As negotiations between Washington and Tehran remain deadlocked, US President Donald Trump convened a high-level meeting Friday with senior US national security officials, including the CIA director, secretary of defense, and vice president, to discuss scenarios for a possible return to military confrontation with the Islamic Republic.
Washington
Oregon WR Malik Benson puts ‘stamp’ on Washington rivalry with electrifying touchdown
SEATTLE – Malik Benson, a senior wide receiver who transferred to Oregon last offseason, received a crash course on the bitter rivalry between the Ducks and Washington Huskies last week from center Iapani Laloulu.
“I just got well educated,” Benson said. “Just with what this game means to Oregon fans.”
Armed with that knowledge, Benson set out Saturday at Husky Stadium to do whatever he could to help the No. 6 Ducks win and advance to the College Football Playoffs.
When the 26-14 UO victory had ended, Benson had produced five catches for 102 yards and the game’s most dazzling play on a 64-yard touchdown in the fourth quarter that helped secure the win.
“I’m just glad I could put my stamp on it and my team could put our stamp on it,” he said.
The pivotal play came when Oregon needed it the most.
The Huskies had scored a touchdown to trim UO’s lead to 19-14 about midway through the fourth quarter.
Benson said UO’s offense took the field sensing that Washington had seized the momentum and it was up to them to take it back with a score.
Oregon’s ensuing drive faced a critical third-and-nine at its 36 when the pivotal play-call came in.
The formation called for Benson to line up wide right as the single receiver. On the left were three receivers. At the snap, Benson said he saw UW left cornerback Tacario Davis back up, giving the receiver room to run a dig route inside against Washington’s three-deep zone.
Benson said he trusted that Moore would make the same read and deliver the ball to the right spot. As it turned out, Moore was on the same page.
Moore, who credited Washington for doing a good job disguising coverages all game, determined during his pre-snap read that the backside dig from Benson could pop open.
“I knew I had numbers backside and Malik, knowing he would get his depth, knowing he could be a playmaker with the ball in his hands, I just had to find a way to give it to him,” Moore said.
Moore, while dropping back, glanced left to the three-receiver route combination before coming back to Benson, who cut inside to a wide-open area at midfield.
Moore delivered his pass on time, but a tad high, forcing Benson to go airborne to make the grab at the Washington 48.
“Once I caught it and landed on my feet, I was like, yeah, it’s my time to turn up,” Benson said.
Five Washington defenders were in position to make a play on Benson with Oregon tight end Kenyon Sadiq as the lone blocker downfield. He secured the block on free safety Alex McLaughlin while Benson’s speed left the other four defenders grasping at air.
Benson sailed into the end zone for a memorable 64-yard touchdown that gave the Ducks a 26-14 lead with 7:55 on the clock.
“At the end of the day, I threw him the pass, but he did the most work,” Moore said.
In the end zone, Benson dropped the football, stared up at Washington fans and then made a ‘W’ with his hands. He then simulated breaking the ‘W’ by bringing his hands down over his knee.
“It just came in the moment,” Benson said. “I just seen the big ‘Ws’ all over everywhere and I just knew that I had to get into that end zone so I could get that celebration.”
Benson, who caught five passes for a career-high 102 yards against the Huskies, has made several plays that impacted wins this season.
Among the most notable: His 85-yard punt return for a touchdown against USC gave the Ducks a 21-14 lead in the second quarter. Oregon won 42-27.
Two weeks earlier at Iowa, Benson caught a 24-yard sideline pass to the Hawkeyes’ 27-yard line to help set up the game-winning field goal in an 18-16 victory.
But Saturday’s catch and run could be the play Oregon fans most remember Benson by, given the opponent, the timing of the play, the wow factor and that it came in a victory that thrust the Ducks into the College Football Playoff.
Benson said not letting down his teammates motivates him.
“Just knowing that I’m an older guy and that guys look at me, so just making plays with my numbers called,” he said.
Benson came to Oregon hoping to return to the national playoffs. He got there in 2023 with Alabama as a backup. His one year at Florida State in 2024 crumbled into a 2-10 season.
Now he’s returning with the Ducks.
“Just blessed for the opportunity,” Benson said.
Washington
Report: Skydiver killed in midair collision in Washington
BOISE, Idaho (CBS2) — KXLY is reporting that a skydiver was killed Sunday evening in a midair collision near Ritzville, Washington.
The Adams County Sheriff’s Office is investigating what exactly occurred, but early information indicates that two skydivers collided in midair, killing one and seriously injuring the other. The survivor was transported to a local hospital, but their condition remains undisclosed at this time.
This is a developing story.
Washington
CIA knows what Iran’s power is even as Washington continues to deny | The Jerusalem Post
At the same time, Qatar and Pakistan launched last-minute, ultimately fruitless mediation efforts to prevent further escalation.
Sources close to the White House say Trump has grown increasingly frustrated with the stalled diplomacy and is now weighing the option of a “decisive final military operation” as a way to end the crisis.
