World
Clashes Between Rival Militias in Libya Kill at Least 32

A few of the fiercest clashes in two years in Libya’s capital between militias loyal to rival political leaders have left almost three dozen folks useless, as neighborhoods grew to become battlefields and residents hunkered down of their houses, fearing a return to battle within the nation.
Not less than 32 folks have been killed in street-to-street combating on Saturday, a few of them civilians, and greater than 150 others have been wounded, in keeping with the well being ministry.
For years, Libya has been fractured between rival governments and prime ministers — and the militias they management. The internationally acknowledged Libyan authorities is led by Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeiba and based mostly within the capital, Tripoli, within the nation’s west.
Parliament, nonetheless, relies in Benghazi within the nation’s east, which is managed by the militia chief Khalifa Hifter and led politically by Fathi Bashagha.
On Sunday, a tense calm returned to the capital because the combating subsided. Fighters loyal to Mr. Bashagha withdrew to the outskirts of Tripoli. Residents returned to their regular schedules, and retailers reopened, however fears remained that the combating might erupt once more.
Earlier than the clashes erupted, there had been rising tensions in Tripoli among the many rival militias. Early on Saturday, an armed convoy belonging to a militia loyal to Mr. Bashagha was attacked because it drove by way of the capital, prompting the temporary wave of violence.
In February, Libya’s Parliament declared that the Tripoli authorities’s authority, together with that of Mr. Dbeiba, had expired after scuttled elections. Parliament voted to put in an interim authorities and unanimously picked Mr. Bashagha as interim prime minister. However Mr. Dbeiba declared the vote illegitimate and vowed to carry onto energy.
Nationwide elections have been scheduled to be held final December within the oil-rich African nation amid a interval of relative peace. There was hope that it might yield a unifying authorities that would shepherd the nation out of greater than a decade of chaos and instability because the Arab Spring revolt in 2011 overthrew the longtime dictator Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi.
However disagreements over the eligibility of the candidates have delayed the vote, with no new date set.
Disarming the nation’s many militias and consolidating forces right into a single nationwide military is considered as one of many main objectives of a brand new authorities.
Within the days main as much as Saturday’s clashes, the United Nations’ mission in Libya stated it was involved a few mobilization of fighters and threats of drive to resolve competing claims of political legitimacy within the nation, and it referred to as for instant de-escalation.
“The present political stalemate and all facets of the disaster that afflict Libya can’t be resolved by way of armed confrontation,” the mission stated in an announcement. “These points can solely be resolved by the Libyan folks exercising their proper to decide on their leaders.”
Mohammed Abdusamee contributed reporting.

World
Video: Trump Gives Russia 50 Days to Make Peace With Ukraine

new video loaded: Trump Gives Russia 50 Days to Make Peace With Ukraine
transcript
transcript
Trump Gives Russia 50 Days to Make Peace With Ukraine
President Trump, expressing frustration over feeling dragged along by President Vladimir V. Putin in peace talks, threatened Russia with “very severe tariffs” unless a deal is reached with Ukraine in 50 days.
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“We’re very, very unhappy with them and we’re going to be doing very severe tariffs if we don’t have a deal in 50 days. Tariffs at about 100 percent. You’d call them secondary tariffs. You know what that means. And I’m disappointed in President Putin because I thought we would have had a deal two months ago. But it doesn’t seem to get there. We’ve made a deal today where we’re going to be sending them weapons and they’re going to be paying for them.” “This is really big. This is really big. You called me on Thursday that you had taken a decision. And the decision is that you want Ukraine what it needs to have to maintain, to be able to defend itself against Russia, but you do want the Europeans to pay for it, which is totally logical.”
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World
Iran vows retaliation if UN Security Council issues snapback sanctions on anniversary of nuclear deal

