Curious Timing: Ukraine Declares Druzhba Pipeline Repaired After New Hungarian PM Elected

Curious Timing: Ukraine Declares Druzhba Pipeline Repaired After New Hungarian PM Elected

Ukraine announced Tuesday it completed repairs to the damaged Druzhba oil pipeline and stands ready to resume pumping Russian oil to Europe, a step Ukrainian officials expect will unlock a long-delayed EU aid package.

The timing is quite interesting and surely not coincidental given that Hungary’s newly elected PM Péter Magyar and his victorious Tisza party are now in Budapest rapidly preparing for the transfer of power in Hungary. Magyar just accomplished a dramatic landslide defeat of Viktor Orbán last Sunday.

via AP

The pipeline, which carries crude to Hungary and Slovakia, has sat at the center of a monthslong ratcheting standoff, which served to further distance Hungary under Orban from the EU.

Hungary and Slovakia have accused the Zelensky government of intentionally delaying repairs to pressure them, after a last January alleged Russian strike on Druzhba damaged it, and halted oil flows to central Europe.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has just confirmed on social media, “Ukraine has completed repair work on the section of the oil pipeline that was damaged by a Russian strike,” and hence: “The pipeline can resume operation.”

“We must continue systematic sanctions pressure on Russia over this war and work on further diversifying energy supplies to Europe,” Zelensky said further. “Europe must be independent from those who seek to destroy or weaken it,” he added.

EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas told reporters in Luxembourg that an agreement on the funds is expected within 24 hours: “I hope that everything goes well,” she said. “Hopefully, all the obstacles are removed.”

As for Magyar, his election win was heralded as a substantial victory for the global left wing, from EU globalists to Democrats in the US. Their assumption is that with Orbán’s veto power out of play, they will be able to do they want in Ukraine and in Hungary.  However, the new Prime Minster may not be as cooperative as they initially believed.  

Magyar has stated that he will not try to block the €90 billion EU loan to Ukraine which Orbán originally vetoed, but he also stated that Hungary will not be contributing to such loans and that the government will not support any attempt to induct Ukraine into the EU

He also announced this week that he will not allow Hungary to join in the EU’s “Migration Pact” and that he plans to further strengthen Hungary’s borders. 

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/23/2026 – 02:45

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Newly Elected Hungarian PM Vows To Arrest Netanyahu If He Enters Country

Newly Elected Hungarian PM Vows To Arrest Netanyahu If He Enters Country

Via The Cradle

Hungary’s incoming Prime Minister, Peter Magyar, stated on April earlier this week that his government will arrest Israeli Prime Minister and ‘wanted war criminal’ Benjamin Netanyahu if he visits, as Budapest reconsiders the previous government’s plan to withdraw from the International Criminal Court (ICC).

“I made myself clear to the Israeli prime minister too, we are not re-entering … because my colleagues examined the matter, and we can still stop withdrawal until June 2,” Magyar said.

The prime minister-elect said his government intends to reverse Hungary’s exit from the ICC before it takes effect, after legal advisors determined the withdrawal process remains incomplete and can still be stopped once his administration takes office.

“The firm intention of the Tisza government is to halt this process and ensure that Hungary remains a member of the ICC,” he stated, adding, “If someone is a member of the ICC and a person who is wanted enters our country, then they must be taken into custody.”

The ICC issued arrest warrants for Netanyahu and his former defense minister, Yoav Gallant, in November 2024 over his role in leading Israel’s genocide against the Palestinian people in Gaza, with the warrant requiring member states to detain individuals sought by the court if they enter their territory.

Magyar’s remarks come despite having invited Netanyahu days earlier to attend a national commemoration later this year, raising questions over the apparent contradiction between the invitation and Hungary’s stated legal obligations.

“I don’t need to spell it out over the phone,” Magyar added, referring to a call last week in which he invited Netanyahu to attend an October ceremony commemorating the 70th anniversary of the Hungarian Uprising. He went on to say, “I assume that every head of state and government is familiar with these laws.”

Magyar’s position stands in direct contrast to that of his predecessor, former prime minister Viktor Orban, who refused to arrest Netanyahu during a 2025 visit and initiated Hungary’s withdrawal from the ICC while guaranteeing him immunity.

Earlier this year, Washington moved to shield Israeli officials from accountability, targeting those pursuing legal action over Gaza instead.

Washington imposed “terrorist-grade sanctions” on ICC judges and UN rapporteur Francesca Albanese, freezing assets and obstructing war crimes probes after she warned major US tech firms – including Alphabet, Amazon, Lockheed Martin, and Microsoft – that their support for Israeli military operations could amount to “gross violations of human rights” in Gaza.

UN officials warned that the sanctions are illegal and risk undermining the broader human rights system, as Washington moves to penalize those pursuing accountability while continuing to arm Israel.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/23/2026 – 02:00

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UCLA Students Protest FedSoc Event With DHS General Counsel James Percival

The UCLA Federalist Society invited James Percival, the General Counsel of the Department of Homeland Security to speak on Tuesday, April 21. Unfortunately, there was a massive protest that disrupted the speech. Students consistently disrupted by the event by booing and heckling the speakers. There was a nonstop cacophony of ring tones and other sounds, again, which were intended to disrupt the event. This event has been covered by Fox News and the UCLA Daily Bruin.

I give credit to Professor Jon Michaels, who introduced the speaker. Michaels is a staunch critic of the Trump Administration, but still believes in the robust protection of free speech and discourse. Professor Greg McNeal of Pepperdine also deserves credit for posing tough questions to Percival. I cannot give credit to the UCLA Administration, which took no action to remove students causing the disruption, even after they were warned. I had flashbacks to when I was protested at the CUNY Law School in 2018.

My friend Yitzy Frankel shared some of the highlights here:

You can watch the entire video here:

Even if UCLA takes no action, I seriously question how some of these students will fare as attorneys. For example, one student drew a sign that said “Hows Trump’s C**ck Taste?” (asterisks in the original). To be sure, there are valid grounds to criticize members of the Trump Administration. But what exactly does this vulgarity convey, other than showing the student is unable to engage in any reasoned discourse?

Another sign was directed at Matthew Weinberg, the chapter President of the UCLA FedSoc chapter. Weinberg, who is Jewish, is currently involved in litigation against the UCLA chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine. This is a student who has faced anti-semitism on campus during the “encampment” movement. Yet another student, who was presumably Jewish, charged that it was Weinberg who was bringing a Nazi to campus:

“Weinberg – why’d you invite Nazis? Jew to Jew, Shame on You”

No, shame on the student holding this sign.