Although no final decision has yet been made, the confrontation appears to be approaching a potentially dangerous turning point, raising a deeper strategic question: Does the CIA, in coordination with Mossad, now see regime change not as a distant aspiration but as an increasingly realistic objective?
If one moves beyond merely examining the “behavior of the regime” and confronts the larger question, who exactly is the United States truly dealing with in Iran’s regime?, one arrives at a dilemma that America’s intelligence community, particularly the CIA, has wrestled with for decades.
The United States still speaks to the Islamic Republic’s “diplomatic façade,” while real authority remains concentrated within the ideological-security structure of the IRGC and, outwardly, the office of Khamenei.
When the upheaval of 1979 succeeded in Iran, the CIA did not truly understand who Khomeini was, nor did it fully grasp that the ideological engine driving him, the dictatorship of the Shiite cleric and the doctrine of Velayat-e Faqih, would ultimately give birth to a religious dictatorship and a Shiite Islamic caliphate in Tehran.
The CIA also failed to accurately foresee that America’s most loyal and strategically important ally in the Middle East, the late Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, would ultimately lose power. Even after the 1983 bombing of the US Embassy in Beirut, the CIA still appeared unable to fully comprehend the mushroom-like rise of Islamist terrorism across the region. That reality cannot simply be concealed or erased from history.
During the years 1975–1978, whenever SAVAK, one of the CIA and Mossad’s closest intelligence partners during the Cold War, warned the CIA that the KGB stood behind both Marxist terrorist movements and Islamist militant networks, those warnings were frequently dismissed or underestimated.
Khomeini’s inner circle also cultivated the illusion that the CIA had orchestrated a coup in Iran in 1953 and removed a so-called “popular prime minister.” Yet few ever asked a more fundamental question: when exactly had that prime minister been elected by the Iranian people, under what election, and through what constitutional authority?
Under Iran’s constitutional monarchy, the Shah possessed the legal authority to appoint and dismiss prime ministers. That populist prime minister had ruled under martial law, attacked and burned opposition newspapers, and effectively paralyzed the national parliament. Had he succeeded, Iran itself could very likely have fallen into the orbit of the Soviet Union in 1953.
What remains remarkable is that even figures close to Khomeini later acknowledged maintaining contacts with the United States and the CIA between 1953 and 1979. In that sense, the narrative of the so-called “CIA coup” in Iran gradually evolved into a repetitive, mythologized, and politically convenient tale. The late Shah himself later wrote in his memoirs that the CIA neither protected him nor stood by its longtime ally, and that in 1979 it ultimately “stabbed him in the back.”
Creating a ‘new Middle East’
Now, after 47 years, the CIA, in coordination with Mossad, may have assumed responsibility for a campaign against the Islamic Republic in pursuit of what many describe as a “new Middle East.”
On the first day of the attack, Tehran’s dictator, Ali Khamenei, was removed from the scene. Since 2001, following the September 11 attacks and the formal launch of the war on terror, the CIA has gradually removed a series of obstructive figures from its path: from Imad Mughniyeh (2008) and Osama bin Laden (2011) to Qassem Soleimani (2020) and Ali Khamenei (2026).
In each of these historic eliminations, cooperation with Mossad reportedly continued in various forms.
But why did the Tehran regime not collapse after the humiliating death of Ali Khamenei? Because regime change was never Washington’s primary objective. Nor has genuine political will for regime change ever truly existed within Washington’s strategic establishment. Even though, over the past 47 years, with the rise of the radical Khomeinist Shiite caliphate in Tehran, America effectively surrendered the Iranian arena to Soviet influence, while the regime itself increasingly fell under the dominance of Russophile networks and figures.
Under these circumstances, the CIA now confronts several major dilemmas. Iran’s formal government is no longer the true center of power. In practice, the presidency, the foreign ministry, and even parliament have gradually evolved into ceremonial, hollow, and largely ineffective institutions.
Strategic decisions, regarding nuclear activity, chemical and biological capabilities, regional terrorism, military structures, and security networks, are ultimately made by the regime’s core power structure.
In reality, the Trump-Netanyahu strikes accelerated the emergence of a military junta in Iran, making any future negotiations significantly more difficult because power no longer hides solely behind the façade of the Shiite clerical establishment.
To put it differently: America negotiates with the state Iran presents, not the system that actually rules it. It has not been long since Trump correctly designated the IRGC as a terrorist organization.
Many of Khomeini’s followers, who had received military and terrorist training in Yasser Arafat’s camps in Palestine, later became founders of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, an institution that, notably, does not even contain the word “Iran” in its name.
Over the course of this 40-day war, America’s security establishment gradually came to realize that Iran increasingly resembled a military garrison disguised as a nation-state.
IRGC has ‘become the system’
The IRGC is no longer merely a military force; it has evolved into an ideological army, an economic empire, a vast network of intelligence organizations, an internal security apparatus, and the mafia-like engine driving regional terrorism. Even during the ceasefire period, the IRGC effectively emerged as the de facto actor shaping the succession to Khamenei.
