Trump pulls Musk ally’s NASA nomination, will announce replacement

Trump pulls Musk ally’s NASA nomination, will announce replacement
This photo taken on February 2, 2021 in Hawthorne, California, shows Inspiration4 mission commander Jared Isaacman, founder and CEO of Shift4 Payments, standing for a portrait in front of the recovered first stage of a Falcon 9 rocket at SpaceX. (AFP)
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Updated 01 June 2025

Trump pulls Musk ally’s NASA nomination, will announce replacement

Trump pulls Musk ally’s NASA nomination, will announce replacement
  • Jared Isaacman’s removal ‘bad news for the agency,’ astronomer says
  • Retired US Air Force general floated as possible replacement

WASHINGTON: The White House on Saturday withdrew its nominee for NASA administrator, Jared Isaacman, abruptly yanking a close ally of Elon Musk from consideration to lead the space agency.
President Donald Trump said he would announce a new candidate soon.
“After a thorough review of prior associations, I am hereby withdrawing the nomination of Jared Isaacman to head NASA,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social site. “I will soon announce a new Nominee who will be Mission aligned, and put America First in Space.”

Isaacman, a billionaire private astronaut who had been Musk’s pick to lead NASA, was due next week for a much-delayed confirmation vote before the US Senate. His removal from consideration caught many in the space industry by surprise.
Trump and the White House did not explain what led to the decision. Isaacman, whose removal was earlier reported by Semafor, did not respond to a request for comment.
Isaacman’s removal comes just days after Musk’s official departure from the White House, where the SpaceX CEO’s role as a “special government employee” leading the Department of Government Efficiency created turbulence for the administration and frustrated some of Trump’s aides.
Musk, according to a person familiar with his reaction, was disappointed by Isaacman’s removal.
“It is rare to find someone so competent and good-hearted,” Musk wrote of Isaacman on X, responding to the news of the White House’s decision.
Musk did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Despite Trump’s decision, Isaacman thanked the president for considering him for the job.
“The past six months have been enlightening and, honestly, a bit thrilling. I have gained a much deeper appreciation for the complexities of government and the weight our political leaders carry," he wrote on X.

"It may not always be obvious through the discourse and turbulence, but there are many competent, dedicated people who love this country and care deeply about the mission. That was on full display during my hearing, where leaders on both sides of the aisle made clear they’re willing to fight for the world’s most accomplished space agency," he said.

It was unclear whom the administration might tap to replace Isaacman.
One name being floated is retired US Air Force Lt. Gen. Steven Kwast, an early advocate for the creation of the US Space Force and Trump supporter, according to three people familiar with the discussions.
Isaacman, the former CEO of payment processor company Shift4, had broad space industry support but drew concerns from lawmakers over his ties to Musk and SpaceX, where he spent hundreds of millions of dollars as an early private spaceflight customer.
The former nominee had donated to Democrats in prior elections. In his confirmation hearing in April, he sought to balance NASA’s existing moon-aligned space exploration strategy with pressure to shift the agency’s focus on Mars, saying the US can plan for travel to both destinations.
As a potential leader of NASA’s some 18,000 employees, Isaacman faced a daunting task of implementing that decision to prioritize Mars, given that NASA has spent years and billions of dollars trying to return its astronauts to the moon.
On Friday, the space agency released new details of the Trump administration’s 2026 budget plan that proposed killing dozens of space science programs and laying off thousands of employees, a controversial overhaul that space advocates and lawmakers described as devastating for the agency.
Montana Republican Tim Sheehy, a member of the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation committee, wrote on X that Isaacman “was a strong choice by President Trump to lead NASA” in response to reports of his departure.
“I was proud to introduce Jared at his hearing and strongly oppose efforts to derail his nomination,” Sheehy said.
Some scientists saw the nominee change as further destabilizing to NASA as it faces dramatic budget cuts without a confirmed leader in place to navigate political turbulence between Congress, the White House and the space agency’s workforce.
“So not having (Isaacman) as boss of NASA is bad news for the agency,” Harvard-Smithsonian astronomer Jonathan McDowell said on X.

“Maybe a good thing for Jared himself though, since being NASA head right now is a bit of a Kobayashi Maru scenario,” McDowell added, referring to an exercise in the science fiction franchise Star Trek where cadets are placed in a no-win scenario.


