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South Korea spy agency says Kim Jong Un’s daughter is likely heir to dictatorship

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South Korea spy agency says Kim Jong Un’s daughter is likely heir to dictatorship

The approximately 10-year-old daughter of North Korean supreme leader Kim Jong Un will likely succeed her father in the dictatorship. 

South Korea’s National Intelligence Service announced Thursday that Kim Ju Ae is forecast as the dictator’s very likely heir apparent, according to all available data collected.

“Based on analyses on her public activities and the level of the North’s respect toward her since her public appearance, Kim Ju-ae appears to be the most likely successor,” said National Intelligence Service official Cho Tae-yong in a report to the South Korean parliament, according to Yonhap News Agency.

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In this photo provided by the North Korean government, Kim Ju Ae attends a military parade to mark the 75th founding anniversary of the Korean People’s Army on Kim Il Sung Square in Pyongyang, North Korea. ((Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service via AP, File))

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The NIS is leaving open a variety of possibilities for succession, given that Kim Jong Un is believed to have at least one other child who has not been seen by the public.

Ju Ae made her first public appearance in November 2022, accompanying her father and mother, Ri Sol Ju, to an intercontinental ballistic missile launch.

Since then, Ju Ae has been photographed extensively alongside her father attending parades, dining with the top brass and touring military facilities.

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In this photo provided by the North Korean government, supreme leader Kim Jong Un, center, and his daughter Ju Ae, center right, review the honor guard during their visit to the navy headquarters in North Korea. (Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service via AP)

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Previously, intelligence groups have said it was “too early” to determine Ju Ae’s role.

Analysts have pointed to consistent, high-profile appearances over the last year as significant evidence for her heir-apparent status.

“By accompanying her father on major events, she’s like learning kingship and building a human network at a tender age,” said Sejong Institute analyst Cheong Seong-Chang.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, right, and his daughter inspect the site of a missile launch at Pyongyang International Airport in Pyongyang, North Korea. ((Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service via AP))

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Earlier this year, South Korean officials announced it has reason to believe the North Korean dictator’s first child is a male.

“We do not have detailed evidence that his first child is a son,” said Rep. Yoo Sang-beom of the People Power Party. “But we are convinced that the first child is certainly a son based on intelligence that has been shared with an external intelligence agency.”

The mysterious eldest child of Kim Jong Un has been a source of speculation for years, and the ramifications of their gender could be significant to the future of the government.

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In the SEC, the Court Just Looks Better

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In the SEC, the Court Just Looks Better

When the LSU women’s basketball team took the court for its SEC Tournament quarterfinal matchup with Oklahoma Friday, Tigers coach Kim Mulkey’s bedazzled basketball-print jacket had no competition for attention along the sideline.

Every other major conference weaves advertisements into its tourney, from event-level sponsorships to company logos on the hardwood—or LED-lit glass in the Big 12’s case this year. Even the Ivy League tourney is presented by TIAA. The SEC, however, has stayed comparatively clean. 

Instead, SEC logos are everywhere at the start of March. Center court. Baseline. Stanchion. Underside of the jumbotron. And almost everywhere else is the league’s logo: It Just Means More. 

It also looks better.

Business emblems have permeated pro sports—sewn onto jerseys, stamped onto equipment, digitally plastered behind players. Now they’re increasingly common in college too, where player pay has turned every dollar into a competitive advantage. The NCAA approved uniform patches in January, 18 months after allowing ads on college football fields. 

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Individual SEC schools have seized those commercial opportunities. Arkansas just announced a patch deal with Tyson Foods to go with the on-field logo that was already present at Donald W. Reynolds Razorback Stadium. 

But the SEC has seemingly decided it has enough money, for now at least. Its football championship field also didn’t have a sponsored component. One doesn’t appear to be coming for the men’s hoops tourney next week. Last year, the conference still distributed $1 billion in revenue to its 16 members, becoming the first league to claim 10-figure earnings (the Big Ten likely reached the same milestone, but its financials don’t drop until May).

There are still some ads at this week’s women’s tournament in South Carolina. A digital board between the coaches hawks Bush’s Beans, Johnsonville sausages and T-Mobile phone service. A small Allstate mark stretches behind the basket. PepsiCo surely pays for the Gatorade coolers loitering behind the benches. 

But those are exceptions that remind the audience just how rare the clean court is.

In February, countless Olympics watchers expressed their appreciation for the IOC’s (at this point only somewhat) clean venue policy. The Masters always stands out for its minimal sponsorships. Same goes for Wimbledon. Those events feel special because they are, turning down checks for a sense of sanctity. The NCAA itself has typically kept its tournament fields simple, too. 

