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Video: Fire Breaks Out Near Glasgow Central Station

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Video: Fire Breaks Out Near Glasgow Central Station

new video loaded: Fire Breaks Out Near Glasgow Central Station

Firefighters brought a blaze under control after it consumed a building on the same street as Scotland’s busiest station. It forced train service to close, the authorities said.

By Jiawei Wang

March 9, 2026

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Private security firm helping Americans evacuate the Middle East amid war with Iran

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Private security firm helping Americans evacuate the Middle East amid war with Iran

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As Americans are stranded in the Middle East amid the U.S. and Israel war with Iran, government and private agencies are working around the clock to conduct evacuations.

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In addition to the U.S. Department of State’s 24/7 task force aimed at evacuating Americans, private security firm Global Guardian is also working around the clock to complete the same mission.

As of Friday, Global Guardian has evacuated more than 4,000 people from the Middle East, according to its CEO and President, Dale Robert Buckner.

While operations and logistics teams sit in an office building in northern Virginia, the firm has personnel in more than 140 countries, allowing Global Guardian access to nearly every corner of the world for emergency response or evacuations.

Global Guardian receiving calls for evacuations in the Middle East.

“We provide medical evac services, we provide kidnap, ransom, extortion negotiation payment if someone is kidnapped or extorted,” Buckner said. “We’re providing about 300 missions a month of executive protection travel, in about 84 countries a month.”

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The private security firm also conducts camera surveillance of residences and commercial property and has cyber analysts monitoring mobile devices. 

After the U.S. and Israel struck Iran in a joint attack last weekend, the firm has been coordinating multiple emergency response evacuations — but this isn’t the first time it has assisted Americans out of a crisis zone.

“That means getting people out of Puerto Vallarta a week ago, and Jalisco, Mexico. That means getting people out of Asheville, North Carolina when it got wiped out by a hurricane,” Buckner said. 

STATE DEPARTMENT GIVES UPDATES ON AMERICANS FLEEING MIDDLE EAST

Logistically, getting tourists out of a war zone and back to safety is a process, but the firm works fast, completing their first border crossing within the first six hours of the missile strikes.

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Immediately, the firm received a call from a pair of students studying abroad, Deputy Vice President of Operations Colin O’Brien told Fox News. He said they were trying to leave Dubai.

“Within about four and a half hours from the phone call, we had our teams in motion to go pick these people up and it was two college-aged women,” said O’Brien.

Global Guardian security firm is working around the clock to execute emergency evacuations in the Middle East.

“Put them in the car, we were then able to move from the Omani border and by eight hours we were at the border. Work through the border checkpoint to a hotel in Muscat, where we could stop and give them a short rest while we arrange their transportation home,” he says. 

The group said it remains active year-round to ensure evacuation plans are in place before disasters strike.

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“There’s a narrative of, here’s the pickup point, here’s the key crossing site,” Buckner said. “This is what you’re gonna need from a paperwork standpoint, legally. And then we’re gonna put you in a hotel or straight onto a commercial flight. Most likely, at this point in the war, we’re gonna put you on a private charter.”

WHAT’S NEXT IN OPERATION EPIC FURY

Buckner said most of these missions happening in the region are ground movement, done by locals. He says in the 140 countries the firm is in, they have ground teams working year-round. Consistently training year-round. 

“We’re communicating, we’re coordinating, we’re executing. Executive protection agents, armed agents, armed vehicles, large-scale event support with medical and security personnel,” he said, describing the firm’s standard operating capabilities.

“We’re coordinating whether the firm needs drivers. From Dubai to Oman, Israel to either Oman, Jordan or Egypt. Out of Bahrain into Saudi Arabia,” Buckner said.

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While the firm is coordinating with the State Department, it said it has not yet conducted a flight mission on behalf of the department.

Security firm analysts create plans to evacuate Americans.

Global Guardian offers these services through what it calls a “Duty of Care Membership,” which Buckner said costs $15,000 per year for a family of five.

“You are going to sign a contract — whether it’s a family, a family office or typically a large corporate logo. Then we become, at your beck and call,” Buckner said, describing the emergency response services included in the agreement.

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For Americans currently stuck in the Middle East, Buckner said the cost of evacuation using ground and air resources varies depending on the situation and location.

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Hungary's opposition leader Péter Magyar calls on Russia to refrain from election interference

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Hungarian opposition leader Péter Magyar has called on Russia to stop interfering in Hungary’s April parliamentary elections, following a report exposing an alleged Kremlin team operating from Budapest’s Russian embassy to keep Viktor Orbán in power. Russia denied those allegations.

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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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