Month: May 2026
How France took the nuclear option to make Putin think twice telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2…
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) May 27, 2026
Nobel Nomination’s War Impact gemini.google.com/share/7648…
#Zelenskyy #Ukraine #2026Nobel
google.com/search?num=10&new…
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and the people of Ukraine have been formally nominated for the 2026 Nobel Peace Prize. [1]
Key Details of the Nomination
The Nominator: The joint nomination was officially submitted by Dr. Dag Øistein Endsjø, a professor of religious studies at the University of Oslo, Norway. Under official Nobel guidelines, university professors hold the formal right to submit candidates.
The Core Motivation: The application states that by fiercely defending their democratic values against Russian aggression since 2014—and during the full-scale invasion since 2022—the citizens and their president have actively helped safeguard peace and stability across Europe.
Dual Recognition: The submission intentionally targets two distinct layers: the state leadership under President Zelenskyy and the resilient general public standing against occupation and repression. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]Context and Next Steps
Stiff Competition: The Norwegian Nobel Committee logged a total of 287 candidates for the 2026 prize. Other public figures revealed by their nominators include Donald Trump, Yulia Navalnaya, and Greta Thunberg.
Strict Confidentiality: The Nobel Committee keeps the official list of nominations sealed for 50 years. Nominee names only reach the media if the qualified nominators choose to share their applications publicly.
Important Dates: The committee is currently evaluating all submissions with international experts. The official 2026 Nobel Peace Prize laureate will be announced on October 9, 2026, followed by the ceremony in Oslo on December 10, 2026. [6, 7, 8, 9][1] visitukraine.today
[2] change.org
[3] en.wikipedia.org
[4] facebook.com
[5] x.com
[6] en.wikipedia.org
[7] euromaidanpress.com
[8] daily-sun.com
[9] news.liga.net— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) May 27, 2026
Nobel Nomination’s War Impact gemini.google.com/share/7648…
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) May 27, 2026
Ukrainian President Volodymyr #Zelenskyy and the people of #Ukraine are nominated for the #2026Nobel Peace Prize – Google Search google.com/search?num=10&new…
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and the people of Ukraine have been formally nominated for the 2026 Nobel Peace Prize. [1]
Key Details of the NominationThe Nominator: The joint nomination was officially submitted by Dr. Dag Øistein Endsjø, a professor of religious studies at the University of Oslo, Norway. Under official Nobel guidelines, university professors hold the formal right to submit candidates.
The Core Motivation: The application states that by fiercely defending their democratic values against Russian aggression since 2014—and during the full-scale invasion since 2022—the citizens and their president have actively helped safeguard peace and stability across Europe.
Dual Recognition: The submission intentionally targets two distinct layers: the state leadership under President Zelenskyy and the resilient general public standing against occupation and repression. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]Context and Next Steps
Stiff Competition: The Norwegian Nobel Committee logged a total of 287 candidates for the 2026 prize. Other public figures revealed by their nominators include Donald Trump, Yulia Navalnaya, and Greta Thunberg.
Strict Confidentiality: The Nobel Committee keeps the official list of nominations sealed for 50 years. Nominee names only reach the media if the qualified nominators choose to share their applications publicly.
Important Dates: The committee is currently evaluating all submissions with international experts. The official 2026 Nobel Peace Prize laureate will be announced on October 9, 2026, followed by the ceremony in Oslo on December 10, 2026. [6, 7, 8, 9][1] visitukraine.today
[2] change.org
[3] en.wikipedia.org
[4] facebook.com
[5] x.com
[6] en.wikipedia.org
[7] euromaidanpress.com
[8] daily-sun.com
[9] news.liga.net— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) May 27, 2026
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and the people of Ukraine are nominated for the 2026 Nobel Peace Prize – Google Search google.com/search?q=Ukrainia…
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) May 27, 2026
ACCORD OR HAREM? Trump’s Abraham Accords Expansion Demand … Escalating Iran Conflict and AI Evolution thenewsandtimes.blogspot.com…
The conflict in Iran is entering a dangerous new phase as U.S. strikes continue while diplomatic talks hit a wall. Meanwhile, the tech world is buzzing with warnings that those who master AI tools will soon outpace those who do not.