Indeed, a flyer compared Percival to Wilhelm Frick, the Nazi Minister of the Interior. One of the most depraved aspects of the modern left is to label everyone they disagree with as a “Nazi.” When I was in college, George W. Bush was a Nazi. Today, anyone associated with Donald Trump is a Nazi. To even make this linkage dilutes the unspeakable horrors of the Nazi regime. It’s no wonder people like Nick Fuentes can now say that Hitler was “cool.”

What will become of UCLA? Eugene Volokh is gone. Steve Bainbridge is near retirement. Jon Michaels and a few other old-school liberals remain, but for how long? Soon enough, this institution will be succumb to self-immolation.

Harmeet Dhillon, the head of the Civil Rights Division, seems to have taken note:

The post UCLA Students Protest FedSoc Event With DHS General Counsel James Percival appeared first on Reason.com.

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UCLA Students Protest FedSoc Event With DHS General Counsel James Percival

The UCLA Federalist Society invited James Percival, the General Counsel of the Department of Homeland Security to speak on Tuesday, April 21. Unfortunately, there was a massive protest that disrupted the speech. Students consistently disrupted by the event by booing and heckling the speakers. There was a nonstop cacophony of ring tones and other sounds, again, which were intended to disrupt the event. This event has been covered by Fox News and the UCLA Daily Bruin.

I give credit to Professor Jon Michaels, who introduced the speaker. Michaels is a staunch critic of the Trump Administration, but still believes in the robust protection of free speech and discourse. Professor Greg McNeal of Pepperdine also deserves credit for posing tough questions to Percival. I cannot give credit to the UCLA Administration, which took no action to remove students causing the disruption, even after they were warned. I had flashbacks to when I was protested at the CUNY Law School in 2018.

My friend Yitzy Frankel shared some of the highlights here:

You can watch the entire video here:

Even if UCLA takes no action, I seriously question how some of these students will fare as attorneys. For example, one student drew a sign that said “Hows Trump’s C**ck Taste?” (asterisks in the original). To be sure, there are valid grounds to criticize members of the Trump Administration. But what exactly does this vulgarity convey, other than showing the student is unable to engage in any reasoned discourse?

Another sign was directed at Matthew Weinberg, the chapter President of the UCLA FedSoc chapter. Weinberg, who is Jewish, is currently involved in litigation against the UCLA chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine. This is a student who has faced anti-semitism on campus during the “encampment” movement. Yet another student, who was presumably Jewish, charged that it was Weinberg who was bringing a Nazi to campus:

“Weinberg – why’d you invite Nazis? Jew to Jew, Shame on You”

No, shame on the student holding this sign.

Indeed, a flyer compared Percival to Wilhelm Frick, the Nazi Minister of the Interior. One of the most depraved aspects of the modern left is to label everyone they disagree with as a “Nazi.” When I was in college, George W. Bush was a Nazi. Today, anyone associated with Donald Trump is a Nazi. To even make this linkage dilutes the unspeakable horrors of the Nazi regime. It’s no wonder people like Nick Fuentes can now say that Hitler was “cool.”

What will become of UCLA? Eugene Volokh is gone. Steve Bainbridge is near retirement. Jon Michaels and a few other old-school liberals remain, but for how long? Soon enough, this institution will be succumb to self-immolation.

Harmeet Dhillon, the head of the Civil Rights Division, seems to have taken note:

The post UCLA Students Protest FedSoc Event With DHS General Counsel James Percival appeared first on Reason.com.

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Oil Conundrum: Record Inventory Draws And Stable Crude Prices

Oil Conundrum: Record Inventory Draws And Stable Crude Prices

Something strange is taking place in oil. Crude prices have been remarkably stable over the last week, with Brent mostly trading in the high 90s on mixed prospects for the resolution of the over 7-week conflict in the Persian Gulf, despite signs to the contrary: the second round of talks between the US and Iran has been postponed indefinitely following Iran’s decision not to participate; President Trump extended a ceasefire “until such time as their proposal is submitted, and discussions are concluded, one way or the other” and the US maintains its blockade of ships departing from or heading to Iranian ports.

So while the market is rejoicing and trading at daily record highs that all is well, the oil picture remains just as bad as it was when the war started almost two months ago.

According to Goldman, the combination of 1) a lower risk premium, 2) destocking in anticipation of expected Hormuz reopening, and 3) a moderation in spot buying, helps explain why futures crude prices, physical crude prices, and refined products prices have all moderated since the ceasefire despite still low Hormuz flows and extreme draws in global visible stocks.

And yet, global visible oil inventories are likely to reach record-low levels even in an optimistic scenario where Hormuz flows start to recover by the end of April.

Global visible oil inventories have been drawing at an average pace of 6.3mb/d in April so far, while Goldman’s estimates of total global oil draws (including “invisible” refined products storage in non-OECD) show 10.9mb/d draws in April so far, the steepest monthly draws on record since 2017. This puts total estimated oil draws since the start of the war at 474mb.

As estimated oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz remain at 10% of normal or 2.0mb/d (4-day moving average) and as any recovery in flows will likely be gradual even following a complete reopening (given logistical constraints such as reversing shut ins, tanker voyage times and pipeline speed limits), declines in global oil inventories are likely to continue through May or beyond.

Extreme inventory draws also imply that rapidly tightening physical markets will continue to require much higher prices for immediate oil delivery rather than prices for delivery in a few months if market participants assume a high probability of a short-lived disruption. This backwardation is the key explanation of the perceived disconnect between nearby physical oil prices (i.e. prices for immediate delivery) and nearby futures oil pries (i.e. prices for June delivery).

The price of swapping Brent futures from “paper” to physical barrel delivery for the same delivery window (Exchange Futures for Physical, or  EFP) never went above $2/bbl over the last two months. However, the premium for dated Brent for an immediate delivery vs.nearby futures (Dated to Frontline, or DFL) moderated recently from nearly $40/bbl to a still very high $10 as the lag between the delivery periods for both contracts narrowed.

The shift from restocking and panic buying in March to destocking in April likely explains the moderation of prices in physical markets, according to Goldman, with some Asia refineries – especially in China – reportedly re-offering previously purchased crude.

But destocking isn’t sustainable since stocks – as we explained in “How Long Before The World Hits Crude Oil Operational Minimum” – have a natural lower bound, after which the main rebalancing mechanism in the absence of a supply recovery is demand reduction.

And herein lies the problem: the global oil-on-water buffer is approaching its depletion as non-sanctioned oil on water is close to its all-time lows, imports of Russian oil dipped below their 2025 average, and the US waiver on imports of Iranian oil on water expired without an extension.

Meanwhile, US oil exports surged to a record high 12.7mb/d, as outbound shipments suggest even higher exports in May. But some key Texas pipelines are already running at or above their operational capacity, suggesting that further increases in US exports are limited.

