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Trump meets with Pakistani PM, army chief as Islamabad seeks reset with US, greater regional role

Trump meets with Pakistani PM, army chief as Islamabad seeks reset with US, greater regional role
Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif speaks during a meeting with US President Donald Trump, as Pakistan Army Chief Field Marshal Asim Munir gestures, at the Oval Office in Washington on Sept. 25, 2025. (PMO handout)
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Trump meets with Pakistani PM, army chief as Islamabad seeks reset with US, greater regional role

Trump meets with Pakistani PM, army chief as Islamabad seeks reset with US, greater regional role
  • High-level engagement aimed at resetting relations between the two countries and expanding cooperation on security, trade and regional peace

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir met US President Donald J. Trump at the White House on Thursday in a high-level engagement aimed at resetting relations between the two countries and expanding cooperation on security, trade and regional peace.

The Oval Office talks marked Sharif’s first meeting with Trump since the latter’s return to power earlier this year and the first joint appearance by Pakistan’s top civilian and military leadership before a US president in years. The meeting followed a precedent-setting White House lunch between Trump and Field Marshal Munir earlier this year — conducted without civilian officials present — and which came amid shifting geopolitical dynamics, including Washington’s increasingly strained ties with New Delhi.

By pairing civilian and military leadership in the same room with the US president, Pakistan is widely seen to be signaling a more coordinated foreign policy posture aimed at strengthening its influence in wider Middle Eastern and Asian security discussions.

During what the Pakistani prime minister’s office described as a “warm and cordial” meeting, Sharif said he was confident the talks would usher in a new phase in bilateral relations.

“Under President Trump’s leadership, the Pakistan-US partnership will be further strengthened to the mutual benefit of both countries,” Sharif was quoted as saying in a statement released by his office after the meeting.

Sharif and Munir arrived at the White House shortly before 5p.m. on Thursday as Trump was signing executive orders and talking with reporters. The meeting between the two leaders was closed to the media, with Pakistan’s delegation leaving the White House at 6:18 p.m.

Ties have improved between the US and Pakistan as Trump’s relationship with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, one of the Republican president’s closest with a world leader during his first term, has become strained over India’s increased purchases of discounted Russian oil after Moscow invaded Ukraine in February 2022. India and Pakistan are neighbors and fierce rivals.

Trump has dramatically raised tariffs on India for those oil purchases in an effort to put indirect economic pressure on Moscow.

Meanwhile, the US and Pakistan reached a landmark trade agreement in July that is expected to allow Washington to help develop Pakistan’s largely untapped oil reserves and lower tariffs for Islamabad.

During Thursday’s meeting, Sharif invited American firms to invest in Pakistan’s agriculture, IT, minerals and energy sectors.

He also praised Trump as a “man of peace” whose “bold, courageous and decisive leadership” helped facilitate a ceasefire between Pakistan and India in May, averting what Islamabad said could have been a “major catastrophe in South Asia.”

The truce, brokered with US involvement, followed a four-day war in which the two nuclear-armed neighbors shared artillery, missile and drone strikes.

Security and counterterrorism cooperation featured prominently in the talks, with Sharif thanking Trump for his public endorsement of Pakistan’s counterterrorism role and calling for expanded intelligence collaboration.

Sharif has gained favor with Trump since publicly endorsing the American leader for a Nobel Peace Prize over his role in brokering the ceasefire with India. Unlike Sharif, Modi has declined to indulge Trump’s attempt to claim credit for arranging the truce.

Pakistan did split with Trump on his decision to carry out US strikes in June on three Iranian nuclear facilities.

Pakistan said the attack “constituted a serious violation of international law” as well as on the stature of the International Atomic Energy Agency.

• with inputs from AP


Quake-hit Myanmar city becomes epicenter of junta election offensive

Quake-hit Myanmar city becomes epicenter of junta election offensive
Updated 11 sec ago

