China sanctions 30 US firms, individuals over Taiwan weapons sales

In response to Washington’s latest inaction against Taiwan, which Beijing claims to be its own, China has sanctioned a group of American defense companies and senior executives over sales of weapons to Taiwan.

The measures, which are targeted at 20 US defense companies and 10 individuals, were announced by China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Friday. The sanctions, according to the statement, are in response to the US’s largest ever weapons deal for Taiwan, which was announced in January 2001.

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The ministry’s statement, which calls for the US to stop “dangerous” efforts to arm the island, states that “any provocative actions that cross the line on the Taiwan issue will be met with a strong response from China.

Northrop Grumman Systems Corporation, L3Harris Maritime Services, Lazarus AI, and Boeing’s St. Louis branch are among the companies that have been sanctioned.

According to the ministry, the measures prevent domestic organizations from working with these companies and freeze their assets in China. Additionally, they enlist sanctioned individuals’ assets in China and forbid them from entering.

The founder of the defense company Anduril Industries and nine senior executives from the sanctioned companies are among the targets. On December 26, the measures become effective.

The US must provide Taiwan with the means to defend itself if Beijing rejects Beijing’s claim to the area. However, tensions between China and the US have increased since selling arms to the island.

President Donald Trump announced the most recent US weapons deal with Taiwan on December 17 that would include the proposed sale of 420 Army Tactical Missile Systems (ATACMS) and 82 High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS) for more than $4 billion.

Similar defense mechanisms were provided by the US to Ukraine to protect against Russian aerial attacks.

Additionally included in the deal are drones worth more than $ 1 billion as well as 60 self-propelled howitzer artillery systems and related equipment worth more than $ 4 billion.

Iran’s government budget reveals tough road ahead as currency hits new low

Iran’s currency has been experiencing new lows in the midst of ongoing economic unrest, which is also reflected in a planned budget for the following year, which effectively reduces public spending.

Tehran’s open market on Wednesday saw the highest rate for a dollar ever on Wednesday, with each dollar trading at roughly 1.36 million rials, before the Iranian currency briefly gained ground on Thursday.

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As the US and its Western allies continue to impose their sanctions and diplomatic pressure on the country’s fragile currency, the risk of a new war with Israel persists.

The hardline-controlled parliament for the upcoming Iranian calendar year, which begins in late March, will receive the finalized budget proposal from President Masoud Pezeshkian this week. The 12-member Guardian Council will then need to approve the budget before it can be signed into law in the coming weeks.

In order to manage a so-called “resistance economy,” the government expects to reduce spending while also managing a so-called “resistance economy” as it continues to face a severe budget crisis. The presented budget nominally increased by just over 5% compared to last year.

However, Iranians will be assured that their spending power will decline as the embattled national currency plunges, and that the minimum wage will also be raised far below the inflation rate, at only 20%.

Iranians observe the Yalda feast, an ancient custom that marks the beginning of winter and the longest night of the year, on December 20, 2025 in Tehran, Iran. [Abedin Taherkenareh/EPA]

In addition, according to the budget, the government expects taxes to rise by a sizable 62 percent next year as the government attempts to lessen its reliance on oil as US efforts to reduce Iranian exports, which are mostly carried by a shadow fleet of ships headed to China.

The entire budget is worth about $106 billion at the current exchange rate, which is several times less than the regional players’ projected 2026 budgets for Turkiye, Saudi Arabia, and Israel.

Iran’s rent-distributing multi-tier exchange rate system is still in play, with the government proposing a rate for import valuation, budget accounting, and a rate that is more in line with the open market rate for oil revenue realization.

A prior subsidized exchange rate that was significantly lower than the open market rate has been abandoned. Low-income Iranians are expected to receive any extra cash as electronic coupons that can be used to purchase essential items like food.

The budget is written in new rials for the first time since four zeros are anticipated to be removed from the struggling national currency by the budget’s start-up year.

The government’s plan to lop off four zeros was approved in October after years of back and forth. The move, according to supporters, was only cosmetic and won’t stop the frenzied inflation, which had already occurred years prior.

forecasts for the budget

The impact of the economic situation’s potential next year has already been heightened by a number of significant factors.

Iranians online were unfavorable about the government’s predictions that wages will far exceed inflation and tax collection. People were concerned that the elimination of the subsidised rate for essential goods might lead to a price shock that would follow.

Pezeshkian from the presidential campaign last year was quoted as saying in a televised interview that the stark wage disparity is “grave injustice” being done to the Iranian people.

Unfortunately, as long as the structural issues are ignored, we are making workers and government workers savanna, and those who have money grow bigger and bigger, according to Pezeshkian at the time.

The poor and the disenfranchised are subject to an additional tax, according to the statement.