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The Southeastern Conference is basically one long video board away from entering that pantheon of viewer-first design, letting the athletes shine alone. But I’ll happily settle for just the occasional bratwurst ad. 

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CENTCOM issues safety warning to Iranian civilians as regime uses ‘heavily populated’ areas for launches

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CENTCOM issues safety warning to Iranian civilians as regime uses ‘heavily populated’ areas for launches

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U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) on Sunday issued a safety warning to civilians in Iran, accusing the regime of launching military operations from densely populated areas and putting civilian lives at risk.

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CENTCOM said Iranian forces are using “heavily populated” cities, including Dezful, Isfahan and Shiraz, to launch one-way attack drones and ballistic missiles. U.S. forces urged civilians in Iran to remain at home, warning that locations used for military purposes could lose protected status under international law and become legitimate targets.

“Iran’s terrorist regime is blatantly disregarding civilian lives by attacking Gulf partners while compromising the safety of their own people,” Adm. Brad Cooper, commander of CENTCOM, said in a statement.

CENTCOM said U.S. forces take “every feasible precaution” to minimize civilian harm but cannot guarantee safety near facilities used by the Iranian regime for military purposes.

Missiles fired from Iran toward Israel streak across the sky over the West Bank city of Hebron as some are intercepted by Israeli air defense systems on March 7, 2026. (Wisam Hashlamoun/Anadolu via Getty Images)

CENTCOM’s announcement said Tehran has launched hundreds of ballistic missiles and thousands of drones since the start of Operation Epic Fury on Feb. 28, though launch rates have declined as U.S. and partner forces have targeted Iran’s military capabilities.

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Iran has targeted civilian airports and hotels across the Middle East as part of retaliatory attacks against several Gulf states including the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Bahrain.

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Debris of a missile fired from Iran toward Israel lies in the Beni Zeid area near Ramallah in the West Bank on March 7, 2026. (Issam Rimawi/Anadolu via Getty Images)

The UAE’s Ministry of Defense on Sunday released footage of its air defenses intercepting and destroying Iranian drones.

The ministry said 17 ballistic missiles were detected, with 16 destroyed and one falling into the sea. 

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Air defenses also detected 117 drones, intercepting 113 of them while four fell within the country’s territory.

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Plumes of smoke rise following reported explosions in Tehran, Iran, on March 2, 2026. (Sohrab/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images)

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Since the start of Iran’s attacks, the UAE says it has intercepted 221 ballistic missiles and 1,342 drones, along with eight cruise missiles.

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Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian claimed on X that Iran has not attacked “friendly and neighboring countries,” saying its strikes have been aimed at U.S. military bases and installations in the region.

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How targeting of desalination plants could disrupt water supply in the Gulf

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How targeting of desalination plants could disrupt water supply in the Gulf

Bahrain has said an Iranian drone attack caused material damage to a water desalination plant in the country, marking the first time a Gulf nation has reported targeting any such facility during the eight days of the war between Iran and the US and Israel.

The attack on Sunday comes a day after Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said a freshwater desalination plant on Qeshm Island in southern Iran was attacked by the United States.

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“Water supply in 30 villages has been impacted. Attacking Iran’s infrastructure is a dangerous move with grave consequences. The US set this precedent, not Iran,” he said on X on Saturday.

While Tehran has not yet commented on the Bahrain attack, it has raised questions about the vulnerability of the Gulf countries, which depend on desalination plants for the majority of their water supply.

How important are water desalination plants to the Gulf region? Can water security in the Gulf be guaranteed amid a widening of military targets to include energy and other civilian sites?

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What are desalination plants?

A desalination plant primarily converts seawater into water suitable for drinking purposes as well as for irrigation and industrial use.

The process of desalination involves removing salt, algae and other pollutants from seawater using a thermal process or membrane-based technologies.

According to the US Department of Energy, desalination systems “heat water so that it evaporates into steam, leaving behind impurities, and then condenses back into a liquid for human use”.

Meanwhile, membrane-based desalination involves “a class of technologies in which saline water passes through a semipermeable material that allows water through but holds back dissolved solids like salts”.

Reverse osmosis is the most popular membrane technology. Most countries in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) use reverse osmosis since it is an energy-efficient technique.

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Why are desalination plants important to the Gulf?

Water is scarce in the Gulf region due to the arid climate and irregular rainfall. Countries in the Gulf also have very limited natural freshwater resources. Groundwater, together with desalinated water, accounts for about 90 percent of the region’s main water resources, according to a 2020 report by the Gulf Research Center.