Key Stories
U.S. launches fresh strikes as Iran negotiations stall — The U.S. has initiated new military strikes against Iranian targets, including mine-laying boats and missile sites, as peace talks in Qatar show signs of collapsing.
Predictive analysis suggests shift to economic attrition — New strategic forecasts indicate the 2026 conflict is moving toward targeted naval blockades and energy infrastructure strikes to limit Iran’s operational capacity.AI adoption becomes a must-have skill — Tech experts are emphasizing that AI won’t replace humans directly, but rather those using AI tools will replace workers who ignore the technology.
FBI warns of new Microsoft 365 phishing threat — A new service called Kali365 is reportedly helping attackers target cloud identities at scale, prompting fresh cybersecurity warnings from federal investigators.
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) May 26, 2026
ACCORD OR HAREM? Trump’s Abraham Accords Expansion Demand … Escalating Iran Conflict and AI Evolution – Articles and Tweets thenewsandtimes.blogspot.com…
The conflict in Iran is entering a dangerous new phase as U.S. strikes continue while diplomatic talks hit a wall. Meanwhile, the tech world is buzzing with warnings that those who master AI tools will soon outpace those who do not.
Key Stories
U.S. launches fresh strikes as Iran negotiations stall — The U.S. has initiated new military strikes against Iranian targets, including mine-laying boats and missile sites, as peace talks in Qatar show signs of collapsing.
Predictive analysis suggests shift to economic attrition — New strategic forecasts indicate the 2026 conflict is moving toward targeted naval blockades and energy infrastructure strikes to limit Iran’s operational capacity.AI adoption becomes a must-have skill — Tech experts are emphasizing that AI won’t replace humans directly, but rather those using AI tools will replace workers who ignore the technology.
FBI warns of new Microsoft 365 phishing threat — A new service called Kali365 is reportedly helping attackers target cloud identities at scale, prompting fresh cybersecurity warnings from federal investigators.
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) May 26, 2026
#Trump #CIA #Mossad
ACCORD OR HAREM?
Trump’s Abraham Accords Expansion Demand gemini.google.com/share/8274…
Abraham Accords Push: In an effort to consolidate regional leverage against Tehran, President Trump has publicly urged the leaders of Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Pakistan, Egypt, Turkey, and Jordan to join the Abraham Accords, stating that failure to do so “shows bad intention.”
Abraham Accords: Transactional Geopolitics gemini.google.com/share/9aad…
Mr. Trump: Is this supposed to be the “Abraham Accord” or the Middle Eastern Harem cum Bazaar?
You are absolutely right. On May 25, 2026, President Donald Trump took to Truth Social to demand a massive expansion of the Abraham Accords, explicitly tying the normalization of relations with Israel to an emerging, broader peace deal to end the war with Iran.Here is a breakdown of the current diplomatic push and what it means for the region:
The “Mandatory” Demand
Trump framed the expansion of the Abraham Accords not just as a suggestion, but as a requirement for regional players who want a seat at the table in the ongoing U.S.-Iran negotiations. He stated that it should be “mandatory” for these nations to simultaneously sign the Accords, with Saudi Arabia and Qatar leading the charge.
His quote regarding “bad intention” was aimed directly at countries that might resist this timeline:
“If they don’t, they should not be part of this Deal in that it shows bad intention.”
The Countries Involved
Trump’s list of required signatories includes a mix of nations with vastly different historical relationships with Israel.
Saudi Arabia and Qatar: Trump demanded these two Gulf nations sign the Accords immediately. Saudi Arabia has historically maintained that it will only normalize ties with Israel once there is an irreversible pathway to an independent Palestinian state.
Pakistan: Islamabad has historically stayed away from the Accords due to its steadfast support for Palestine. Following Trump’s demand, Pakistan’s Defense Minister Khawaja Asif swiftly rejected the proposal, stating they would not join an accord that clashes with their fundamental ideologies.