Quake-hit Myanmar city becomes epicenter of junta election offensive

Quake-hit Myanmar city becomes epicenter of junta election offensive
  • The March 28 jolt killed nearly 3,800 people as it flattened swaths of Mandalay
  • The ruling junta has pledged elections beginning on December 28
MANDALAY, Myanmar: Six Myanmar war widows speak softly of their grief as they walk inside the crumbling walls of Mandalay Palace, fresh arrivals in an earthquake-wracked city strained anew by conflict.
“We feel more freedom here,” said one among them, all widows of dead soldiers.
She was evacuated from her hometown, which was “ruined by war,” to the improbable refuge of a military-run quake recovery zone several months after it struck.
The March 28 jolt killed nearly 3,800 people as it flattened swaths of Mandalay – an ancient royal capital hemmed by jungle-clad mountains and the snaking Irrawaddy River.
The 7.7-magnitude tremor dealt an especially heavy blow in a country reeling from civil war since the military seized power in a 2021 coup.
The junta has pledged elections beginning on December 28 and has touted them as a path to peace with its myriad adversaries – from ragtag pro-democracy partisans to semi-professional ethnic minority armies.
However, a UN expert has dismissed the vote as a “fraud” and rebels have declared they will block it.
The military is besieging their enclaves with new offensives, bidding to expand the poll’s reach into regions it does not currently control.
Fighter jets and helicopters howl over Mandalay’s quake-dented skyline, flying toward front lines while newly displaced civilians arrive daily, crowding shelters in a city where much was razed.
Draped over the tarpaulin-wrapped palace parapet, a new red military banner urges: “Co-operate and crush all those harming the union.”
The widows, who AFP is not identifying for security reasons, have been left in mourning and displaced in a strange and wounded place.
“Some of our husbands fell in battle right before our eyes. Some fell far away,” said one, now raising three children alone.
“I have no idea about politics,” she said. “I do not think it is good that Myanmar people fight each other.”
‘I really hate war’
The strain is not immediately visible on the streets.
Most collapsed buildings have been cleared and the scaffolding-filled city resembles one undergoing a modest construction boom.
The gem market has become an unlikely hub for those displaced from the ruby-mining town of Mogok, around 115 kilometers north of Mandalay.
The junta, which has hammered the coveted town with air strikes since it was seized by rebels last summer, has said it will not hold elections there.
Now the displaced flee to Mandalay, hawking precious stones inside a shopping mall with cracked walls where trading has been restricted to the ground-floor entrance lobby.
“Because of the heavy fighting every day more and more people are coming,” said one recent arrival, touting tiny sapphires to prospective buyers.
More than 90,000 people, many jostling for aid, are living displaced in the Mandalay region, according to UN figures.
“We are getting less and less since the earthquake,” said 62-year-old Ohn May, who was sitting on the floor with around a dozen people among their belongings in a Buddhist monastery hall.
“We have been waiting for donations like chickens waiting for feed,” Ohn May said.
The prospect of polls is irrelevant for some as they scrabble to meet their daily needs.
“I do not want to think about who is right or wrong – about the power, or the politics, or whatever,” said a 56-year-old displaced teacher. “But what I know is I really hate war.”
Weary from a near half-decade of fighting, others like Khin Maung Htwe, 55, regard the election with a nothing-to-lose mindset.
Perhaps, he reasoned, “it will bring a little bit of peace and stability.”
“With the fighting, it’s the worst situation possible,” he said.
Nothing left to give
The March earthquake hit with a force so immense that the ground sheared up to six meters in places, according to NASA analysis, tearing gaping holes into roads.
Portions of the Sky Villa condo in Mandalay were pancaked in the deadliest single site, killing 206 people, according to the managers of the upmarket mid-rise.
The last of the bodies were recovered in mid-September, said a search and rescue worker as excavators churned through the ruins one recent morning.
A security guard, who once watched the daily lives of Sky Villa’s residents, has remained at his post for the past six months.
He guards the wreck of homes that buried many alive, observing a city hobbled by the combination of natural and human-made disasters.
“Everyone has their own problems and has had to look after themselves,” said the 65-year-old, speaking on condition of anonymity.
“They haven’t been able to look after each other.”

Another tropical storm causes 4 deaths and new evacuations in the Philippines

Another tropical storm causes 4 deaths and new evacuations in the Philippines
Updated 35 min 58 sec ago

Another tropical storm causes 4 deaths and new evacuations in the Philippines

Another tropical storm causes 4 deaths and new evacuations in the Philippines
  • Bualoi, which has weakened since making landfall overnight, was the latest of back-to-back storms from the Pacific to threaten Asia
  • Bualoi made landfall in the Philippine town of San Policarpo in Eastern Samar province late Thursday with sustained winds of 110kph