Putting all this together, Goldman warns that while the risks to its base case oil price forecast (which is close to current market pricing) are two-sided, there is significant net upside risks from longer Hormuz flows disruptions and potentially more persistent Mideast supply losses.

Meanwhile, as we reported previously, estimated oil flows from the Persian Gulf (including pipeline redirections) are at  9.3mb/d or 40% of normal…

… deteriorating by 2.6 mb/d which is the estimated oil exports from Iran since the US blockade started on April 12th to 0.3mb/d.

More in the full Goldman note available to pro subs.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/23/2026 – 00:05

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From Gaza To BRICS: The Revolt Against The Dollar Order

From Gaza To BRICS: The Revolt Against The Dollar Order

Authored by Freddie Ponton via 21stCenturyWire.com,

Washington spent decades marketing the dollar as the natural language of world trade, a neutral vessel carrying commerce across borders. In practice, it became the armed currency of an imperial system that bombed states into ruin, sanctioned whole societies, and reserved the right to strangle any country that refused submission.

Unlike the usual churn of de-dollarization commentary, this report does not trade in fantasies of sudden dollar collapse or fairy tales about a BRICS currency descending to save the world overnight. It follows the machinery already taking shape beneath the noise, from national-currency trade and central bank swap lines to sovereign payment systems, digital settlement experiments, and BRICS-linked development finance, while keeping in view the fractures, delays, and contradictions that still run through the structure.

Just as important, this article refuses to separate economics from empire, tying the scramble for monetary sovereignty directly to sanctions, SWIFT weaponisation, the siege of Iran, and the wider coercive order that pushed much of the Global South to start building financial escape routes of its own.

The empire taught the world to flee

What matters here is not another recycled debate, but a grounded map of how a multipolar financial order is taking shape in practice, who is driving it, and why that shift now reaches far beyond the balance sheets of central banks.

That system is now producing its own backlash. Across BRICS and the wider Global South, de-dollarization is no longer a slogan tossed around at summits or a fantasy about a miracle currency waiting just beyond the horizon. It is taking material form through local-currency trade, sovereign payment systems, central bank swap lines, digital settlement projects, and development finance built to reduce exposure to Western-controlled capital.

The shift is not benign because it grows out of pressure, not theory. States that watched Russia cut from major Western financial channels, Iran suffocated under sanctions, and entire economies treated as hostages to US foreign policy have drawn the same conclusion. No nation can claim sovereignty if another power can freeze its trade, choke its banks, and police its payments.

That is why the war on Iran belongs at the heart of the story. The bombs may fall from the sky, but the same system works through banks, reserve currencies, settlement networks, and the threat of exclusion. Military aggression and monetary coercion are not separate instruments. They are two hands of the same order.

The scaffolding of a post-dollar order

2025 study on BRICS de-dollarization spearheaded by Podrugina Anastasia Viktorovna, an Associate Professor of the Department of World Economics, Faculty of World Economy and International Affairs, heading the Group for Structural Issues in the World Economy at the Centre for Comprehensive European and International Studies (CCEIS), makes clear that what is emerging is not a dramatic monetary rupture, but a layered architecture. Its pillars are already visible in the expansion of national-currency trade, the spread of central-bank swap arrangements, the growth of sovereign payment and messaging systems, the exploration of digital-currency settlement, and the gradual strengthening of financial markets in local currencies. The same study is sober enough to stress that this framework contains many of the necessary parts, but is still not fully functional.

DOCUMENT: Formation of a de-dollarization architecture in the BRICS countries (Source: CWE Journal)

The strongest evidence begins with trade itself. By 2024, more than 90% of bilateral trade between Russia and China was already being settled in national currencies. Around 90% of direct payments between Russia and India were also taking place in national currencies. At the same time, Russia and Iran signed a strategic partnership agreement in 2025 that provided for a move toward national-currency settlements in mutual trade.

But even here, the limits of the transition are visible. The rapid growth of Russia-India trade has left large pools of so-called frozen rupees in Indian banks, exposing a basic problem of local-currency settlement. When trade is imbalanced, and a currency is not freely convertible, the alternative to the dollar can still trap value inside narrow channels. The architecture is advancing, but every such friction point is a reminder that monetary sovereignty needs more than political will; it also needs usable, liquid, and recyclable financial circuits. These are not symbolic gestures. They show what de-dollarization looks like once it leaves the conference hall and enters the bloodstream of real commerce. It means exporters and importers routing around the old imperial middleman. It means countries under siege refusing to let every sale, shipment, and invoice pass through a currency system controlled by powers openly hostile to their survival.

But trade settlement alone cannot carry a project this large. Without deeper financial markets in local currencies, even successful trade settlements will hit a ceiling. The architecture described in the first study depends not only on payment systems and swap lines, but on bond markets, development finance, and lending mechanisms able to keep capital circulating outside the dollar’s orbit. That is why the New Development Bank matters so much, and it is not just a lender, but a testing ground for the next stage of de-dollarization, increasing the share of its lending in BRICS currencies from 25% toward a planned 30% by 2026 while pointing toward a larger, still unfinished architecture of local-currency finance.

The same study shows that BRICS states are also trying to build protective liquidity through bilateral swap lines and through the Contingent Reserve Arrangement, created in 2014 with an initial capacity of $100 billion dollars. That mechanism offers a degree of collective financial defense, even if the study notes that access beyond the first 30% of a member’s limit still remains tied to IMF approval, a reminder that the old system has not yet been fully escaped.

Then there is the payment backbone itself. Russia has its own Financial Messaging System (SPFS), China has the Cross-border Interbank Payment System(CIPS), India has its Structured Financial Messaging System (SFMS),  and Iran has its own System for Electronic Payments Messaging (SEPAM). These systems matter because they reduce dependence on SWIFT and give targeted states more space to move when Western governments weaponize financial plumbing. By the end of 2024, SPFS had 584 users, and message volume had risen by 23%. CIPS had 168 direct participants and a network of more than 4,800 banks across 119 countries.

The picture grows even sharper in the realm of digital finance. The same research points to BRICS Bridge and BRICS Pay as important initiatives under discussion, yet it notes that both BRICS Bridge and BRICS Pay remain under active development in 2026, with momentum increasing, but there is still no clearly verified full public launch that can be treated as a settled fact from the strongest available sources. That does not weaken the case. It tells the truth. The alternative order is real, but it is still being assembled piece by piece.

That incompleteness matters. For instance, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) already offers a non-Western proof that regional payment integration can move beyond aspiration into institution, with denser swap arrangements, broader payment connectivity, and more coordinated settlement frameworks than BRICS has yet achieved. The lesson is not that BRICS is failing, but that it remains at an earlier stage of construction, still assembling what others have already begun to normalize.