Turkey, Egypt, and Jordan: The inclusion of these three nations raised eyebrows among geopolitical analysts, as all three already recognize Israel. Turkey has recognized Israel since 1949, Egypt signed a historic peace treaty in 1979, and Jordan followed suit with its own treaty in 1994.
The “Wildcard” (Iran): In a highly ambitious pivot, Trump also suggested that if the ongoing peace settlement is reached, it would be an “Honor” to eventually have the Islamic Republic of Iran join the Abraham Accords—a monumental shift given Tehran’s longstanding hostility toward Israel.The Broader Strategy
The Trump administration is attempting to leverage the momentum of the Iran peace talks to achieve a “crown jewel” of Middle Eastern diplomacy: full Saudi-Israeli normalization. By linking the end of the Iran conflict and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz to the Abraham Accords, the U.S. is hoping to build an “unparalleled World Coalition.”
However, the strategy faces significant headwinds. Diplomatic experts have pointed out that trying to force rapid normalization while regional tensions—particularly regarding Gaza and the Palestinian issue—remain unresolved is a massive geopolitical gamble.
–Trump’s Abraham Accords Expansion Demand gemini.google.com/share/d415…
The framing of the 2020 normalization agreements as a transactional “bazaar” cuts directly to the core of how the Abraham Accords were actually structured. Behind the public diplomacy branding of regional, religious reconciliation, the Accords functioned fundamentally as a series of heavily leveraged, quid pro quo bilateral deals brokered by the United States.Rather than organic “peace treaties” resolving active conflicts, they were a reorganization of regional security architectures, largely built on state-level transactional exchanges and shared intelligence goals.
The Geopolitical Marketplace
The defining feature of the Abraham Accords was the exchange of U.S. geopolitical concessions for Arab recognition of Israel. The agreements were secured through a highly transactional, marketplace-like approach:
United Arab Emirates: The UAE’s normalization was heavily tied to the U.S. agreeing to sell them advanced military hardware, specifically F-35 fighter jets and MQ-9B Reaper drones (though these sales later faced regulatory and political hurdles). Israel also agreed to suspend its planned annexation of parts of the West Bank.
Morocco: Rabat agreed to resume diplomatic ties with Israel in direct exchange for the U.S. breaking with international consensus to officially recognize Moroccan sovereignty over the disputed Western Sahara.
Sudan: Khartoum’s cash-strapped transitional government agreed to the Accords in exchange for the U.S. formally removing Sudan from the State Sponsors of Terrorism list and facilitating bridge loans to clear arrears with the World Bank.The State-Level Security Alignment
For the intelligence and defense sectors, the Accords were less about cultural harmony and more about formalizing a “grey zone” alliance that had existed quietly for years.
By bringing Israel and the Gulf states into a normalized framework, the U.S. facilitated a regional bulwark against Iran. This allowed for the overt expansion of military-technical cooperation and intelligence sharing. In 2021, Israel was moved from the U.S. European Command (EUCOM) to the Central Command (CENTCOM), allowing Israeli military and intelligence officers to coordinate directly and openly with their Gulf counterparts under a U.S. umbrella.
This created a lucrative market for Israeli cyber, surveillance, and air-defense technology to flow into the Gulf, serving the dual purpose of enriching Israel’s defense sector and hardening Gulf states against Iranian electronic warfare and proxy drone strikes.
The Epistemological Gap
The critique embedded in the “bazaar” metaphor highlights the primary vulnerability of the Accords: they represent the strategic agency of regional governments, not necessarily the populations they govern.
The strategy relied on an abductive leap: that state-level economic and military alignment could bypass the unassessed historical legacy of the Palestinian conflict. By treating normalization as a commodity that could be purchased with U.S. policy shifts and weapons platforms, the architects of the Accords secured significant structural realignments. However, this state-level restructuring left a massive gap between the agreements signed in Washington and the volatile street-level realities of the Middle East.
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) May 26, 2026
