BLACKWATER USA | DAILY BRIEF

Posted by BW Actual on Sep 10th 2025

BLACKWATER USA | DAILY BRIEF

Hamas

  • An Israeli airstrike targeted Hamas's leadership-in-exile in Qatar while they were reportedly meeting to discuss a new, U.S.-backed ceasefire proposal.
  • Hamas said the strike missed its most senior targets but killed five lower-level members, including the son of the militia's senior negotiator, and a Qatari security officer.
  • The strike - thought to be Israel's first on Qatar - probably did more damage to U.S.-Israeli relations and Qatar's willingness to mediate ceasefire talks than it did to Hamas.
  • Pres. Trump said he was "very unhappy about every aspect of" the strike and specifically lamented Israel's unilateral action against Qatar, which Trump called "a Sovereign Nation and close Ally of the United States, that is working very hard and bravely taking risks with us to broker Peace."
  • Qatar's prime minister offered reassurances that his country would still continue its (thus far thankless and fruitless) role of mediating between Israel and Hamas, but seethed at Israel for violating Qatari sovereignty. He criticized Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu by name and called for "a response from the entire region to such barbaric actions."
  • Meanwhile, Hamas belatedly claimed responsibility for Monday's shooting that killed six in Jerusalem.
  • Netanyahu's office said the Jerusalem shooting was one of the factors that led Israel to target Hamas's leadership in Qatar, but it seems more likely that Israel's strike had been planned for months and was only waiting for an opportunity to target a gathered group of Hamas leaders.
Nepal
  • Nepal's "Gen Z" protesters were clearly not satisfied with the government's half-hearted (and mildly patronizing) concession to lift a nascent social media ban but ignore agitators' more significant calls for reform.
  • Nor did the demonstrators accept yesterday's resignations of the prime minister, KP Sharma Oli, and home minister as solutions.
  • Following the resignations, angry demonstrators set fire to the Supreme Court, the parliament building, the prime minister's residence (and residences of three former prime ministers), and the ruling Communist Party of Nepal's headquarters.
  • The military sent troops to restore order in Kathmandu - apparently unsuccessfully so far. The protests seem to be morphing into a broader, angrier expression of economic discontent and outrage over government corruption.
France
  • Pres. Macron appointed his former defense minister and close ally, Sébastien Lecornu, to become his fifth prime minister. 
  • Like his unsuccessful predecessor, François Bayrou, Lecornu is a centrist. He'll face the same resistance from both political extremes - the far left and the far right - that stalled Bayrou's budget proposal and ultimately ended his premiership.
Iran
  • Iran signed an agreement laying out "practical modalities" for International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) experts to resume inspections of Iran's nuclear sites, which were cut off in June when Israel - and then the U.S. - bombed the sites.
  • Iran is keen to cooperate with the IAEA to avoid a reinstatement of UN sanctions, which is a distinct possibility after France, Germany, and the UK notified the UN last week that Iran was in breach of its commitments to the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) nuclear deal.
  • That notification started a 30-day clock for consultations in which both sides hope to avoid the drastic default option of a "snapback mechanism" that reimposes UN sanctions on Iran.
  • Iran's foreign minister noted that its agreement to resume IAEA inspections is contingent on reaching a deal to avoid reinstated sanctions, and - if sanctions are reimposed - "Iran will consider its cooperation with the agency to have come to an end."
DRC
  • The Islamic State-linked Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) attacked a funeral in DRC's eastern North Kivu province, killing at least 70 people.
  • Intensified Ugandan pressure on the ADF under Operation Shujaa has pushed the militant group out of its usual hideouts and severed its access to the local communities it exploits for resources and new recruits. Local reports suggest some ADF fighters are dying of starvation, and attacks like this are likely examples of an ailing militia lashing out in desperation.
Afghanistan
  • Taliban officials in Kandahar celebrated success in reducing childhood mortality in the province from 23.5% in Q2 2024 to 9.5% in the same quarter this year.
  • Per the head of the provincial pediatric ward, "the main reason for the reduction in mortality is the use of modern medical equipment." May the Taliban's Kandahar-based fundamentalist leadership take note.
  • While Kandahar's reduction in childhood deaths is laudable, 9.5% is still nearly three times the global under-five mortality rate.