Iranian women shop in a local market as the value of the Iranian rial drops, in Tehran, Iran, December 20, 2025. Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via REUTERS ATTENTION EDITORS - THIS PICTURE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY
Iranian women in Tehran, Iran, on December 20, 2025, as the value of the Iranian rial falls [Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency via Reuters)]

However, successive governments have failed to reduce budget deficits or control banks that are teetering toward bankruptcy, putting the pressure on the central bank to print more money to finance the nation, which in turn causes inflation to rise.

The government increased the petroleum price cap earlier in December despite repeated assurances that it had no plans to do so this year. The move has already increased transportation costs, which will ultimately increase inflation.

The most affordable and least expensive petroleum is currently available to most Iranians, starting at 50, 000 rials per litre (roughly $1.19), and higher-quality imported fuel was delivered this week for 800, 000 rials per litre (19).

The government has developed a 20-point plan, according to Hamid Pourmohammadi, who is in charge of Iran’s Plan and Budget Organization, that will ease the country’s 90 million-person population’s daily living conditions.

RSF says Sudan’s army launches air strikes on paramilitary stronghold Nyala

As part of an intensive aerial assault against its positions in South Darfur, Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces (RSF) paramilitary group claims the army of the country’s army attacked a fuel market in Nyala, the administrative capital of the RSF.

Military drones and warplanes sprayed strategic RSF locations throughout Nyala, including the international airport, military installations, and training facilities, for three days straight, ending on Thursday.

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Potrivit to footage that was circulated on social media, the fuel market’s strike caused a massive blaze as barrels of fuel exploded, incendiating thick clouds of black smoke into the air.

The army was allegedly targeting civilians, according to Youssef Idris Youssef, the head of the RSF’s civil administration in South Darfur. He referred to the attack as part of “a systematic policy” to punish Darfur residents who don’t oppose the RSF’s presence in their communities.

The Sudanese military has not commented on the strikes.

Both RSF members involved in the fuel trade and civilians were reported as casualties.

According to local sources, RSF intelligence services conducted mass arrests close to the targeted site and Nyala’s main market, holding civilians and military personnel on suspicion of providing army coordinates.

Nyala is of particular strategic importance because TASIS, the RSF’s parallel government, was established there in July. The alternative administration, led by RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan “Hemedti” Dagalo, is criticized for potentially fracturing Sudan but has significant control over Darfur.

The army attacked the RSF and Nyala airport in October, which the organization claims serves as its forces’ logistics hub.

Darfur is still in conflict.

Since the RSF’s capture of el-Fasher in October, which has sparked atrocities documented by rights groups, fighting has raged throughout Darfur.

According to the US, Darfur was the site of a genocide by the RSF.

The RSF claimed this week that it had taken control of the region’s Abu Qumra and made advances toward Um Buru, but army-allied joint forces claimed that they had also taken control of Karnoi, as well.

Just two days prior to the UN Security Council’s request for RSF to leave captured areas, camps to be dearmed, and eventual elections, Kamil Idris, Sudan’s prime minister, made the peace proposal.

The RSF rejected the idea, with Alaa el-Din Naqd, a spokesman for Sudanese outlet Radio Dabanga, claiming it constituted “wishful thinking.”

Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, the de facto leader of Sudan, met with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Thursday for talks where he endorsed peace initiatives and criticized division.

A senior official in Sudan’s Transitional Sovereignty Council had earlier ruled out any negotiations and said there could be “no truce and no negotiation with an occupier.”

In what the UN describes as one of the worst humanitarian crises ever to break out, the war, which started in April 2023, has resulted in the deaths of nearly 100 000 people and the displacement of nearly 14 million.

Guinea elections: Who’s running and what’s at stake?

Guineans will vote on Sunday in a likely-surprising manner four years after military leader General Mamady Doumbouya led a coup that overthrew the country’s fragile democracy and toppled its civilian government of the day.

The young military leader, known for his signature wraparound sunglasses, is widely expected to win the vote on December 28 and solidify his hold on power in the resource-rich West African nation, as key opposition figures have been barred from participating.

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Guinea, the largest exporter of bauxite, a crucial component of aluminum, and has a population of 15 million people. Doumbouya’s government is banking on its vast mines, especially the mega Simandou mine – one of the largest iron ore projects in the world, to create more jobs and revenue in the coming years. The nation has a lot of uranium, gold, and diamond deposits.

Doumbouya has gained some support due to new policies that have boosted mining exports. The general’s opponents, however, dispute his legitimacy, citing both his previous election-run pledge and his various media and protest bans.

The 2021 coup destabilised Guinea’s democratic trajectory. Guineans only voted in the first truly free and fair elections since independence from France in 1958 after decades of coups and dictatorships. The coup also caused suspensions from the African Union and sanctions from the regional Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) bloc.