US has given at least $21.7 billion in military aid to Israel since war in Gaza began, report says

US has given at least $21.7 billion in military aid to Israel since war in Gaza began, report says
Updated 3 min 56 sec ago

US has given at least $21.7 billion in military aid to Israel since war in Gaza began, report says

US has given at least $21.7 billion in military aid to Israel since war in Gaza began, report says
  • The reports say that without the US assistance, Israel would not have been able to sustain its concerted campaign against Hamas in Gaza

WASHINGTON: The United States under the Biden and Trump administrations has provided at least $21.7 billion in military assistance to Israel since the start of the Gaza war two years ago, according to a new academic study published Tuesday, the second anniversary of the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attacks in Israel that provoked the conflict.
Another study, also published by the Costs of War project at Brown University’s Watson School of International and Public Affairs, says the US has spent roughly $10 billion more on security aid and operations in the broader Middle East in the past two years.
While the reports rely on open source material for most of their findings, they offer some of the most comprehensive accountings of US military aid to close ally Israel and estimated costs of direct American military involvement in the Middle East.
The State Department had no immediate comment about the amount of military aid provided to Israel since October 2023. The White House referred questions to the Pentagon, which oversees only a portion of the assistance.
The reports, which draw on publicly available notifications to Congress, were released as President Donald Trump presses for an end to the war in Gaza. Israeli and Hamas officials launched indirect talks in Egypt this week after Hamas accepted some elements of the US plan that Israel also said it supported.
The reports, which are sharply critical of Israel, say that without the US assistance, Israel would not have been able to sustain its concerted campaign against Hamas in Gaza. They note that tens of billions of dollars in future funding for Israel is projected under various bilateral agreements.
The main report says the US provided $17.9 billion to Israel in the first year of the war — when Democratic President Joe Biden was in office — and $3.8 billion in the second year. Some of the military assistance has already been delivered while the remainder will be supplied in the coming years, it said.
That report was produced in conjunction with the Washington-based Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft. The institute has been accused by some pro-Israel groups of being isolationist and anti-Israel, charges the organization denies.
A second report analyzing US spending on broader Middle East activities, such as strikes on Yemen’s Houthi rebels and Iranian nuclear facilities, puts those costs at between $9.65 billion and $12 billion since Oct. 7, 2023, including between $2 billion and $2.25 billion for the attacks in Iran and associated costs in June.


Pakistan tells UN seven in 10 women killed in conflicts last year were in Gaza

Pakistan tells UN seven in 10 women killed in conflicts last year were in Gaza
Updated 9 min 24 sec ago

Pakistan tells UN seven in 10 women killed in conflicts last year were in Gaza

Pakistan tells UN seven in 10 women killed in conflicts last year were in Gaza
  • It criticizes UN Secretary-General’s report on Women, Peace and Security for excluding situation in Kashmir
  • A Pakistani diplomat tells UN that women remain the ‘first casualties and last to be heard’ in global conflicts

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Monday told the United Nations Security Council that seven in ten women killed in conflicts worldwide last year were in Gaza, as it urged greater representation of women in UN-mediated peace processes across the world.

Counsellor Saima Saleem, speaking during an open debate on Women, Peace and Security, said the UN framework to promote female participation in conflict prevention, peace building and post-war recovery was established under Resolution 1325 25 years ago.

However, she noted it now stood at a crossroads, with women continuing to be the first casualties and the last to be heard in conflict situations.

“The plight of Palestinian women is one of the gravest tragedies of our times,” she said. “Seven in ten women killed in conflicts worldwide in 2024 were in Gaza. Homes, schools, and maternity wards were bombed. Pregnant women gave birth under fire without anesthetics or water. Tens of thousands were displaced; hundreds of thousands now face famine.”

“These are not collateral tragedies but deliberate crimes that demand accountability,” she added.

The Pakistani diplomat also highlighted the suffering of women in Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Sahel, noting that women sustain families and communities amid war but remain sidelined from formal mediation processes and deliberately targeted by armed groups.

“Conflict-related sexual violence has risen by nearly 90 percent in just two years, while the number of women and children killed quadrupled between 2023 and 2024,” she said.

Saleem criticized the UN Secretary-General’s latest report over the issue for omitting the situation of women in Indian-administered Kashmir, saying they have endured “decades of occupation,” adding the UN mechanisms and global rights organizations had documented “structural impunity” and “reprisals against female family members of the disappeared.”

New Delhi maintains the Kashmir issue is an internal matter, though Pakistan says it is an internationally recognized disputed region subject to UN resolutions.

Citing research showing that peace agreements with women’s participation are more durable, Saleem called for binding thresholds for women’s representation in all UN-mediated processes and for accountability wherever sexual violence is deployed as a deliberate tactic of war.

“The road to peace must be built by women and men together,” she said. “Sustainable peace demands women at the heart of decision-making — as mediators, peacekeepers, and leaders.”

She reaffirmed Pakistan’s commitment to the UN’s Gender Parity Strategy, noting that Pakistani women peacekeepers had served in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mali, South Sudan and other missions, helping survivors where justice was denied.

