adviser to Netanyahu who now lives in Serbia, appeared on a list of people whom the police suspect of involvement in the so-called “Bild affair” and are prevented from communicating with the prime minister’s office.

Next to Einhorn’s name a line was added saying there is a “pending arrest warrant against him,” according to a document submitted to the court.

“We can confirm the warrant,” a police spokesman told AFP.

In a post on his personal Facebook page, Netanyahu said the arrest warrant showed he was being targeted via his former aides.

“They can’t beat me in elections, so they start a lawsuit, the lawsuit falls apart so they bring in my advisors one after the other to try to blackmail them”, he said in a video message in Hebrew.

The Bild affair involved the leaking of classified intelligence from the Israeli military to the German tabloid Bild in September 2024. Two other Netanyahu aides were arrested and indicted for the leak.

The document aimed to prove that Hamas was not interested in a ceasefire deal, and to support Netanyahu’s claim that the hostages captured by Palestinian militants in their Oct. 7, 2023 attack on Israel could only be released through military pressure rather than negotiations.

Einhorn has not returned to Israel since the investigation was opened, but he was questioned by Israeli investigators in Serbia last year.

He is also a suspect in the so-called “Qatargate” scandal, in which he and other close associates of Netanyahu are suspected of being recruited by Qatar to promote the Gulf country’s image in Israel.

Qatar hosts senior Hamas leaders and has played a mediating role between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist movement during the war in Gaza.

It also sent millions of dollars in cash to Gaza every month between 2018 and October 2023 to pay Hamas’s civil servants and for cash handouts to Gazan families.

The news of the warrant came after the police on Sunday detained a current senior aide to Netanyahu suspected of obstructing an investigation, with local media reporting that it was the premier’s chief of staff Tzachi Braverman.

Another former Netanyahu aide, Eli Feldstein, recently said during a televised interview that Braverman offered to “shut down” an army investigation into the Bild affair.

Feldstein himself is on trial for his alleged involvement in both the Bild leak and Qatargate.

In the same interview, Feldstein said Netanyahu was aware of the leak and was in favour of using the document to drum up public support for the war.

Israeli media reported on Monday that Braverman, picked to become Israel’s next ambassador to the U.K., was barred from leaving the country for 30 days, and from being in contact with the Prime Minister’s office for 15 days.

AFP contacted the police and Braverman’s lawyer to confirm the bans but did not immediately receive a response.


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Drone strike kills 3 in Gaza as Hamas prepares to transfer governance to new committee


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Russian troops delivered a strike by the Oreshnik hypersonic ballistic missile system on January 9, crippling the Lvov state aircraft repair plant in western Ukraine that provided maintenance for F-16 fighter jets and produced long-range attack unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), Russia’s Defense Ministry reported.

TASS has compiled the main information on the aftermath.
Oreshnik Strike

- Russian troops delivered a strike by the Oreshnik hypersonic ballistic missile system on January 9, crippling the Lvov state aircraft repair plant.

- The Defense Ministry specified that the enterprise repaired and provided maintenance for the Ukrainian army’s aircraft, including F-16 and MiG-29 fighter jets supplied by Western countries. It also produced long-and medium-range attack UAVs used for strikes on civilian facilities deep inside Russia.

- Furthermore, the Oreshnik strike hit production facilities, warehouses with finished products (UAVs), and the infrastructure of the factory airfield.
Strike by Iskander and Kalibr Missiles

- The production facilities of two Kiev enterprises engaged in the assembly of attack UAVs were damaged on January 9 by the Iskander tactical ballistic missile systems and Kalibr sea-launched cruise missiles.

- Energy infrastructure facilities supporting the operation of Ukraine’s military-industrial complex, were also hit in Kiev.
Response to Kiev’s Attack

- On January 9, the Defense Ministry reported that the Russian Armed Forces launched a massive strike, including with the Oreshnik hypersonic ballistic missile system, on critical targets in Ukraine.

- The ministry stated that this was a response to Kiev’s December attack on Russian President Vladimir Putin's residence in the Novgorod Region.


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#Cuba’s president says no current talks with the U.S. following Trump’s threats.

Diaz-Canel posted a flurry of brief statements on X after Trump suggested that Cuba “make a deal, BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE.” He did not say what kind of deal.

Diaz-Canel wrote that for “relations between the U.S. and Cuba to progress, they must be based on international law rather than hostility, threats, and economic coercion.”

He added: “We have always been willing to hold a serious and responsible dialogue with the various US governments, including the current one, on the basis of sovereign equality, mutual respect, principles of International Law, and mutual benefit without interference in internal affairs and with full respect for our independence.”

His statements were reposted by Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez on X.

On Sunday, Trump wrote that Cuba would no longer live off oil and money from Venezuela, which the U.S. attacked on Jan. 3 in a stunning operation that killed 32 Cuban officers and led to the arrest of President Nicolas Maduro.

Cuba was receiving an estimated 35,000 barrels a day from Venezuela before the U.S. attacked, along with some 5,500 barrels daily from Mexico and roughly 7,500 from Russia, according to Jorge Pinon of the Energy Institute at the University of Texas at Austin, who tracks the shipments.

Even with oil shipments from Venezuela, widespread blackouts have persisted across Cuba given fuel shortages and a crumbling electric grid. Experts worry a lack of petroleum would only deepen the island’s multiple crises.

The situation between the U.S. and Cuba is “very sad and concerning,” said Andy S. Gomez, retired dean of the School of International Studies and senior fellow in Cuban Studies at the University of Miami.

He said he sees Diaz-Canel’s latest comments “as a way to try and buy a little bit of time for the inner circle to decide what steps it’s going to take.”

Gomez said he doesn’t visualize Cuba reaching out to U.S. officials right now.

“They had every opportunity when President (Barack) Obama opened up U.S. diplomatic relations, and yet they didn’t even bring Cuban coffee to the table,” Gomez said. “Of course, these are desperate times for Cuba.”

Michael Galant, senior research and outreach associate at the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, D.C., said he believes Cuba might be willing to negotiate.

“Cuba has been interested in finding ways to ease sanctions,” he said. “It’s not that Cuba is uncooperative.”

Galant said topics for discussion could include migration and security, adding that he believes Trump is not in a hurry.

“Trump is hoping to deepen the economic crisis on the island, and there are few costs to Trump to try and wait that out,” he said. “I don’t think it’s likely that there will be any dramatic action in the coming days because there is no rush to come to the table.”

Cuba’s president stressed on X that “there are no talks with the U.S. government, except for technical contacts in the area of ​​migration.”

The island’s communist government has said U.S. sanctions cost the country more than US$7.5 billion between March 2024 and February 2025.


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#Ottawa joins countries condemning Iranian regime for killing protesters.


In a joint statement issued with Australia and the European Union on Friday, Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand praised the bravery of peaceful protesters and attacked Iran’s use of lethal force.

The statement noted that at least 40 people had died at the hands of Iran’s security forces, though activists believe the number of deaths is more than 10 times higher.

Prime Minister Mark Carney posted Friday that these reports are “profoundly concerning” and urged Iran to allow for freedom of expression and peaceful assembly.

Conservative MPs and groups supporting Israel have been posting frequently about the protests and have suggested the Islamic Republic, established in 1979, is on the brink of collapse.

#Canada cut diplomatic ties with Iran in 2012 and Ottawa issued a terrorism designation in 2024 for a branch of Iran’s army, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 12, 2026.


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UK, Germany discuss NATO forces in Greenland to calm US threat, Bloomberg News reports


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