The next battlefield will not be fought only through reserves and trade invoices. It will also be fought through code. Beyond BRICS Bridge and the still-unfinished payment initiatives already on the table lies a wider digital frontier of interoperable systems, domestic payment integration, programmable money, and new clearing architectures that could one day move value across borders with far less dependence on the dollarized banking chain, and central bank digital currency (CBDCs) will likely play a central role in that shift. If that frontier matures, the most important break with the old order may not arrive as a single new currency at all, but as a mesh of digital rails that quietly makes the old monopolies less necessary. A 2024 working Paper authored by Mayer Jörg, a Senior Economic Affairs Officer in the Division on Globalisation and Development Strategies of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), titled “De-dollarization: The global payment infrastructure and wholesale central bank digital currencies”, provides with great accuracy, a solid explanation of how CBDCs and multi-CBDC payment architecture could move cross-border settlements away from the dollar-dependent correspondent banking chain and toward interoperable digital systems.

Sanctions turned the dollar into a warning

2026 study on greater BRICS cooperation, authored by Yang Lyu, an Associate Research Professor at the China Institutes of Contemporary International Studies, Beijing, P.R. China, explains why this process has accelerated. Countries are not stepping back from the dollar because they suddenly discovered an academic preference for monetary diversity.

They are moving in the same direction for different reasons, and that is why the process advances with both momentum and friction. Russia was pushed forward by sanctions warfare, China by long-term monetary strategy, and others by the simpler need to lower transaction costs, hedge political risk, and widen room for manoeuvre without fully rupturing with the old order. BRICS is therefore advancing not as a perfectly unified bloc, but as a coalition converging on the same infrastructure from very different political starting points.

The study argues that the weaponization of the dollar and of Western payment infrastructure has steadily eroded trust in both. It links that erosion to sanctions, financial blockades, SWIFT exclusion, and the use of monetary dominance as a geopolitical bludgeon. By the end of 2024, it notes, the dollar’s share of global foreign-exchange reserves had fallen below 58%, while its share in cross-border payments had dropped to 42.6%.

At the same time, more than 25% of intra-BRICS trade was already being settled in local currencies by the end of 2024. That does not mean the dollar has been dethroned. It means the world has started to hedge against it, and it has done so for reasons rooted in fear, survival, and bitter experience.

Iran stands as one of the clearest examples. The 2026 study places the blockade of Iran alongside sanctions on Russia, Venezuela, and Cuba as part of the pattern that pushed countries to seek alternatives to dollar-based finance. For states across the Global South, the lesson is no longer theoretical. A reserve currency controlled by an aggressive empire is not simply a medium of exchange. It is a pressure point waiting to be used.

DOCUMENT: Innovating the global payment system through greater BRICS cooperation (Source: Springer)

This is why the de-dollarization debate is often misunderstood in the West. For much of the world, the issue is not whether the dollar remains liquid, deep, and still globally dominant. The issue is whether a country can import food, export energy, finance development, and survive political confrontation without placing its throat inside the same imperial fist.

The same study makes another crucial point. The most advanced path is not a common BRICS currency. That remains the boldest and least immediately feasible option. The most practical path is local-currency settlement, while the most forward-looking one is cross-border digital payment. The deeper story, then, lies not in branding but in infrastructure.

Greater BRICS changes the balance of power

This story becomes even more consequential once BRICS expansion enters the frame.

That expansion matters for another reason as well. BRICS is gaining force not only because it resists Western domination, but because it offers many states in the Global South a more usable political proposition, which offers cooperation without the ritual humiliation of Western conditionality, financing without open submission, and a wider stage on which to pursue sovereignty without formally entering an anti-Western military bloc. That is why its appeal keeps spreading beyond the countries already inside it. For many governments, BRICS is no longer simply an act of defiance. It is a practical project of political and economic reorientation.

The 2026 study featured above argues that the bloc’s enlargement in 2023 and the admission of partner countries in 2024 transformed it from a grouping of major emerging economies into a much broader platform for the Global South.

That expansion changed the scale of the project. According to the study, BRICS economies accounted for more than 40% of global output measured in current dollars and 23% of global goods exports, while holding roughly half of the world’s gold and currency reserves. These data point to something material and dangerous from the standpoint of Washington, because a de-dollarizing bloc with this kind of weight does not rest on rhetoric alone, but also on oil, food, mineral reserves, industrial capacity, maritime corridors, overland routes, and enormous demographic scale.

Iran matters here not as an isolated victim of aggression but as part of a larger geography of resistance. The expanded BRICS formation brings together states with leverage in energy, agriculture, transport, minerals, and strategic chokepoints. It gives the search for financial sovereignty a material foundation that is far harder to crush than any single sanctioned state standing alone.

The study also argues that expansion improves the conditions for upgrading core BRICS financial mechanisms such as the New Development Bank, the Contingent Reserve Arrangement, and the bloc’s emerging payment architecture. More members mean more resources, broader expertise, and a greater ability to dilute internal resistance to reform. In plain language, the wider the bloc becomes, the more credible its financial alternatives become.

And that is precisely what makes the process dangerous from Washington’s point of view. Expanded BRICS does not grow in a straight line. It compounds, with each new member, corridor, reserve pool, and payment channel creating fresh advantages that deepen cooperation further and make the whole architecture harder to unwind. The threat is not that BRICS has already replaced the old order. It is that a self-reinforcing cycle has begun, and every successful step gives the next one more weight, more legitimacy, and more staying power.

Corridors need detente

What comes next is not just a struggle over currencies, but over routes. The same states now trying to reduce their exposure to dollar coercion are also trying to build the physical geography of a different order, and that includes ports, rail lines, energy corridors, digital cables, and payment rails that can tie Asia, the Gulf, and Europe together on terms less vulnerable to Western choke points.

That is why detente matters. A corridor cannot function under permanent bombardment, and no Gulf state can turn geography into lasting power while missiles, sanctions, and military escalation keep the region in a state of managed instability.

This is where Saudi Arabia and the UAE need to be understood clearly. They are not confused actors drifting between camps. They are conflicted hinge powers, still tied to Washington’s security architecture, yet increasingly drawn toward the commercial, financial, and geopolitical opportunities opened by BRICS, China, India, and the wider push for non-dollarized trade. Their long-term value lies not in choosing permanent confrontation, but in becoming indispensable connectors between energy producers, capital flows, industrial zones, and the trade arteries running east to west and south to north.

That is also why the politics of detente may prove more decisive than any summit declaration. The faster these corridors become operational outside the chokehold of dollar hegemony, the stronger the material constituency for stability becomes, because every new port link, customs platform, payment interface, logistics hub, and industrial corridor begins to depend on predictability rather than war. In that sense, de-dollarization is not only a monetary process. It is also a question of whether the real economy can be pulled into the same orbit. No payment system can carry history on its own if trade, investment, logistics, energy, agriculture, and industrial cooperation remain too thin to bear its weight.