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Iran on Monday warned that it would retaliate if the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) took steps to impose “snapback” sanctions as nations mull further action to halt Tehran’s nuclear development.
“The threat to use the snapback mechanism lacks legal and political basis and will be met with an appropriate and proportionate response from the Islamic Republic of Iran,” Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei claimed during a press conference, according to a Reuters report.
Baghaei did not expand on how Iran would retaliate, but his threats come amid repeated warnings from security experts that time is running out to enforce the sanction mechanism by Oct. 18 under terms dictated by the 2015 nuclear deal.
Esmaeil Baghaei, Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman, speaks during a press conference in Tehran and warns of retaliation if the U.N. issues snapback sanctions, on July 14, 2025. (Atta Kenare/AFP via Getty Images)
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The comments coincided with the 10-year anniversary of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), which was originally intended to halt Iran’s nuclear ambitions, but which some have argued was insufficient to adequately deter Tehran.
Under the terms of the JCPOA, any signatory can unilaterally call up snapback sanctions if Iran is found to have violated the terms of the agreement.
Though the U.S., which, alongside the U.K., France, Germany, China and Russia, signed the 2015 deal, was deemed by the U.N. and other JCPOA members unable to utilize the mechanism after Washington withdrew from the agreement in 2018 during President Donald Trump’s first term.
Despite repeated calls by the U.S. to enforce snapback – which would legally enforce all 15 U.N. members on the council, including Russia, to reimpose sanctions on Iran – no one on the UNSC or JCPOA has yet taken steps to enforce the sanctions.
“I would say one of the few good things about the JCPOA is that it reverse engineers the veto in the sense that you really only need one of the permanent members to be able to do this,” Behnam Ben Taleblu, senior director of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies’ Iran orogram told Fox News Digital. “But why is no one doing it? It’s because it’s a risky move.
“I think it’s a worthwhile move, but we have to be honest – it’s a risky move,” he added.
Ben Taleblu explained that Iran’s most likely response to the severe sanctions under the snapback mechanism would be its abandonment of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) – an international agreement that over 190 nations have signed, pledging either not to transfer weapons to another recipient by nuclear-capable nations, or not to develop atomic arms by non-nuclear nations, among other commitments.

Members of the Security Council attend a meeting on threats to international peace and security at the United Nations on June 13, 2025, in New York City. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)
TIME IS RUNNING OUT TO STOP IRAN FROM MAKING NUCLEAR BOMB: ‘DANGEROUS TERRITORY’
The terms of the agreement are monitored by the U.N.’s International Atomic Energy Agency – which Iran has already suspended cooperation with following U.S. and Israeli strikes against its nuclear program last month.
“In a world in which Iran’s most likely response is to leave the NPT, one has to be confident in at least the ability of military threats to deter Iran further, or at least the credibility of America’s and Israel’s, or the international community’s, military options against Iran moving forward,” Ben Taleblu said.
“The problem is the lack of a game plan. Has America provided Europe with a game plan, a road map for post-snapback?” he added, noting there needs to be a much larger strategy for next steps should sanctions be reinforced.
Though the U.S. assesses that Iran’s nuclear program has been stunted by up to two years, experts remain convinced that Tehran’s atomic ambitions have not been deterred, and its ties to terrorist networks and adversarial nations mean it remains a top security concern.
Trump has said he is still committed to negotiating with Iran on its nuclear program, though questions remain over how long he will continue to allow negotiations to drag out before a European nation like the U.K., France or Germany must step in to enact snapback sanctions not only before the October deadline, but before Russia takes over control of the UNSC presidency that month.
Pushing through the snapback mechanism is expected to be a roughly six-week process.

A banner depicting Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is placed next to a ballistic missile in Baharestan Square in Tehran on Sept. 26, 2024. (Hossein Beris/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images)
Reports on Sunday suggested that German Chancellor Friedrich Merz could call up the snapback measures as soon as Tuesday, and U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee championed the move in a post on X.
But Fox News Digital could not independently verify these claims and the German Foreign Ministry told Israeli news outlet JNS that the claims were incorrect.
The chancellor’s office did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s questions.
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