But in recent years, as groundwater has also begun to deteriorate as a result of climate change, Gulf countries have begun relying heavily on energy-intensive seawater desalination to meet their water needs.

More than 400 desalination plants are located on the Arabian Gulf shores stretching from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to Kuwait, providing water to one of the most water-scarce regions in the world.

According to a 2023 research paper published by the Arab Center Washington DC, GCC member states account for about 60 percent of global water desalination capacity, producing almost 40 percent of the total desalinated water in the world.

About 42 percent of the UAE’s drinking water comes from desalination plants, while that figure is 90 percent in Kuwait, 86 percent in Oman, and 70 percent in Saudi Arabia. Saudi Arabia also produces more desalinated water than any other country.

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Desalination has also played a crucial role in enabling economic development in the region, according to Naser Alsayed, an environmental researcher specialising in the Gulf states.

He noted that after the discovery of oil in the late 1930s, Gulf states had very limited natural freshwater resources and could not meet the demands created by population growth and expanding economic activity.

“Desalination plants were therefore introduced,” he told Al Jazeera, adding that the importance of desalinated water in supporting the Gulf’s development is often overlooked.

“As a result, targeting or disrupting desalination facilities would place much of the region’s economic stability and growth at significant risk,” he said.

“Secondly, desalination is the main source of freshwater for most GCC states, especially smaller and highly water-scarce countries such as Bahrain, Kuwait and Qatar. Because this water is primarily used for human consumption, desalination carries a strong humanitarian dimension and is essential for sustaining daily life in the region, making any disruption to these facilities particularly significant for the population,” he added.

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Iran also uses desalination plants, which have been installed in coastal areas such as Qeshm Island in the Gulf. But Iran also has many rivers and dams and is not as heavily reliant on desalination plants as other countries in the Gulf region.

If a desalination plant is attacked, what is the impact?

The Gulf’s heavy reliance on desalination plants has made it vulnerable during times of conflict.

During the 1990-1991 Gulf War, Iraqi forces intentionally destroyed most of Kuwait’s desalination capacity, and the damage to its water supply was severe.

Raha Hakimdavar, a hydrologist, told Al Jazeera that in the long-term, attacking these plants can also impact domestic food production, which mostly uses groundwater.

“However, the pressures from competing needs can divert this water away from domestic production. This can be especially challenging because the region is also highly food import dependent and is facing potential food security challenges due to the compromising of the Strait of Hormuz,” said Hakimdavar, who is a Senior Advisor to the Deans at Georgetown University in Qatar and the Earth Commons.

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A 2010 CIA report (PDF) also warned that while “national dependence on desalinated water varies substantially among Persian Gulf countries, disruption of desalination facilities in most of the Arab countries could have more consequences than the loss of any industry or commodity.”

According to Alsayed, the impact of a plant being attacked in the region, however, depends on the local scenario.

“For Saudi Arabia, which is the least dependent on desalination and has significant geographic space, facilities on the Red Sea provide resilience. The UAE has 45 days of water storage aligned with its 2036 water security strategy, so contingency plans are in place to manage potential disruptions,” he said.

“The effects are likely to be felt more acutely in smaller states that are highly dependent on desalination like Qatar, Bahrain, and Kuwait, which have minimal strategic reservoirs,” he noted.

“The most significant impact, in my view, is psychological,” Alsayed said. “Water is essential to human life, and the perception of risk can cause fear and panic, which is particularly challenging in the current environment in the region and where authorities are working to maintain calm.”

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How can water security be guaranteed?

As attacks on Gulf countries continue, with energy and civilian infrastructure being targeted, Alsayed highlighted that it is important for GCC countries to view water security as a regional issue rather than an independent concern for each member state.

“The countries need to coordinate more closely and work together. The GCC has a strong platform to prepare for water challenges, but has not fully utilised it,” he said.

Alsayed noted that the GCC Unified Water Strategy 2035 called for all member states to have a national integrated energy and water plan by 2020, but this has not yet been achieved.

“Whether through unified desalination grids, shared regional strategic water reserves, or diversifying water resource goals, this is the way to usher a new era to strengthen Gulf water security,” he said.

Hakimdavar, the hydrologist, said there is no replacement for desalination in the GCC in the near-term.

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But she added that the GCC countries can rely on strategic water storage reservoirs – many countries maintain large water reserves that can supply cities for several days or longer.

“Countries can also diversify water supply systems, and also invest in smaller, more distributed desalination plants powered by renewable energy to reduce reliance on a few very large facilities,” she added.

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