tisdag 10 mars 2026

 

Iran Debacle; US Officials Tell Trump End War; Trump Calls Putin Begs Help Tough Talks; Iran Defiant

Alexander Mercouris


  

IRAN, short-term excursion. Trump rings Putin. Graham angry with SPAIN? Hungary seizes Ukraine gold

Alex Christoforou


 

 

Trump calls Putin, topic IRAN WAR

The Duran

 

 

Mohammad Marandi: Iran Chooses New Supreme Leader — The War of Attrition Begins

Dialogue Works

 

MIT Prof. Ted Postol: Iranian Missiles vs Israeli Air Defense: Who Would Actually Win?

Dialogue Works

 

 

Jeffrey Sachs: We're in the Early Stages of World War III, Trump FAILS in Iran

Danny Haiphong

 

More icebergs in the South Atlantic threaten Swedish coastal cities

Have you heard of the "Doomsday Glacier"?

Kalle Sundin

Aftonbladet's editorial page is independent Social Democratic.

Published 06.00

          Satellitbilder på isberget A23a (bildens nederkant) i januari 2025 när det var på mot ön Sydgeorgien (i bildens överkant).

     Satellite images of the iceberg A23a (bottom of the image) in January 2025 when it was heading                 towards the island of South Georgia (top of the image). Photo: AP/Nasa

A23a is known as the queen of icebergs. It from northwest Antarctica 40 years ago. At the time it was the largest in the world – about 4,000 square kilometers – which is larger than the entire island of Gotland. It has been estimated to weigh 1.1 trillion tons.

But now A23a has only weeks left before it  melts completely, scientists believe.

The iceberg’s journey was initially uneventful. For 30 of its 40 years in freedom, it was stuck on the bottom of the South Atlantic. But in 2024, it broke free. For a while, it looked like it would crash straight into the island of South Georgia, which would have been bad news for the hundreds of thousands of king penguins that breed there. It was close, but in the end, A23a took a different path around the island instead.

Large chunks of ice have fallen off. Andrew Meijers, a researcher at the British Antarctic Survey, believes that this is most likely due to the higher sea temperatures we have seen in recent decades. Now the iceberg has also moved towards the northern parts of the ocean where the water is warmer. This makes the process even shorter.

“It’s hard to believe that it won’t be around any time soon,” says glaciologist Christopher Shuman, who is now retired but has followed A23a for much of his career.

           Kungspingviner. 

          King penguins on the island of South Georgia. Photo: Alexey Seafarer

Tomorrow's scientists will have far more objects to study. The king penguins on South Georgia have only just begun. The era of climate change is coming with floating icebergs.

In recent decades, the ice sheets in Antarctica have lost trillions of tons through increased melting and iceberg formation.  This is largely due to warmer  ocean water and changes in ocean currents.

This risks leading to a catastrophicf rise in sea levels.

You may have heard of the Doomsday Glacier? It is a nickname given to the Thwaites Glacier in Antarctica. It covers an area the size of Great Britain and has begun to melt at a breakneck pace. It contains water that would mean a 60-centimeter sea level rise.

Not only that. Thwaites also acts as a kind of cork that holds back other enormous ice sheets. If it were to break, scientists estimate that we would be talking about a sea level rise of around 3 meters. The consequences will be enormous in cities like Miami and London. Not to mention low-lying coastal countries, such as Bangladesh.

The impact will also be great for Sweden. Melting in Antarctica affects our water level more than melting in Greenland does because the rise will be greatest in areas far away from a melting ice sheet. The fate of Swedish coastal cities is also linked to the icebergs in the South Atlantic.

Right now, politics is strictly focused on geopolitical tensions, wars and the economic effects that come with them. Then the climate issue falls into the shadows again. In Sweden, the government parties are divided among themselves about how many of the climate goals should be scrapped. At the same time, electrification has slowed down. We are facing a major rearmament, which will lead to investments in the defense industry. What will be left for the technological shifts of the transition?

On March 5, A23a had shrunk from its previous 4,000 square kilometers to about 180. After all, this is the queen of icebergs we are talking about. An era is about to end. The one that follows could be really unpleasant for all of us.

 

Latest news

Climate Threat  Global Challenges
Scientists Dump 65,000 Liters of Lye into the Sea – for the Climate

Scientists have released 65,000 litres of sodium hydroxide into the sea off Maine in the US, in the hope of limiting the effects of climate change.

According to The Guardian, the idea is to make the sea less acidic and increase the amount of carbon dioxide that the water can absorb. Similar deacidification projects have previously been carried out in Swedish waterways.

Sodium hydroxide forms corrosive lye when dissolved in water, and the experiment has some climate advocates nervous.

Benjamin Day at the climate organization Friends of the Earth US says he is “deeply concerned” that large-scale manipulation of natural systems could have “catastrophic unforeseen consequences”.

However, Phil Renforth, an expert on carbon dioxide storage at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh, believes that the climate situation is so urgent that we must be ready to experiment.

“We cannot rule anything out until we have a working solution,” he tells The Guardian.

Political situation in France

Activists confronted Macron and IAEA chief

Two Greenpeace activists approached French President Emmanuel Macron and the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Rafael Grossi, during a nuclear energy meeting, Le Figaro reports.

The activists were dressed in black suits and carried signs that read “Nuclear power = energy insecurity” and “Nuclear power fuels Russia’s war.”

One of them shouted at Macron and accused the president of buying uranium from Russia before being taken away by guards.

“We produce our own nuclear power,” Macron replied.


Trump's USA The future of the Republicans
Data: Marco Rubio the favorite when Trump asked donors about 2028

Two names top the list of possible Republican candidates in the 2028 election. Vice President JD Vance has been seen as one of the most likely, as has Secretary of State Marco Rubio, but who it will ultimately be is unclear.

On the same day that the United States launched attacks on Iran, Donald Trump is said to have asked 25 Republican donors who they want to see as a candidate in 2028. According to several sources to NBC News, the support in the room was overwhelming for Marco Rubio.

- It was almost unanimous for Marco, says one of them.

Another source, however, describes the situation as evenly divided between Vance and Rubio. Trump has openly said that Vance is the most likely heir to the Maga movement, but he has also promoted Rubio as a potentially strong Republican leader.

According to NBC News, this is not the first time Trump has openly asked his inner circle how he should approach the race to replace him. The fact that he wants to have a hand in the game indicates that he wants to play a major role in the party's future.