Financial sovereignty without deeper real-economy integration stays fragile, because money may find a new route while the material life beneath it still depends on supply chains, markets, and chokepoints shaped by the old order. It is a regional stabilization project in embryo, one that gives Gulf capitals a direct economic stake in containing escalation and keeping the routes open.

This is also where the Israeli question becomes harder to ignore.

The original east-to-west corridor vision encapsulated in the early India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor concept (IMEC), and its initial public framing, placed the Gulf at the center and imagined Israel as the Mediterranean outlet for trade moving onward to Europe. On paper, that gave Israel an obvious strategic pitch, where it can market itself as the indispensable logistical hinge between Asia and the Mediterranean. But politics has a way of wrecking maps. Israel’s deepening unpopularity, especially across the Global South, has raised the political cost of any corridor architecture that asks Arab, Asian, and African states to anchor their commercial future to an Israeli hub as though legitimacy were irrelevant.

That does not mean such projects disappear overnight. It means they enter a harsher political climate, where many states will think twice before tying their commercial future to a route entangled with a deeply discredited regional order. In the current climate, Israel will find it hard, perhaps impossible, to market its way out of the Gaza genocide or the devastation left in the wake of its military expansion into Lebanon and Syria. The more unstable and unpopular Israel becomes, the more attractive it will be for Gulf, Asian, and BRICS-linked actors to diversify outlets, multiply routes, and build a wider corridor ecosystem rather than accept any single state as the mandatory gate between East and West. In that sense, the battle over the future is no longer only about who controls the currency of trade, but it is also about who can offer the safest, most legitimate, and most politically sustainable roads along which that trade will move.

The break is unfinished, but it is real

None of this means BRICS has already built a complete replacement for the dollar. The research does not claim that, and the facts would not support it. Several initiatives remain incomplete, some currencies are far more usable internationally than others, and the old order still retains enormous structural advantages in liquidity, habit, and market depth.

But that is not the real measure of what is happening. The real measure is whether a parallel architecture exists in recognizable form, amd it certainly does. Local-currency trade is rising, while sovereign messaging systems are expanding, and swap lines and reserve arrangements are being tested. Digital settlement experiments are clearly moving forward, and the New Development Bank is increasing local-currency lending whilst attempting to reduce borrowers’ exposure to dollar risk.

That is what makes the old imperial center nervous. Endless war did not preserve unipolar power. It only exposed its violence. As for sanctions, they did not restore faith in the dollar order; instead, they taught countries to search for exits. The war on Iran, like the wars that came before it, has only sharpened the lesson.

What is being born will not arrive all at once. It will not come wrapped in a single currency note or announced by a single triumphant headline. It is far more likely that it will arrive through contracts, clearing mechanisms, settlement systems, reserve pools, and political will. The world Washington tried to discipline through force is building routes around that discipline. And this time, the escape route is being built in plain sight, for everyone to recognize.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/22/2026 – 23:50

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US Drains Half Its Patriot Arsenal During Iran War, New Military Study Finds

US Drains Half Its Patriot Arsenal During Iran War, New Military Study Finds

The seven-week Iran war, currently on pause due to an extended ceasefire, has raised alarm in Washington over the question of how fast the US has burned through its missile interceptor stockpile.

The two-week ceasefire, having just been extended, provided an opportunity for both sides to restock and regroup. A fresh analysis from the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) finds the US military tore through nearly half its Patriot interceptor inventory while heavily draining multiple other critical missile stockpiles.

US Army file image

According to CSIS, the Pentagon burned through almost 50% of its Patriot missiles, more than half of its Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) systems – designed to counter short, medium, and intermediate-range threats – and over 45% of its Precision Strike Missiles (PrSMs) during the Iran air and missile campaign.

And the hangover won’t be short given that replenishing key munitions – including Tomahawks and JASSMs – back to levels before Trump’s latest war of choice in the Middle East could take anywhere from one to four years.

Below is a key line from the fresh CSIS report:

The Trump administration recently announced a series of agreements with industry to boost production and put missile inventories on a “wartime footing.” The large quantities of munitions in the president’s FY 2027 budget request further underscore the urgency of rebuilding and expanding the inventory. Near-term deliveries, however, are relatively low because of small orders in the past. Even if Congress appropriates the requested FY 2027 funds, it will take years for these missiles to be delivered.

Of course, some of these systems were already removed from the Asia-Pacific area, where the US military has an eye on China. These systems are of course central to any future showdown in the Western Pacific.

“Even before the Iran war, stockpiles were deemed insufficient for a peer competitor fight. That shortfall is now even more acute and building stockpiles to levels adequate for a war with China will take additional time,” the CSIS report’s authors wrote.

However, the Pentagon’s line has consistently been that the Untied States military remains the  most “powerful in the world and has everything it needs to execute at the time and place of the President’s choosing.”

The reality is that in the opening days of Operation Epic Fury, the US seemed underprepared for the ferocity of the Iranian response. At least 13 American bases in the region were hit and damaged, to the point that US forces across the region had to be moved back, and energy sites across the Gulf were pummeled and suffered billions of dollars in damage.

US interceptors worked in overdrive drying to protect sensitive Gulf facilities and bases, as dozens of inbound Iranian drones and missiles were a daily thing back in March into early April before the ceasefire took effect.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/22/2026 – 23:25

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/vq0RTDA Tyler Durden

“Sotomayor Drops The Ball on Obamacare” And The Shadow Docket

When exactly did the shadow docket begin? People are now arguing about what was the first relevant shadow docket case, but those disagreements turn on stated and unstated assumptions. The answer depends on how you define the shadow docket. I need to give some more thought to exactly what the “shadow docket” is.

My colleague Stephanie Barclay suggests that the shadow docket actually began on New Year’s Eve 2013 when Circuit Justice Sotomayor granted emergency relief to the Little Sisters of the Poor.

I wrote about this moment at some length in Chapter 15 of my 2016 book, Unraveled: Obamacare, Religious Liberty, and Executive Power. I will include an excerpt of the book after the jump.

Here, I will offer a few reasons why the Little Sisters order can be distinguished from the Clean Power Plan order about two years later. This ruling may still qualify as the first shadow docket entry under certain assumptions, but I have some doubts.

First, the Little Sisters of the Poor were only seeking an exemption for themselves. Other litigation had been filed throughout the country by other religious non-profits. Almost all of those courts had granted emergency relief to the plaintiffs. Only two plaintiffs were denied relief: the Little Sisters of the Poor and Notre Dame University. Notre Dame did not file an emergency appeal to the Supreme Court. Instead, they caved and made coverage of emergency contraception available under their plan. The Little Sisters, represented by the Becket Fund, would file an emergency application with Circuit Justice Sotomayor. With modern emergency docket litigation, plaintiffs often seek universal relief, whether through nationwide injunctions, vacatur, certified classes, or broad associational standing. Outside death penalty cases, it is rare for the Supreme Court to grant emergency one-off relief. Mirabelli is one such case.

