US jobless claims slow in last full week of 2025 amid weak labour market

Saudi-UAE fallout and its impact on Yemen’s recognised government

The United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia’s partner in the Arab coalition in Yemen, and its Gulf Arab neighbor, Saudi Arabia, have a history of conflict.

Without informing Saudi Arabia or the internationally recognized Yemeni government, two ships reportedly entered the port of Mukalla carrying more than 80 vehicles and weapons and ammunition bound for the Southern Transitional Council (STC).

The two allies’ differences in Yemen are significant, and this may be the turning point for Yemen right now.

Following a military uprising between Saudi Arabia and the UAE in the Yemeni governorate in December, Mukalla is in control.

In this conflict, there are two factions that each are loyal to a different political party: the Presidential Leadership Council (PLC). Before it exploded in public over the past few days, the difference had been simmering for years in the shadows.

The Houthis, who brutally overran the capital Sanaa in 2015 and later imposed their own government, are key members of the Arab military coalition in Yemen.

Since the UAE-backed Southern Transitional Council (STC) formed in 2017 as a separatist political and military force seeking an independent state in South-South Yemen, an independent state, between 1967 and 1990, this conflict of interest has been escalating gradually.

The STC forces earlier in December overran all southern governorates, including Hadramout and al-Mahra governorates. Saudi Arabia, which saw the action as a threat to its national security, did not like it.

With its oil and gas resources and related infrastructure, Hadramout also contributes to Yemen’s economic development and is a key border crossing with Saudi Arabia, which contributes to border security and trade.

Politically, economically, and militarily, Yemen’s current situation will be cast a dark cloud by the most recent public conflict between Saudi Arabia and the UAE. Saudi and Emirati were the two political parties that made up Yemen’s political elites, with the government members pursuing either of the two camps.

The eight-member PLC, an internationally renowned organization that is already divided into camps affiliated with Saudi Arabia and the UAE, would provide the most authoritative insight into the differences.

Sultan al-Arada, Abdullah al-Alimi Bawazir, Othman Hussein Mujalli, and Rashad al-Alimi, the PLC president, are all members of one camp. Abdul Rahman al-Mahrami (also known as Abu Zaraa), Tariq Mohammed Saleh, and Faraj Salmin al-Bahsani form the second, which is led by Aidarus al-Zoubaidi, the STC force’s head.

Following the Saudi attack on the ships carrying weapons to the STC, the leaders of both camps made two contradictory statements regarding al-Alimi’s request for the UAE to leave Yemen. One was opposed to the UAE’s withdrawal from Yemen, showing that they are representing regional players’ interests while also confirming that Yemen is a site of proxy war.

The quick developments and subsequent events in Yemen have caused the country to enter a new internal conflict with the political and military components that make up the legitimate government, along with new internal conflict between numerous armed groups.

Additionally, Sanaa and Yemen’s most populous provinces, which were under the control of the Houthi rebellion in the north, are now under focus.

Faceing the Houthis’ takeover was the legitimate Yemeni government’s and the Saudi-led Arab coalition’s main objectives. After more than a decade of armed conflict, the nation is currently on the verge of collapse and a new tumult, which could allow the Houthis to retake control of the nation.

The Saudi-led coalition’s recent events will further deteriorate, casting doubt on its cohesion and ability to accomplish Yemen’s stated joint goals.

Putin says Russia believes it will win in Ukraine in New Year’s Eve address

Vladimir Putin, the president of Russia, made the comments during his televised annual New Year’s Eve address in which he claimed his country believes it will win the war in Ukraine almost four years after launching an invasion of the neighboring country.

The Russian leader called on the nation on Wednesday to “support our heroes” fighting in Ukraine, where troops have been conducting a brutal offensive since February 2022.

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Although the outcome of the conflict is still largely undetermined despite concerted peace negotiations and ongoing intensive fighting on the battlefield, “we believe in you and our victory,” he said.

Boris Yeltsin, Putin’s predecessor, unapologetically resigned during his New Year’s Eve address, giving him the reign of the new millennium. He had been serving as his prime minister for months.

Putin has since attempted to end what he has called years of humiliation following the Soviet Union’s collapse in 1991, making numerous positive references to the rule of Soviet dictator Josef Stalin, and attempting to end it.

Before Bashar al-Assad’s Syrian regime fell years later, with heavy bombing of civilians in opposition areas, he devasted the breakaway republic of Chechnya, invaded Georgia, and supported it.