MANILA: Another tropical storm barreled across Philippine islands Friday, causing at least four deaths and new evacuations of tens of thousands of people from landslide- and flood-prone villages long battered by typhoons.
Bualoi, which has weakened since making landfall overnight, was the latest of back-to-back storms from the Pacific to threaten Asia. Typhoon Ragasa, one of the strongest to hit in years, caused at least 25 deaths in the northern Philippines and Taiwan, mostly from flooding, before making landfall in China and dissipating over Vietnam.
Bualoi made landfall in the Philippine town of San Policarpo in Eastern Samar province late Thursday with sustained winds of 110kph, knocking out power in towns and villages and setting off flooding and two minor landslides, the country’s disaster-mitigation agency said in a news conference.
More than 73,000 people from Eastern Samar and Northern Samar provinces went to government emergency shelters as the storm approached, provincial officials said.
The four deaths were in the central island province of Masbate. Three were hit separately by a falling tree, a collapsed wall and falling debris and a fourth was hit by lightning Thursday night, officials said.
“We need clearing operations because most of our road networks are not really passable for food and health assistance to pass,” Masbate Gov. Ricardo Kho said in a news conference. “We also need help to have our ports reopened as early as possible for us to receive help from different provinces.”
Bualoi, locally named Opong, was the 15th tropical cyclone to hit the Philippines this year.
The fast-moving storm, which has a rain and wind band of about 450 kilometers from its center, was blowing northwest and could blow over densely populated coastal provinces south of the capital, Manila, later Friday before entering the South China Sea. It could restrengthen to a typhoon on a course toward Vietnam, Philippine forecaster said.
The latest storm hit at a sensitive time in the Philippines. Multiple investigations have implicated multiple lawmakers, including allies of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., in a corruption scandal involving flood control and related infrastructure projects. Allegations of massive kickbacks that have financed lavish lifestyles of those involved have sparked public outrage and protests in a Southeast Asian country prone to deadly floodings and typhoons.


‘Nightmare bacteria’ cases are increasing in the US

‘Nightmare bacteria’ cases are increasing in the US
Updated 26 September 2025

‘Nightmare bacteria’ cases are increasing in the US

‘Nightmare bacteria’ cases are increasing in the US
  • Bacteria that are difficult to treat due to the so-called NDM gene primarily drove the increase, CDC researchers say
  • 4,341 cases of carbapenem-resistant bacterial infections counted from 29 states in 2023, and that is just a partial count

NEW YORK: Infection rates from drug-resistant “nightmare bacteria” rose almost 70 percent between 2019 and 2023, according to a new report from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention scientists.
Bacteria that are difficult to treat due to the so-called NDM gene primarily drove the increase, CDC researchers wrote in an article published Monday in the Annals of Internal Medicine. Only two antibiotics work against those infections, and the drugs are expensive and must be administered through an IV, researchers said.
Bacteria with the gene were once considered exotic, linked to a small number of patients who received medical care overseas. Though the numbers are still small, the rate of US cases jumped more than fivefold in recent years, the researchers reported.
“The rise of NDMs in the US is a grave danger and very worrisome,” said David Weiss, an Emory University infectious diseases researcher, in an email.
It’s likely many people are unrecognized carriers of the drug-resistant bacteria, which could lead to community spread, the CDC scientists said.

This 2019 illustration provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention depicts carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae bacteria. (CDC via AP)

That may play out in doctors’ offices across the country, as infections long considered routine — like urinary tract infections — could become harder to treat, said Dr. Maroya Walters, one of the report’s authors.
Antimicrobial resistance occurs when germs such as bacteria and fungi gain the power to fight off the drugs designed to kill them. The misuse of antibiotics was a big reason for the rise — unfinished or unnecessary prescriptions that didn’t kill the germs made them stronger.
In recent years, the CDC has drawn attention to ” nightmare bacteria ” resistant to a wide range of antibiotics. That includes carbapenems, a class of antibiotics considered a last resort for treatment of serious infections.
Researchers drew data from 29 states that do the necessary testing and reporting of carbapenem-resistant bacteria.
They counted 4,341 cases of carbapenem-resistant bacterial infections from those states in 2023, with 1,831 of them the NDM variety. The researchers did not say how many of the infected people died.
The rate of carbapenem-resistant infections rose from just under 2 per 100,000 people in 2019 to more than 3 per 100,000 in 2023 — an increase of 69 percent. But the rate of NDM cases rose from around 0.25 to about 1.35 — an increase of 460 percent, the authors said.
A researcher not involved in the study said the increase is probably related to the COVID-19 pandemic.
“We know that there was a huge surge in antibiotic use during the pandemic, so this likely is reflected in increasing drug resistance,” said Dr. Jason Burnham, a Washington University researcher, in an email.
The CDC’s count is only a partial picture.
Many states are not fully testing and reporting cases. Even in states that do, cases tend to be among hospital patients sick enough to warrant special testing. Many hospitals also aren’t able to do the testing needed to detect certain forms of genetic resistance.
The CDC researchers did not have data from some of the most populous states, including California, Florida, New York and Texas, which means the absolute number of US infections “is definitely underestimated,” Burnham said.
This is not the first study to report a rise. A CDC report published in June noted an increase in NDM cases in New York City between 2019 and 2024.