Second, the Clean Power Plan litigation was somewhat unique in that the case began at the D.C. Circuit. There were no district court proceedings. Moreover, the Supreme Court issued its stay of the executive action before the D.C. Circuit had an opportunity to rule. By contrast, for the contraception mandate, the District Court and the Tenth Circuit both denied relief after full briefing and consideration. Justice Sotomayor’s order in no way short-circuited the appellate process. Moreover, Sotomayor did what virtually every court had done at that point.

Third, on December 31, 2013, Justice Sotomayor granted what we would now call an administrative stay:

IT IS ORDERED that [the government is] temporarily enjoined from enforcing against [the Little Sisters of the Poor] the contraceptive coverage requirements imposed by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, and related regulations pending the receipt of a response and further order of the undersigned or of the Court. The response to the application is due Friday, January 3, 2014, by 10 AM.

To be precise, if the shadow docket was born with the Little Sisters, the birth occurred twenty-one days later on January 24, 2014, when the full Court issued a one-paragraph order:

The application for an injunction having been submitted to Justice Sotomayor and by her referred to the Court, the Court orders: If the employer applicants inform the Secretary of Health and Human Services in writing that they are non-profit organizations that hold themselves out as religious and have religious objections to providing coverage for contraceptive services, the respondents are enjoined from enforcing against the applicants the challenged provisions of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and related regulations pending final disposition of the appeal by the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit. To meet the condition for injunction pending appeal, applicants need not use the form prescribed by the Government and need not send copies to third-party administrators. The Court issues this order based on all of the circumstances of the case, and this order should not be construed as an expression of the Court’s views on the merits.

A few things stand out here. The Court to did not enjoin the contraceptive mandate altogether. It granted relief to one party, and only one party. There was no suggestion at the time this ruling set a precedent, which other parties could rely on. Notre Dame, which did not appeal, did not benefit from this ruling. Instead, the Court effectively granted an accommodation to a single plaintiff. This sort of tailored remedy stands in stark contrast with the sweeping relief granted in the Clean Power Plan case. That ruling completely enjoined the policy nationwide.

Fourth, in the Clean Power Plan case, it is pretty clear the Obama Administration was trying to rush the policy to “bake it in” before the Supreme Court could review it. Will Baude suggested that the Chief Justice was “concern[ed] that the executive branch [was] openly circumventing the federal courts.” The Obama Administration was not trying to circumvent all federal court review. They were content to run out the clock in the favorable D.C. Circuit. DOJ was trying to avoid Supreme Court review.  There was some gamesmanship.

But I don’t think there was a similar gaming for the contraceptive mandate. The ACA statute provided that the employer mandate would go into effect on January 1, 2014 (though the statute itself said nothing at all about contraception coverage). You may recall that initially, the Obama Administration argued that the “penalty” enforcing the individual mandate was a tax, and since the tax would not be collected until 2014, the challenge to Obamacare in 2010 was not yet ripe in light of the Tax Anti-Injunction Act. This was a clever way of “baking in” Obamacare before the Supreme Court could review it. But DOJ abandoned this strategy once they realized they needed the taxing power argument to save the law. There is lots of gamesmanship and playing keep-away from SCOTUS

Fifth, there is another reason to distinguish the Clean Power Plan and the Little Sisters of the Poor. This reason is somewhat political, but not really. There were no recorded dissents for the nuns. The Justices all likely agreed that the District Court in Colorado committed a clear error, and the ex ante status quo had to be preserved. In other words, the claim for legal relief was clearly established. That would seem to be a very strong factor in favor of granting emergency relief. The Clean Power Plan case split hard by a 5-4 vote. Such a sharp disagreement is almost certain proof that the basis for legal relief is not clearly established. This is what Justice Kagan wrote in her memorandum, and in many subsequent published dissents.

For these reasons, and others, I think it is tough to view the Clean Power Plan and the Little Sisters of the Poor on the same wavelength. I spoke with several DOJ lawyers at the time. They were a “little bit surprised” by the Court’s ruling. But this reaction pales in comparison to the shock the Obama Administration had after the Clean Power Plan ruling, where the Justices bypassed the lower court altogether.

Here is an excerpt from Chapter 15, titled “New Year’s Resolution.” As I’ve noted in other contexts, I wrote this book behind the veil of ignorance. The shadow docket wasn’t even a glimmer in my eye at the time. Indeed, if memory serves, I wrote this chapter before the Clean Power Plan ruling. (The book was sent to the press circa June 2016.)

15.1. “Adhere to Their Religious Conviction”

In September 2013, as a government shutdown loomed, and with only three months before the contraceptive mandate went into effect, the Little Sisters of the Poor finally challenged Accommodation 2.0 in court. One of their attorneys told me that they were very late to file because the Little Sisters didn’t want to have anything to do with litigation. But as New Year’s Eve drew near, the order of nuns were left with no other options. Over the next three months their lawyers at the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty anxiously waited for a decision. “We kept calling, saying, ‘hey we have an emergency coming up,'” the lawyer told me. “We needed an answer.”

Finally, late in the afternoon on Friday, December 27, the district court ruled against the Little Sisters. Judge William J. Martínez did not question whether the mandate conflicts with their religious beliefs. However, Martínez did “analyze the challenged regulations to determine whether their implementation will cause the allegedly harmful act to in fact occur.”1 Despite the Little Sisters’ objection to filling out the form, the court concluded that “nothing on the face of the Form expressly authorizes [providing] contraceptive care.” Signing the form “does not authorize any organization to deliver contraceptive coverage to Little Sisters’ employees,” the court concluded. As a result, Accommodation 2.0 does “not substantially burden Plaintiffs’ religious beliefs,” and the Little Sisters are not actually “required to buy into a scheme that substantially burdens their religious beliefs.”

At that time, the overwhelming majority of courts had already granted interim relief to religious non-profits. One of the attorneys for the Little Sisters was shocked that the court ruled against them. “I would have thought that of all the clients in the country who were going to get relief from the lower courts, the one I don’t need to worry about is the Little Sisters of the Poor, because who’s really going to turn down Little Sisters of the Poor? They’re so obviously religious that it’s idiotic to not call them a religious employer.”

After an all-nighter, the very next day the Becket Fund lawyers requested an emergency injunction from the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver. The twenty-one-page brief explained: “By midnight on New Year’s Eve, Mother Provincial Loraine Marie Maguire must decide whether the Little Sisters should adhere to their religious conviction that they cannot participate in the Mandate, or whether they should sacrifice that religious belief to spare their ministry from the government’s crushing fines.” This prayer for relief would also go unanswered.