Conakry, a coastal city in Guinea, serves as its capital. Most Guineans practise Islam (85 percent), while others are Christians and animists (15 percent). Although there are more than two dozen ethnic groups, the Fulani, Peul, Malinke, and Soso are the largest. The country is known for being the source of the Niger River, which flows through several countries and empties into the Atlantic Ocean through Nigeria.

On November 4, 2025, the Simandou mine, one of the largest high-grade iron ore deposits, is run by Australian business Rio Tinto and joint-venture partners SimFer in Guinea’s Nzerekore region.

How does voting work?

About 6.7 million eligible voters over the age of 18 have registered for the election. There are 23, 662 polling stations.

For a seven-year term, the president will be elected by an absolute majority vote through a two-round process.

A high turnout is expected based on the 87 percent of voters who turned up for a referendum held in September. More than 90% of those who voted “yes” to a new constitution, which increases the presidential mandate from five to seven, and creates a senate, where a third of the members would be presidential appointees, were largely seen as a test of Doumbouya’s popularity.

Nine presidential candidates have been cleared to run, although the major opposition challengers who stood a real chance were barred on technicalities. None of the eight opposition candidates has strong political standing. Candidates took part in an evening series on state television where they debated each other’s proposals weeks ahead of the vote.

Campaigns began on November 28 and ended midnight on December 25. Doumbouya largely stayed off the campaign trail, although his ministers travelled across the country, urging civilians and the military to vote at large rallies that featured musicians and attracted young people. This week, a private businessman also held a carnival in Conakry in aid of Doumbouya.

About 10, 000 election observers from the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), the European Union, the United Nations, the International Organisation of the Francophonie and several other organisations will be present.

Who has been excluded?

Diallo
Former prime minister and once main challenger Cellou Dalein Diallo speaks at the Press House in Dakar on September 24, 2020, during an invitation by the foreign media in Senegal. [Seyllou/AFP] The politician was prohibited from participating in the December 28 elections.

Cellou Dalein Diallo, 73

Diallo, a long-standing opposition leader, was going to be Doumbouya’s most formidable challenger. The former prime minister (2004-2006) heads the Union of Democratic Forces of Guinea (UFDG). He contested the elections of 2010 and 2015, but his archrival, Alpha Conde, won both of them. When the coup leaders seized power in 2021, Diallo welcomed the move and pledged his willingness to work with them in restoring democracy.

However, when Diallo was the transport minister, the Doumbouya government began a corruption investigation against him in relation to the sale of Air Guinee, the country’s national carrier, in 2002. Diallo, who accused the military ruler of a witch-hunt to block him from elections, has since been forced into exile in neighbouring Senegal and in France. His party was one of three suspended in August due to “substantial deficiencies” in the documents they submitted, according to the Ministry of Territorial Administration, the body’s representative, as opposed to an independent elections commission. Diallo was also disqualified based on his residency, as the new constitution adopted in September requires that presidential candidates have their primary residence in the country.

Alpha Conde
On November 19, 2019, Guinea’s then-president Alpha Conde laughs while speaking at a conference in Berlin, Germany [John MacDougall/Reuters]

Alpha Conde, 87

After serving two five-year terms, Conde’s decision to run for a third term in 2021 caused chaos in Guinea and led to the coup in September.

A longtime opponent of military regimes in the country, Conde promised to strengthen democracy upon his election in 2010, after polls that, despite being turbulent, were also a chance for the country to depart from decades of dictatorship. In a free election, he became the first Guinean president to be elected. His government oversaw improvements in the mining sector and managed the 2014 Ebola epidemic, but is also accused of gross corruption and mismanagement.

He won a referendum in March 2020, pushing him to seek two more terms, claiming it raised his cap. The move led to widespread protests across the country that turned violent as the police and army attempted to shut them down, leading to dozens of deaths. At least 30 people were killed during the election in October 2020 as a result of the unrest. In September 2021, Conde was deposed and arrested by a group of soldiers led by Doumbouya, whom he had appointed in 2018 as head of the elite Special Forces Group. In Turkiye, it is thought that he is reportedly in exile. Conde’s Rally of the Guinean People (RPG) was one of the parties suspended in August because it had “not fulfilled the obligations required”, according to the authorities.

Sidya Toure, 80

The former prime minister (1996-1999) is another well-known opposition figure who has been sidelined. With 13% of the vote, he finished third in the historic elections of 2010. Toure is the leader of the Union of Republican Forces (UFR). He has spent a number of years living in exile in the Ivory Coast, and because of his foreign residency, he was exempt from the elections.

Who is running?

Doumbouya
Mamady Doumbouya, the leader of Guinea, waves as he poses for the Supreme Court ahead of the November 3, 2025 presidential election scheduled for December 28 in Conakry, Guinea.

General Mamadou Doumbouya, 41

The incumbent is the clear favorite to win the elections, and activists and opposition parties accuse him of using the vote to legitimize and secure his rule.

