Thursday, February 12, 2026

Gaza Notes



Since October 7, 2023, the number of Palestinians killed by Israeli forces and settlers in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, has surpassed 1,050.
According to recent data from the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) and the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA):
  • Total Fatalities: At least 1,054 Palestinians have been killed between October 7, 2023, and early February 2026.
  • Child Casualties: This figure includes at least 230 children.
  • Settler Violence: A significant portion of these deaths—approximately 33 in late 2025 alone—involved Israeli settlers, sometimes acting alongside military forces.
  • Detention Deaths: At least 28 of the total fatalities from the West Bank occurred while individuals were in Israeli detention.
The UN Human Rights Office (OHCHR) has expressed "serious concerns" over the spike in violence, noting that the lethality of recent military operations in the northern West Bank (such as in Jenin and Tulkarm) has reached levels not seen since the Second Intifada.

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Representation in Iran

Iran's Islamic Consultative Assembly is the counterpart of parliaments in parliamentary systems and the US Congress in the American system. 

 There are no Baháʼí representatives in Iran's Islamic Consultative Assembly (the Majlis).
Under the current Iranian legal and political system:
  • Reserved Seats: The Iranian Constitution only recognizes Zoroastrians, Jews, and Christians as protected religious minorities. These groups are allocated a total of five reserved seats in the 290-member parliament:
    • Two seats for Armenian Christians
    • One seat for Assyrian and Chaldean Christians
    • One seat for Jews
    • One seat for Zoroastrians
  • Non-Recognition: The Baháʼí Faith is not recognized by the Iranian government, which often characterizes the community as a "political movement" or "espionage cell" rather than a religion. Consequently, Baháʼís are excluded from the reserved seat system.
  • Election Barriers: All candidates for parliament must be approved by the Guardian Council, which requires candidates to demonstrate commitment to Islam or one of the recognized minority faiths. This effectively bars Baháʼís from running for any office.

In the 290-seat Islamic Consultative Assembly, there are exactly five representatives from the recognized religious minorities.
The breakdown of these seats is as follows:
  • Christians: 3 representatives
    • 2 seats for Armenian Christians (one for the North and one for the South).
    • 1 seat for Assyrian and Chaldean Christians.
  • Jews: 1 representative.
  • Zoroastrians: 1 representative.
For the current (12th) Parliament, some of these specific representatives include:
  • Behshid Barkhodar (Zoroastrian) — notably the first female representative for religious minorities in the assembly.
  • Homayoun Sameh (Jewish).
  • Ara Shaverdian (Northern Armenian Christian).
  • Geghard Mansourian (Southern Armenian Christian).
  • Shaarli Anouyeh Tekyeh (Assyrian and Chaldean Christian).

Monday, February 9, 2026

About John Kiriakou

 

John Kiriakou is a former CIA officer, author, and journalist best known as the first U.S. government official to publicly confirm the CIA’s use of waterboarding.

Key Background & CIA Career
  • Role: He served as an intelligence analyst and operations officer (1990–2004), notably as Chief of Counterterrorist Operations in Pakistan after 9/11.
  • Major Achievement: He led the 2002 raid that captured Abu Zubaydah, then believed to be a top al-Qaeda leader.
  • Whistleblowing: In a 2007 ABC News interview, he confirmed that waterboarding was official U.S. policy approved by the White House, though he later admitted he had been misled about how many times it was used on Zubaydah.
Prosecution and Imprisonment
  • Charges: In 2012, he was charged under the Espionage Act—the sixth such whistleblower under the Obama administration.
  • Conviction: He pleaded guilty to violating the Intelligence Identities Protection Act for disclosing a covert officer's name to a reporter.
  • Sentence: He served 23 months in federal prison (2013–2015). He remains the only individual to serve prison time related to the CIA’s torture program, despite being the one who exposed it rather than performing it.
Life After Prison & Controversies
  • Advocacy: Since his release, he has been a vocal advocate for prison reform and an critic of the "National Security State."
  • Media Work: He has hosted programs on Sputnik News (a Russian state-funded outlet), which he stated was the only place willing to hire him as a felon.
  • Pardon Quest: He reportedly discussed a $2 million pardon deal with associates of Rudy Giuliani in 2020, which he declined.
  • Authorship: He has written several books, including  (2010) and  (2017).
Awards and Recognition

He has received numerous honors for his actions, including the Joe A. Callaway Award for Civic Courage, the PEN Center USA First Amendment Award, and the Sam Adams Award for Integrity in Intelligence

The Super Bowl Halftime Included a Wedding Ceremony

Yes, a real couple got legally married during Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl LX halftime show on February 8, 2026.
About five minutes into the 13-minute performance at Levi's Stadium, a wedding ceremony was shown on stage. The unnamed couple, dressed in all white, exchanged vows and shared a kiss as a licensed officiant declared them married in front of the live audience and millions of viewers.
Key Details of the Wedding
  • Origin: The couple had originally sent a wedding invitation to Bad Bunny. Instead of attending their planned ceremony, the artist invited them to get married during his halftime performance.
  • Legal Status: A representative for Bad Bunny and reports from the Associated Press confirmed the marriage was 100% real and legally binding.
  • Witness: Bad Bunny served as an official witness and signed the couple’s marriage certificate.
  • Performance Integration: As the couple finished their ceremony, they parted to reveal a surprise appearance by Lady Gaga, who performed a salsa-inspired version of "Die With a Smile" while the newlyweds celebrated nearby with a real wedding cake.

While this was the first time a wedding occurred during the halftime show itself, it follows a similar headline from Super Bowl LVIII (2024), when headliner Usher and his longtime partner Jennifer Goicoechea obtained a marriage license in Las Vegas just days before the game and wed in an intimate ceremony immediately following his performance.