“The Pact for the Future has reaffirmed our collective commitment to this agenda,” she said. “Now is the time to act: mandate women’s participation, guarantee their protection, promote their leadership, and strengthen accountability.”


Saudi firm to establish AI hub in Pakistan to transfer knowledge, jointly develop solutions

Saudi firm to establish AI hub in Pakistan to transfer knowledge, jointly develop solutions
Updated 07 October 2025

Saudi firm to establish AI hub in Pakistan to transfer knowledge, jointly develop solutions

Saudi firm to establish AI hub in Pakistan to transfer knowledge, jointly develop solutions
  • The development comes as both nations plan to forge partnerships in AI, cybersecurity and other tech fields
  • Pakistani software developers body says the initiative will boost training, innovation and startup collaboration

ISLAMABAD: ’s GO Telecom company will establish an artificial intelligence (AI) hub in Pakistan this month that would help transfer knowledge and jointly develop innovative digital solutions, Pakistan’s information technology (IT) ministry said on Monday.

The decision to establish the GO AI Hub in Pakistan was made during a meeting between Pakistani IT Minister Shaza Fatima Khawaja and the leadership of GO Telecom at the company’s headquarters in Riyadh last week.

GO Telecom plays a significant role in ’s digital transformation landscape, offering cloud, data center and management services to businesses. The company has expanded regionally through partnerships such as with Oman’s Data Park and by acquiring a majority stake in Ejad Tech, a Saudi IT solution provider.

While GO has a strong domestic presence in Pakistan’s petroleum sector, the planned AI hub appears to be its first major tech venture in the South Asian country, marking an expansion of its international footprint.

“The official launch of the [GO AI] Hub is planned for October 2025, with participation from senior government and industry leaders from both countries,” the IT ministry said in a statement shared with Arab News, adding that the initiative will promote joint development of digital solutions between and Pakistan.

During the meeting, future collaborations, including digital infrastructure expansion, data center development, and the establishment of a technical talent development center in Pakistan, also came under discussion, reflecting the shared vision to enhance regional digital connectivity and innovation.

“Through initiatives like GO AI Hub Pakistan, we aim to strengthen collaboration in emerging technologies, empower youth through digital skills, and accelerate our shared vision of a connected, knowledge-driven future,” the IT ministry’s statement said.

Arab News reached out to GO Telecom but could not get an immediate response on more details about the AI hub.

In an earlier statement shared by the Pakistani IT ministry, GO Telecommunications Group CEO Yahya bin Saleh Al-Mansour said the discussions with the Pakistani IT minister in Riyadh underscored the “strong potential” for cooperation between and Pakistan.

“The Group’s expansion into the Pakistani market aligns with our strategic vision of diversification and strengthening partnerships with friendly and brotherly nations,” he was quoted as saying.

The Pakistan Software Houses Association (P@SHA) welcomed the initiative, saying the AI hub would open new avenues for Pakistani startups in training, innovation and bilateral collaboration.

“This is an excellent initiative as it will provide Pakistani AI and telecommunications companies with access to the GO Telecom Group’s platform, enabling greater collaboration and growth opportunities,” P@SHA Chairman Sajjad Mustafa Syed told Arab News.

Pakistan and have long enjoyed close ties, but in recent years have sought to broaden their cooperation further. During Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s visit to Riyadh in October 2024, they signed 34 memoranda of understanding worth $2.8 billion across multiple sectors.

Both countries are now planning to forge a partnership in the fields of artificial intelligence (AI) and cybersecurity, Pakistani state media reported last week.

Syed said the GO AI Hub would help increase the reach of Pakistani companies and startups to the Saudi market.

“Our companies have long lacked access to major international markets through a credible and established platform but with the GO AI Hub Pakistan, they will finally gain that opportunity as the Saudi telecom giant offers extensive reach in the Kingdom and region,” he added.


UEFA ‘reluctantly’ approves European league games in US, Australia

UEFA ‘reluctantly’ approves European league games in US, Australia
Updated 07 October 2025

UEFA ‘reluctantly’ approves European league games in US, Australia

UEFA ‘reluctantly’ approves European league games in US, Australia
  • Despite “the widespread lack of support that had already been raised by fans, other leagues, clubs, players and European institutions,” UEFA said that it had found no clear regulatory framework in FIFA’s statutes that would allow it to oppose the moves
  • “The UEFA Executive Committee has reluctantly taken the decision to approve, on an exceptional basis, the two requests referred to it,” European football’s governing body said in its statement

LAUSANNE: European football governing body UEFA on Monday said it had “reluctantly” approved the staging of a Spanish La Liga and an Italian Serie A match in the US and Australia respectively despite fan protests.