Europe has been concerned that if the Kremlin’s conflict with Ukraine doesn’t end right away, it could spread to other countries.

shares video in Russia

Russia’s defense ministry had earlier made a video that claimed to show a downed drone that had been involved in a recent, attempted Ukrainian attack on one of Putin’s residences in Novgorod, a region in northwestern Russia.

Kyiv denies that any attack occurred, accusing Moscow of fabricating the evidence to support further aggression. In response to the alleged attack, which Russia has labelled a “terrorist” act, it has stated that it will take a tougher line in US-mediated peace negotiations over Ukraine.

A Russian service member appears next to a drone that the Russian Defense Ministry claims was shot down as a result of an alleged Ukrainian attack on one of Putin’s residences. [Handout: Russian Defence Ministry via Reuters]

No one was hurt and Putin’s residence was unharmed, according to Moscow, who claims that 91 drones were shot down by air defenses as part of the alleged attack.

A damaged drone was captured in a darkened night on camera in a forested area. A witness from the village of Roshchino was also captured on a video that the ministry called a witness and claimed to be a local villager.

The United Arab Emirates, India, and Pakistan expressed concern over Russia’s claim, which in turn criticized Kyiv for their comments on an attack that it claims never occurred.

However, the Western allies of Ukraine have expressed more skepticism about the Russian claim.

The top diplomat of the European Union, Kaja Kallas, accused Russia of trying to “derail” peace talks with its “unfounded claims” on Wednesday.

Russia’s claim that Ukraine recently targeted key Russian government sites is a deliberate diversion is. She posted on X on Russia’s website to criticize any real progress made by Ukraine and its Western allies.

“No one should accept unfounded allegations from the aggressor, who has repeatedly targeted Ukraine’s infrastructure and its citizens since the start of the war.”

Russian attack in Ukraine's Odesa region.
Emergency services personnel work to put out a fire in Odesa, Ukraine, on December 31, 2025, in this image provided by the Ukrainian Emergency Service (Ukrainian Emergency Service via AP).

Odesa injured children are among them.

Meanwhile, Ukrainian officials reported that six people had been injured when overnight Russian drones attacked Odesa’s southern city’s apartment complexes and the power grid.

According to regional military administration head Oleh Kiper, a toddler and two other children were among the injured in the bombardment, and four apartment buildings were also damaged.

DTEK, a utility company, reported significant damage to two of its energy centers. It will take time to restore the equipment to its original state, according to DTEK.

According to Russian media outlets, the top general of Russia’s forces were moving forward in the Sumy and Kharkiv regions of northeastern Ukraine in an effort to create what it calls a buffer zone in the area in 2026.

According to RIA reporting, President Vladimir Putin had authorized the expansion of the so-called buffer zone close to the Russian border in the previous year.

How Donald Trump launched a new push to amass US government data in 2025

A “great leap forward”

However, according to Schwartz, both under the leadership of Democrats and Republicans, the consolidation of government data has continued over the years.

He claimed that surveillance is “biased, unforgivably.”

However, the process accelerated with Trump’s second term. According to Schwartz, the Trump administration’s actions violate privacy laws, indicating a “dangerous” transition away from protections from the Nixon era.

The elimination of the safeguards from Watergate, which were meant to keep databases separated, has been the top issue with the federal government, he said.

Schwartz noted that Trump’s consolidation efforts have been hampered by the use of the new, fully integrated data systems.

According to Schwartz, “as the current administration has made a significant leap forward in terms of surveillance and invasion of privacy, so has it also been a less transparent government in terms of the general public understanding what it is doing.”

Trump had already signed an executive order on March 20 that forbade government organizations from “taking all necessary steps” to end what he called “data silos.”

US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the IRS struck a deal in April to exchange taxpayers’ personal information, including their names and addresses.

In order to accomplish Trump’s goal of deporting immigrants, the memo was seen as a tool.

The agencies’ data-sharing agreement was put on hold by a federal court in November. However, other initiatives are still being made.

The Supreme Court upheld DOGE’s request to gain access to sensitive Social Security data in June. And just this month, the Trump administration pressed states to share information about food aid recipients in order to avoid losing funding.

While the data consolidation project appears to focus on immigrants, Venzke argued that people of all races shouldn’t be surprised if their personal information is later used to evade detection.

There is no justification for it to be restricted to people without legal documents. They are vastly expanding the existing system to include all kinds of information about US citizens, according to Venzke.

This is how the GHF weaponised food aid in Gaza

NewsFeed

As families risked their lives to access aid in Gaza this year, thousands of Palestinians were killed or injured at or close to food distribution centers. Tareq Abu Azzoum, a reporter for Al Jazeera’s Tareq Abu Azzoum, discusses how starving civilians were used as “deathtraps” by GHF.