Doumbouya took power in the September 2021 coup, deposing then-president Alpha Conde after months of tension and protests. He vowed to bring democracy into the country and end the hostility.

The regional ECOWAS bloc has pressured Doumbouya to present a fast transition timeline. Initial promises of an 18-month transition were made by the military ruler, who then largely ignored two deadlines and continued to do so. However, ECOWAS, while keeping up pressure, has not been overly critical. Contrary to his fellow countrymen in Mali, Niger, and Burkinabe, who were under pressure to hold elections after their coups, rebuffed ECOWAS by disbanding the alliance and creating a new one in January. ECOWAS is wary of antagonising Doumbouya and possibly causing Guinea to join the rival alliance.

Local news reports and civil society organizations claim that the Doumbouya government has since 2022 restricted local news organizations, banned protests, and targeted activists who were arrested. A week before the elections, authorities also blocked Facebook.

More than 2, 250 kilometres of new roads, schools, and hospitals have been constructed, according to the military ruler’s supporters. They also point to the launch of the mega Simandou iron ore mine project, which saw its first iron ore exports this year, 30 years after it was licensed to operate.

International interest has been piqued by the project. Analysts say that’s partly why Western governments, with whom Doumbouya has maintained a friendly stance even as Conakry ramps up trade with China, are careful not to criticise his hold on power.

The president has promised to increase the infrastructure improvements made over the past four years as campaign posters of the smiling Doumbouya are plastered across Conakry’s streets and in Kankan, his political stronghold. He has also pledged to build better democratic institutions, fight corruption, boost health and education access, and support women and youth. He is a candidate for the GMD movement, or Generation for Modernity and Development.

Others are:

  • Former minister of education under Alpha Conde and former World Bank economist Aboulaye Yero Balde Balde is running under the Front for Democracy in Guinea (FRONDEG).
  • The Front for National Alliance (FAN) party’s only female candidate, Makale Camara, is its president. She has promised better access to water and electricity, and wants to diversify the economy beyond mining. She served from 2016 to 2017 as a former foreign minister.
  • Faya Millimono – the head of the Liberal Bloc party. He initially supported the military coup, but he now antagonizes Doumbouya because he was critical of Conde.
  • Ibrahima Abe Sylla – the former energy minister under the military government, is running under the New Generation for the Republic party. He previously ran in 2020 and 2010.
  • Abdoulaye Kourouma – the 2020 presidential candidate and former parliamentarian, is running under the Rally for Renaissance and Development party.
  • Mohamed Nabe, a member of regional electoral missions, is an expert on electoral issues. He will run under the Alliance for Renewal and Progress party.
  • Former parliamentarian Elhadj Bouna Keita is the RPG’s leader, R.P.G.
  • Mohamed Cherif Tounkara – is running as an independent candidate.

What are the main problems?

Guinea
Campaign posters of Guinean leader and presidential candidate Mamady Doumbouya are set up along a road, ahead of the presidential election scheduled for December 28, in Conakry, Guinea, on December 21, 2025]Souleymane Camara/Reuters]

The economy and mining

Guinea remains a poor country despite its immense mineral wealth. The International Labour Organization claims that the literacy rate is low and that about half of the workforce is unemployed.

Much hope for change hinges on restructuring in the mining sector to unlock lucrative deals for the country. Due to Doumbouya’s government’s reliance on the Simandou mine, which Chinese and Australian companies own stakes in, to provide sufficient funds to fund additional infrastructure and amenities. The first shipment from the mines left for China early in December, after a newly constructed railway allowed for ore to be transported out of the remote Simandou highlands to the port of Conakry. Many Guineans are optimistic about the proceeds, but there are also concerns that the government’s continued corruption could stifle the industry. Many are also concerned about the fate of the thousands of construction workers employed at the mine once building projects are complete.

Justice for the stadium massacre on September 28

In 2009, former military leader Moussa Dadis Camara, who seized power in 2008, oversaw the massacre of protesters who gathered in their tens of thousands at a stadium in Conakry to call for democratic rule. In an effort to halt their protests, Camara’s forces opened fire on the demonstrators. Many were shot, while others were crushed in the ensuing stampede. During the massacre, 109 women and girls were raped, and at least 156 were killed. It was one of the country’s most tragic events.

Camara, who eluded a coup and attempted assassination attempt months later, has long been a target of the yearned for justice and a trial in Guinea. Doumbouya’s government launched a 22-month-long trial against him, and a court convicted Camara and seven of his military commanders in July 2024. The verdict was hailed as a landmark case for justice by rights organizations. Camara was handed a 20-year sentence, and he and the others were ordered to pay compensation to the victims of the massacre. To the detriment of the victims and rights activists, Doumbouya pardoned Camara on alleged health grounds in March, just one year later.