Three days later, at noon on December 31, 2013 – as it had done a year earlier with Hobby Lobby – the Tenth Circuit denied the injunction. Judges Paul Joseph Kelly, Jr. and Carlos F. Lucero found that under the accommodation, stage is not warranted.”

Like the year before, the Tenth Circuit’s refusal to put the mandate on hold was at odds with virtually all other federal courts to consider the issue. In seventeen out of nineteen cases, the courts had granted an injunction for the religious non-profits before the December 31 deadline. Leading up to New Year’s Eve, only the Little Sisters and Notre Dame University were denied an injunction by the lower courts.2

In early December, Father Jenkins, who had invited Obama to speak at Notre Dame four years earlier, explained that succumbing to the mandate will lead us “down a path that ultimately will undermine those [religious] institutions.”3 However, with a decision that surprised many, Notre Dame acquiesced to the Seventh Circuit’s order. A spokesperson for the university announced on December 31, “Having been denied a stay, Notre Dame is advising employees that pursuant to the Affordable Care Act, our third party administrator is required to notify plan participants of coverage provided under its contraceptives payment program.”4 Coverage of emergency contraceptives such as Plan B and Ella would soon become available through Notre Dame’s insurance plan.

Many criticized the university for not having a strong enough commitment to fight the mandate all the way. Father Bill Miscamble, a professor of history at Notre Dame, told the National Catholic Register that he was disappointed “with the tepid way in which Notre Dame has acquiesced with the Obamacare provisions and authorized its health-insurance administrator to implement the HHS mandate.”5 Notre Dame did not seek an injunction from the Supreme Court. I asked one of the attorneys for the Little Sisters why Notre Dame did not request emergency relief from the Justices. He replied, “I don’t know, and you will never find out.” Notre Dame continued to challenge the mandate in the lower courts, but by that point it had already complied with the accommodation.

Later that month, Pope Francis spoke about Notre Dame, saying, “[I]t is my hope that the University of Notre Dame will continue to offer unambiguous testimony to this aspect of its foundational Catholic identity, especially in the face of efforts, from whatever quarter, to dilute that indispensable witness…. And this is important: its identity, as it was intended from the beginning. To defend it, to preserve it and to advance it!” Notre Dame Professor Carter Snead saw the Pope’s remarks as encouraging the university to continue its fight against the contraception mandate: “The Holy Father’s words strike me as a timely and profound encouragement to Notre Dame in its continuing efforts to defend its religious liberty in court.”6 Patrick Deneen, also a Professor at Notre Dame, told National Review that “[o]n the same day that Pope Francis’s statement was publicized, members of the university community were given notice that we would be receiving new health ID cards for ‘women’s preventive services.'”7

The Little Sisters of the Poor would not be so easily deterred. Mother Provincial Loraine joked with one of her attorneys, “Well, really, how many nuns can they put in jail?”

15.2. “Sotomayor Drops Ball on Obamacare”

With less than twelve hours till the new year, the contraceptive mandate was barreling toward the Little Sisters like an oncoming train. Justice Sonia Sotomayor – who at that very moment was riding Amtrak to New York City – would soon pull the emergency brake. The Bronx native was invited to push the button to start the New Year’s Eve ball drop. The president of the Times Square Alliance exclaimed, “Who better to join us in the crossroads of the world than one of New York’s own?”8 Sotomayor would receive notice of the Little Sisters’ emergency petition around 5:00 PM while she was on the northbound train from Union Station to Penn Station. Fortunately, Amtrak’s wireless Internet actually worked that evening.

The Little Sisters made their case: “Mother Loraine must make that decision by midnight tonight, unless relief is granted by this Court.” There was a strong sense of déjà vu to this appeal. The Becket Fund represented both Hobby Lobby and the Little Sisters. And just like the year before, the attorneys were forced to frantically file a last-minute appeal with Circuit Justice Sotomayor on December 31. The year before, Sotomayor rebuffed Hobby Lobby. Fortunately, should old acquaintance be forgot and never brought to mind, this prayer for extraordinary relief was answered.

Before Justice Sotomayor released the Waterford Crystal Ball over the Crossroads of the World, she would first release an injunction halting the contraceptive mandate. Or, as The Drudge Report more colorfully captioned it, “Sotomayor Drops Ball on Obamacare.”9 At 10:00 PM, Mark Rienzi’s phone rang. It was Danny Bickel, the Supreme Court’s Emergency Applications clerk. Capital defense lawyers have dubbed Bickel “the death clerk” because he handles the eleventh-hour requests to stay executions.10 But tonight, there was a far less somber call to make. Bickel told the Becket Fund attorney that the Court would soon issue an order, and he would send him a copy. Around 10:15 PM, as hundreds of thousands massed in Times Square, Sotomayor issued a one-paragraph order:

IT IS ORDERED that [the government is] temporarily enjoined from enforcing against [the Little Sisters of the Poor] the contraceptive coverage requirements imposed by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, and related regulations pending the receipt of a response and further order of the undersigned or of the Court. The response to the application is due Friday, January 3, 2014, by 10 AM.

Success! But this was an ephemeral victory, and the nuns’ angst was not quite over. Sotomayor’s December 31 order was only temporary. That evening, Mark Rienzi called Mother Loraine, who had “been praying about what she was going to do tomorrow.” He told her, “[W]e at least have life for a little while.”

As the nuns hailed Mary, Miley Cyrus twerked away 2013 in Times Square.11 Fortunately, the New York Times observed, “Viewers should not expect to see Ms. Cyrus twerking near Justice Sotomayor.”12 The Justice had a private space to handle these more pressing matters.13

15.3. Accommodation 3.0

On Friday, the government submitted its reply, and urged the Court that the injunction should be denied. “Applicants claim a right to extraordinary relief,” the solicitor general wrote, “even though compliance with the procedure they challenge will not result in anyone else’s provision of the items and services to which applicants object.” Recall that under Accommodation 2.0, the nuns, would not have to pay for the contraceptives. The Becket Fund lawyers replied that same day in a plea to keep the injunction in place:

The temporary injunction issued Tuesday night saved Mother Provincial Loraine Marie Maguire from the choice of violating her faith by executing the government’s required form, or exposing the Little Sisters’ ministry to decimation by IRS penalties. She exercised her religion that night, and each day since, by acting in accordance with God’s will as she understands it. The temporary injunction protected, and continues to protect, that religious exercise. That injunction should remain in place.