One particularly striking detail was that individuals affiliated with the IRGC, some of whom reportedly appeared on CIA watchlists, continued to participate openly within Iran’s diplomatic delegations in Pakistan, while the CIA observed the situation without any meaningful response.
And this is the crucial point: the IRGC no longer protects the system. It has become the system.
Throughout 1,400 years of Islamic caliphates, succession crises have repeatedly shaped the destiny of regimes and ruling structures. Following Khamenei’s death, Iran entered that same historical pattern. Yet after 37 years of dictatorship, the removal of Khamenei did not lead to the collapse of the structure itself.
Although the power structure became increasingly fragmented, the IRGC steadily absorbed authority into its own hands. They raised cardboard images of Mojtaba Khamenei and claimed he remained alive, hoping to preserve the regime’s security cohesion, maintain internal control, and ensure institutional survival.
The IRGC did not merely manufacture a symbolic leader. It reconstructed command centers, intelligence networks, financial structures, and security command systems while simultaneously shaping the broader architecture of Iran’s future order.
The CIA likely understands this transformation. Washington’s politicians do not.
Certainly, elements within the American intelligence community understand that “civilian diplomacy” in Iran is deeply constrained and that the real nucleus of power prioritizes regime survival above all else. The elimination of individual commanders or officials means little to the system itself. Amid economic collapse and the broader destruction of Iran, survival remains the regime’s overriding objective.
Yet Washington still feels compelled to pretend that Iran’s foreign ministry remains the regime’s principal actor — even though its leadership itself emerges from the broader IRGC structure. This contradiction becomes increasingly visible when Iran’s foreign minister resembles little more than a puppet figure with virtually no authority over the regime’s actual strategic direction.
What exists in Washington today is an ongoing conflict between intelligence realism and diplomatic theater, a taboo contradiction that major media institutions continue to reinforce and reproduce.
One must also openly acknowledge another deeply uncomfortable reality: the United States fears the collapse of the Islamic Republic as much as it fears its survival. Washington simultaneously fears a nuclear-armed Iran and an uncontrolled Iranian collapse that could destabilize the Persian Gulf and the broader region. This dual fear has produced a state of strategic paralysis.
Many in Washington fear the collapse of the Islamic Republic more than the consequences of its continued survival. Meanwhile, the demands and aspirations of the Iranian people themselves were neither prioritized nor meaningfully represented in negotiations between Washington and Tehran.
The central problem is no longer Iran’s diplomacy. The deeper problem is that America may still be negotiating with institutions that no longer truly govern Iran. Washington does not negotiate with Ahmad Vahidi or with the real nucleus of power directing events inside the country. Instead, it continues wasting time speaking to political puppets.
Washington still speaks to the façade of the Iranian state while the security apparatus quietly absorbs the state itself. For these reasons, the CIA’s dilemma in dealing with Iran’s hardline power structure has not been successful, and likely will not be.
The central challenge facing Washington is no longer Iran’s nuclear program alone. It is whether the United States is ultimately prepared to acknowledge that the institutions it negotiates with may no longer be the institutions that truly govern Iran.
Washington
Bystander in serious condition after fatal shooting near White House checkpoint
A bystander who was struck by gunfire after a man fired on a checkpoint outside the White House and was fatally shot by U.S. Secret Service officers remains in serious but stable condition Sunday.
The Secret Service said the bystander, who has not been identified, suffered a gunshot wound described as not life-threatening. It was not clear how he was shot.
Authorities have released few additional details about the shooting, which happened early Saturday evening. The Metropolitan Police Department said the suspect, identified as 21-year-old Nasire Best, started shooting toward a White House security checkpoint when Secret Service officers returned fire. Best, of Dundalk, Maryland, was later pronounced dead at a hospital.
President Donald Trump was in the White House at the time of the shooting.
It was the third shooting near the president in the past month, after a man stormed the White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner in April armed with guns and knives, and Secret Service officers shot and wounded a man who fired at them earlier this month near the Washington Monument.
In a Truth Social post, Trump said the suspect in Saturday’s shooting had a “possible obsession with our Country’s most cherished structure.” He also used the shooting to promote the ballroom he is seeking to build on the site of the White House’s former East Wing, saying the shooting “goes to show how important it is, for all future Presidents, to get, what will be, the most safe and secure space of its kind ever built in Washington, D.C.” Trump is asking Congress for $1 billion for security additions for the White House campus, including the ballroom.
Best had a previous run-in with law enforcement near the White House, according to D.C. court records. He was arrested last July for attempting to enter White House grounds near a different checkpoint. He failed to heed officers’ commands to stop, claimed to be Jesus Christ and said he wanted to be arrested.
Best was a track and field athlete at Dundalk High School, from which he graduated in 2023.
A woman who identified herself as Best’s mother told The Washington Post that she learned about the shooting on social media and was in disbelief. She said her son “was never violent, regardless of what people are posting.”
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