“While it is regrettable to have to let these two games go ahead, this decision is exceptional and shall not be seen as setting a precedent,” UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin said in a statement.

UEFA made its ruling after Spain’s La Liga agreed to move a game scheduled for late December between champions Barcelona and Villarreal to Miami, Florida.

Italy’s Serie A also decided to stage the encounter between AC Milan and Como on February 8 in Perth, Australia, to avoid a clash with the Winter Olympics opening ceremony at Milan’s San Siro stadium.

But that sparked protests from European supporters groups who branded the moves “absurd, unaffordable, and environmentally irresponsible.”

In its statement, UEFA said that it had “reiterated its clear opposition to domestic league matches being played outside their home country.”

But despite “the widespread lack of support that had already been raised by fans, other leagues, clubs, players and European institutions,” UEFA said that it had found no clear regulatory framework in FIFA’s statutes that would allow it to oppose the moves.

“The UEFA Executive Committee has reluctantly taken the decision to approve, on an exceptional basis, the two requests referred to it,” European football’s governing body said in its statement.

NFL, NBA precedent

While the idea of relocating European football matches to other continents seems shocking to many, other sports — particularly US ones — have been doing something similar for years, even decades.

The NFL has held games in London since 2007 while it also expanded to Mexico and Germany.

Last year it added a game in Sao Paulo and this year there has been one in Dublin for the first time. Another is slated for Madrid in November while Melbourne will play host to a game in 2026.

The NBA, which has relocated regular-season matches since 1990 to Japan and since 2013 to Europe, has already scheduled six games in Berlin, London, Manchester and Paris over the next three seasons.

In rugby union, the French Top 14 club competition took its 2016 final to Barcelona’s Camp Nou stadium, while Ireland and New Zealand played an international match in Chicago that same year — with Ireland claiming their first ever victory over the All Blacks.

Last weekend, Argentina played their final Rugby Championship match at home to South Africa at Twickenham in London.

It is not unheard of in football to host matches abroad, but until now those had only ever been glorified friendlies.

The Spanish and Italian Super Cups are already held in , after previous editions in China, Morocco, Qatar and Libya, as governing bodies seek to cash in on the global reach of the beautiful game.

La Liga has been trying for years to host games in the US, home of its commercial partner Relevent Sports.

Football’s world governing body FIFA shifted its hitherto opposition to relocating matches, with a ‘working group’ launched in May to revise their rules.

That opened the door to UEFA granting La Liga and Serie A the permission to branch out.

On Monday, Lega Calcio Serie A thanked “UEFA for recognizing the exceptional nature of this initiative.”

“It should also be emphasized that this is only one match out of 380 in the league: an extraordinary event, not a structural change to the schedule,” a Serie A statement said.

“I hope that approval from FIFA and the Australian Football Federation will complete the authorization process,” added Serie A president Ezio Simonelli.

“For us, a contingency linked to the unavailability of the San Siro Stadium has been transformed into an opportunity to please the many Italian football fans, who will have the chance to follow the match live in Perth, and also for the two teams and Italian football to increase their international visibility and fan base.”


UN chief ‘strongly condemns’ Houthis detaining nine more UN personnel in Yemen

UN chief ‘strongly condemns’ Houthis detaining nine more UN personnel in Yemen
Updated 07 October 2025

UN chief ‘strongly condemns’ Houthis detaining nine more UN personnel in Yemen

UN chief ‘strongly condemns’ Houthis detaining nine more UN personnel in Yemen
  • The move came after the UN in August said the Iran-backed Houthi rebels had seized at least 11 of its employees as part of a wave of detentions after an Israeli strike killed the rebels’ prime minister

WASHINGTON: Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Monday denounced the arbitrary detention of nine more United Nations workers in Yemen by Houthi rebels, along with the seizure of assets and facilities in areas under Houthi control.
“Most recently, the Houthi de facto authorities detained nine additional UN personnel, bringing the total number of arbitrarily detained UN staff to 53 since 2021,” spokesman Stephane Dujarric said in a statement.
“These actions hinder the UN’s ability to operate in Yemen and to deliver critical assistance,” the statement continued.
The UN last month relocated its top humanitarian coordinator in Yemen from the capital Sanaa, which is under Houthi control, to the government-held city of Aden.
Yemen’s internationally recognized government established its headquarters in the southern city of Aden after the rebels drove them out of Sanaa in 2014.
The move came after the UN in August said the Iran-backed Houthi rebels had seized at least 11 of its employees as part of a wave of detentions after an Israeli strike killed the rebels’ prime minister.
“The United Nations will continue to work tirelessly, and through all available channels, to secure the safe and immediate release of all arbitrarily detained personnel, as well as the return of UN agency offices and other assets,” Dujarric said.