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Trump Administration Revokes Temporary Protection Status for Yemenis in America

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The Trump administration ended Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for about 1,400 Yemenis in the United States, giving 60 days to leave or face deportation, reversing a protection in place since 2015 amid tightening immigration enforcement.

The administration of U.S. President Donald Trump ordered an end to Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for nationals of Yemen, affecting roughly 1,400 people who had been covered since September 2015. The decision was announced by Kristi Noem, who concluded the country no longer meets statutory requirements.

After reviewing conditions in the country and consulting with appropriate US government agencies, I determined that Yemen no longer meets the law’s requirements to be designated for Temporary Protected Status.

Secretary of U.S. Department of Homeland Security Kristi Noem

She added that allowing beneficiaries to remain “is contrary to our national interest.”

Beneficiaries without other legal status have 60 days to depart voluntarily or face arrest and removal proceedings.

Authorities offered a government-funded plane ticket and a $2,600 payment for individuals who “self-deport.”

The TPS designation had last been extended in 2024 and was scheduled to expire on March 3 this year.

Enforcement-First Immigration Policy

The revocation fits a broader enforcement campaign launched after Trump returned to office in 2025. The administration has also removed protections for Venezuelans, Haitians, Hondurans, Nicaraguans, Somalis, Ukrainians, Ethiopians, South Sudanese and others.

It simultaneously expanded travel restrictions to citizens of 19 countries including Yemen, Somalia and South Sudan, and partial entry restrictions affecting 29 additional states such as Nigeria and Senegal.

Officials described the measure as “putting America first” while Kristi Noem called the move “a win for the rule of law and vindication for the US Constitution,” arguing that Temporary Protected Status “was never designed to be permanent” and had been used as “a de facto amnesty program for decades.”

She said that, given “the improved situation” in the countries concerned, the administration is ending what was intended to be a temporary designation.

Conflict Assessment Dispute

The determination contrasts with U.S. State Department travel guidance warning citizens not to travel to Yemen due to “terrorism, unrest, crime, health risks, kidnapping, and landmines.”

TPS historically applies when war or disaster prevents safe return, and administrations have often renewed designations repeatedly rather than terminate them after nearly a decade.

TPS allows recipients to live and work legally but does not grant permanent residency. More than 1,000 refugees and asylum seekers fall under the current termination order, according to the Department of Homeland Security statement released Friday.

Long-Duration Displacement Question

TPS had been renewed repeatedly for nearly 10 years, illustrating the gap between temporary legal categories and protracted conflicts. The new order converts protected residents into removable migrants if they remain past the 60-day period.

The decision therefore reclassifies a population that had legal presence for almost a decade into an enforcement case, without changing the underlying conflict designation acknowledged by travel advisories.

As such the termination of humanitarian protection for Yemeni nationals marks a shift from renewable crisis relief toward enforcement-first immigration policy, redefining how the United States treats long-duration conflict displacement cases.

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Trump Wants to Punish Spain & NATO Allies Over Iran War

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A Pentagon email has revealed the U.S. has outlined options to punish NATO allies for not supporting the war on Iran, including suspending Spain, amid growing European defiance of U.S. policy & a parallel push by EU countries to deepen ties with China.

Washington is weighing punitive measures against NATO partners it views as unwilling to support operations in the Iran war, according to an internal Pentagon policy email.

The memo, circulating at senior Pentagon levels, frames access, basing and overflight rights as “just the absolute baseline for NATO,” according to a U.S. official who talked to Reuters for its exclusive. It proposes suspending “difficult” countries from key alliance roles, with Spain specifically identified due to its refusal to allow bases or airspace to be used for strikes on Iran.

Spain hosts two major U.S. installations – Naval Station Rota and Morón Air Base – making its stance operationally relevant even if suspension would be largely symbolic in military terms.

One option includes suspending Spain from NATO structures, while another suggests reassessing U.S. diplomatic support for British control of the Falkland Islands, a dispute dating back to the 1982 war in which 650 Argentine and 255 British personnel were killed.

The measures aim to reduce what officials describe as a European “sense of entitlement,” signaling frustration with allies that declined to support U.S. naval operations to reopen the Strait of Hormuz after the war began on Feb. 28.

Pentagon Press Secretary Kingsley Wilson said allies “were not there for us,” adding the department would ensure options to make partners “do their part.”

President Donald Trump has echoed this view, asking, “Wouldn’t you if you were me?” when discussing potential U.S. withdrawal from NATO.