 


Pentagon chief to address rare major gathering of top US military brass

Pentagon chief to address rare major gathering of top US military brass
Updated 26 September 2025

Pentagon chief to address rare major gathering of top US military brass

Pentagon chief to address rare major gathering of top US military brass
  • The Pentagon did not provide an explanation

WASHINGTON: Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth will address a major gathering next week of senior US military officers who will travel from around the globe to attend, President Donald Trump said Thursday.
Trump confirmed to reporters in the Oval Office that the highly unusual meeting would take place, saying: “I love it. I mean, I think it’s great.”
“Let him be friendly with the generals and admirals from all over the world,” the president said.
Vice President JD Vance also downplayed the significance of the meeting, telling reporters that it was “actually not unusual at all,” and saying “it’s odd that you guys have made it into such a big story.”
Neither official confirmed the purpose of the gathering of top military brass.
The Pentagon likewise did not provide an explanation, with spokesman Sean Parnell only saying in a statement that Hegseth “will be addressing his senior military leaders early next week.”
In May, Hegseth ordered major cuts to the number of general and flag officers in the US military, but it was unclear if the meeting is related to that directive.
The Pentagon has seen a series of major shakeups this year under President Donald Trump’s administration, which has fired several of the country’s most senior officers, usually without providing an explanation.


US Defense Secretary Hegseth says soldiers in Wounded Knee massacre will keep their Medals of Honor

US Defense Secretary Hegseth says soldiers in Wounded Knee massacre will keep their Medals of Honor
Updated 26 September 2025

US Defense Secretary Hegseth says soldiers in Wounded Knee massacre will keep their Medals of Honor

US Defense Secretary Hegseth says soldiers in Wounded Knee massacre will keep their Medals of Honor
  • US Army soldiers killed an estimated 250 Lakota Sioux tribepeople, including women and children, in Wounded Knee, South Dakota, in 1890
  • The soldiers were trying to disarm Native American fighters who had already surrendered at their camp
  • Hegseth’s predecessor, Lloyd Austin, ordered the review of the awards in 2024 after a Congressional recommendation in the 2022 defense bill

 

WASHINGTON: Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has announced that he has decided that the 20 soldiers who received the Medal of Honor for the actions in 1890 at Wounded Knee will keep their awards in a video posted to social media Thursday evening.
Hegseth’s predecessor, Lloyd Austin, ordered the review of the awards in 2024 after a Congressional recommendation in the 2022 defense bill — itself a reflection of efforts by some lawmakers to rescind the awards for those who participated in the bloody massacre on South Dakota’s Pine Ridge Indian Reservation near Wounded Knee Creek.
While the events of that day are sometimes described as a battle, historical records show that the US Army, which was in the midst of amid a campaign to repress the tribes in the area, killed an estimated 250 Native Americans, including women and children, of the Lakota Sioux tribe, while attempting to disarm Native American fighters who had already surrendered at their camp.
“We’re making it clear that (the soldiers) deserve those medals,” Hegseth said in the video, before adding that “their place in our nation’s history is no longer up for debate.”
After the fighting, Medals of Honor were given to 20 soldiers from the 7th Cavalry Regiment, and their awards cite a range of actions including bravery, efforts to rescue fellow troops and actions to “dislodge Sioux Indians” who were concealed in a ravine.
The event also became a celebrated part of the regiment’s history, with their coat of arms still featuring the head of a Native American chief to “commemorate Indian campaigns,” according to the military’s Institute of Heraldry.
In 1990, Congress apologized to the descendants of those killed at Wounded Knee but did not revoke the medals.
According to Hegseth, the review panel ordered by Austin “concluded that these brave soldiers should, in fact, rightfully keep their medals from actions,” but an official from the defense secretary’s office couldn’t say if the report he was referencing in the video would be made public.
President Donald Trump issued an executive order in March titled “Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History” that decried efforts to reinterpret American history and, since then, Hegseth has undertaken multiple actions that have subverted the recommendations of a Congressionally-mandated commission that examined the use of Confederate names and references in the military.
He reverted the names of several Army bases back to their original, Confederate-linked names, though by honoring different figures.
Hegseth also restored a 1914 memorial to the Confederacy that was removed from Arlington National Cemetery. The monument features a classical female figure, crowned with olive leaves, representing the American South, alongside sanitized depictions of slavery.
In September, the US Military Academy at West Point, New York, also confirmed that a painting of Gen. Robert E. Lee dressed in his Confederate uniform was back on display in the school’s library after being removed in 2022. The portrait shows a Black man leading Lee’s horse in the background, which had been hanging in the library since the 1950s before it was placed in storage.