He also criticized Spain directly, saying, “Their financial numbers… are absolutely horrendous,” accusing them of contributing little to NATO defense.

Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez rejected the report, stating governments “do not work off emails.”

In parallel, Spain has continued its anti-war stance. They have pushed to suspend the EU-Israel agreement, citing alleged breaches of international law, though Euronews said the effort lacks consensus, with Germany and Italy opposing it.

Meanwhile president Sánchez, speaking in China, said Europe should “strengthen ties with China,” reflecting broader strategic divergence within the alliance.

The dispute comes as NATO, now 76 years old, faces questions about cohesion. U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth complained Nato wouldn’t be much of an alliance if members hesitate to act, noting Iran’s missiles can reach Europe even if not the United States.

The Iran war, now in its eighth week, has exposed divisions over risk-sharing, military access, and the scope of alliance obligations, with policy options under review but no formal decisions announced.

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Budget Battle Begins: Trump Asks Congress $1.5 Trillion for War

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Trump proposed a record $1.5 trillion defense budget for 2027 amid Iran war, as costs reach $2B daily, sparking political backlash for rising debt & cuts on domestic spending.

The Trump administration’s proposed $1.5 trillion defense budget reflects the escalating financial demands of the Iran war while intensifying political and fiscal tensions in Washington.

The White House’s 2027 proposal seeks a more than 40 percent increase in defense spending, the sharpest rise since World War II.

U.S. media cited closed-door briefings estimating the Iran war may be costing up to $2 billion per day as the conflict enters its fifth week.

The plan allocates over $1.1 trillion through standard appropriations, with an additional $350 billion via a party-line mechanism.

Recent losses underline the scale of military strain. According to EGYOSINT, U.S. assets hit include 4 F-15E Strike Eagles, 1 A-10 shot down, and 17 MQ-9 Reaper drones destroyed.

Other reported losses include 1 E-3G Sentry (Airborne Early Warning and Control – AEW&C) aircraft destroyed, 8 KC-135 tankers damaged or lost, and multiple helicopters including UH-60 Black Hawk and HH-60G Pave Hawk variants.

These losses add pressure to replenish stockpiles and sustain operational tempo.

Trump framed the increase as necessary, stating federal resources must prioritize “military protection” over domestic programs.

Democrats sharply criticized the proposal. Senator Jack Reed said: “The U.S. Department of Defense doesn’t lack funding, but it currently lacks responsible civilian leadership & management.”

To offset costs, the administration proposes $73 billion in non-defense cuts, about 10 percent, while boosting law enforcement funding by over $40 billion.

The U.S. already faces annual deficits near $2 trillion and total debt exceeding $39 trillion, raising concerns about long-term sustainability.

Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer said: “Trump’s budget is Rotten To The Core,” adding it prioritizes “bombs in the Middle East” over domestic needs.

Some Republicans support the plan, aiming to push defense spending toward 5 percent of GDP, while others warn of deepening fiscal imbalances.

Congress retains authority to modify or reject the proposal, setting up a contentious budget process.

The scale of the request highlights the trade-off between wartime demands and domestic priorities, as lawmakers weigh immediate military needs against rising debt and political opposition.

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Iran-linked Hackers Breach FBI Director’s Personal Email

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The personal email of FBI Director Kash Patel has been compromised by an Iran-linked hacking group, with the U.S. Department of Justice confirming the breach as concerns grow over escalating cyber tensions.

The U.S. Department of Justice confirmed that the email account of FBI Director Kash Patel had been compromised, following claims by a hacking group with alleged ties to Iran. The incident marks a significant cybersecurity concern involving a top U.S. intelligence official.

Officials at the Department of Justice acknowledged the breach but declined to provide further details about the scope or potential impact. The confirmation comes after the hackers publicly claimed responsibility and began releasing materials online.

A group calling itself “Handala Hack Team” said it had accessed Patel’s personal email inbox and published photos along with what it described as his resume. In a statement posted online, the group declared that Patel had joined its list of “successfully hacked victims.”

Cybersecurity firm Cyble described the group as an emerging but increasingly visible threat actor since late 2023, primarily targeting Israeli-linked entities and organizations.

While the hackers have released samples of the alleged data, Reuters reported it could not independently verify the authenticity of the emails. However, initial reviews suggest the material may include a mix of personal and professional correspondence dating from 2010 to 2019.

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