Twenty-one days of silence from the Court would follow. Then on January 24, the Justices issued a one-paragraph order:

The application for an injunction having been submitted to Justice Sotomayor and by her referred to the Court, the Court orders: If the employer applicants inform the Secretary of Health and Human Services in writing that they are non-profit organizations that hold themselves out as religious and have religious objections to providing coverage for contraceptive services, the respondents are enjoined from enforcing against the applicants the challenged provisions of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and related regulations pending final disposition of the appeal by the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit. To meet the condition for injunction pending appeal, applicants need not use the form prescribed by the Government and need not send copies to third-party administrators. The Court issues this order based on all of the circumstances of the case, and this order should not be construed as an expression of the Court’s views on the merits.

Simply stated, if the Little Sisters notify the government in writing that they “have a religious objection to providing coverage for contraceptive service,” which they obviously do, they are exempted from the contraceptive mandate altogether. I will refer to this approach as Accommodation 3.0, although in effect it mirrors the exemption given to the houses of worship. Rather than having to certify a religious objection, which would serve as notice for the insurer to begin paying for contraceptive coverage, under Accommodation 3.0, the employees of the Little Sister would not receive the coverage at all. There was no need for the Little Sisters to use the form provided by the government. Critically, however, the Justices stressed that “this order should not be construed as an expression of the Court’s views on the merits.” With that order, the Little Sisters finally received the relief they needed.

There was no recorded dissent to the order, but that does not mean that all of the Justices in fact agreed. For example, when the court refuses to halt an execution, Justice Ginsburg has explained that the lack of dissent on a last-minute appeal does not mean everyone concurs: “When a stay [of execution] is denied,” she observed, “it doesn’t mean we are in fact unanimous.”14

A senior DOJ official told me that they “were a little bit surprised” by the claim of the Little Sisters of the Poor and other religious non-profits. In contrast with Hobby Lobby, where the position of the government was that there was no RFRA claim at all, for the Little Sisters, there had been this evolution of working to try to frame that accommodation that would work for religious non-profits, or at least the vast majority of them. He added that there had been a lot of discussions between the administration and representatives of religious organizations to try to find some common ground, to find some way to make it work. That resulted in these changes over time in the nature of accommodation. That is, the upgrade from Accommodation 1.0 to 2.0. The Justice Department, he explained, did think by the time we’ve gotten to the idea of the form, that it would be perceived that we had avoided a substantial burden on religion and come up with a system that really seemed fair and would work. He shrugged his shoulders, and said, “So I think we were a little surprised about the stay.”

The Little Sisters’ fight was far from over. The case would be sent back to the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals for another round of litigation. But first, exactly two months later on March 25, 2014, the Supreme Court would hear oral arguments in Sebelius v. Hobby Lobby Stores.

The post "Sotomayor Drops The Ball on Obamacare" And The Shadow Docket appeared first on Reason.com.

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China Tests Directed Energy Beam That Recharges Drones Mid-Flight

China Tests Directed Energy Beam That Recharges Drones Mid-Flight

Authored by Bojan Stojkovski via Interesting Engineering,

A Chinese research team has successfully tested a wireless power transfer system that beams energy from the ground to a drone in flight using microwaves. 

The setup relies on a mobile emitter that directs energy to an antenna array mounted beneath the aircraft, enabling continuous power delivery without physical connections. Notably, the experiment maintained stable transmission even while both the drone and the ground unit were moving, marking a step beyond static demonstrations. 

Representational image of a Chinese drone.

Analysts have compared the concept to a “land-based aircraft carrier”, where an armoured vehicle could act as both a launch platform and an energy hub, sustaining drone operations in a manner similar to how naval carriers support aircraft at sea.

New system keeps drones flying for over three hours 

The concept could significantly expand how long drones remain in the air, supporting continuous surveillance, strike missions, and electronic warfare without frequent landings. The results, published in the peer-reviewed journal Aeronautical Science & Technology, come from a research team at Xidian University, an institution closely associated with defense-related technologies. 

During trials, the vehicle-mounted system sustained fixed-wing drones in flight for up to 3.1 hours while operating at an altitude of about 49 feet, demonstrating stable power delivery under real-world conditions, the South China Morning Post reported.

According to project lead Song Liwei, one of the main technical hurdles was keeping the microwave emitter precisely aligned with the drone while both were in motion. The team addressed this by combining GPS positioning, a real-time tracking mechanism, and onboard flight control systems to continuously correct the beam’s direction. This coordination allowed stable energy transfer despite movement and environmental variability.

As unmanned systems have become increasingly central to modern ground warfare, militaries and defense researchers have intensified efforts to develop wireless charging and in-flight power delivery technologies. Now, the goal is to reduce dependence on landing cycles and extend the operational endurance of drone fleets in contested environments.

US, China race to develop in-flight drone charging systems

Beyond extending flight endurance, the technology could also reshape drone design by reducing reliance on large onboard batteries, thereby freeing up space and weight for heavier payloads and additional sensors. In practical terms, this would allow smaller platforms to perform more complex missions without sacrificing range or endurance.

In the US, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has already backed multiple efforts investigating wireless energy transfer, including radio-frequency and laser-based systems. Furthermore, private companies are also demonstrating laser-based charging concepts, highlighting a parallel push toward airborne energy delivery systems.

Compared with other wireless energy approaches, laser-based systems offer higher precision and longer transmission ranges, but they are vulnerable to disruption from environmental factors such as fog, dust, and atmospheric turbulence. They can also create detectable infrared signatures, which may reveal a drone’s position to adversaries.

Microwave-based transmission takes a different trade-off, as it is generally more robust in poor weather conditions and less affected by line-of-sight degradation. In addition, a single microwave emitter could potentially supply energy to multiple drones at once, which makes the approach more suitable for dense operational environments or contested battlefields where resilience and scalability are critical.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/22/2026 – 23:00

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/kP23YGQ Tyler Durden

“Sotomayor Drops The Ball on Obamacare” And The Shadow Docket

When exactly did the shadow docket begin? People are now arguing about what was the first relevant shadow docket case, but those disagreements turn on stated and unstated assumptions. The answer depends on how you define the shadow docket. I need to give some more thought to exactly what the “shadow docket” is.

My colleague Stephanie Barclay suggests that the shadow docket actually began on New Year’s Eve 2013 when Circuit Justice Sotomayor granted emergency relief to the Little Sisters of the Poor.

I wrote about this moment at some length in Chapter 15 of my 2016 book, Unraveled: Obamacare, Religious Liberty, and Executive Power. I will include an excerpt of the book after the jump.

Here, I will offer a few reasons why the Little Sisters order can be distinguished from the Clean Power Plan order about two years later. This ruling may still qualify as the first shadow docket entry under certain assumptions, but I have some doubts.

First, the Little Sisters of the Poor were only seeking an exemption for themselves. Other litigation had been filed throughout the country by other religious non-profits. Almost all of those courts had granted emergency relief to the plaintiffs. Only two plaintiffs were denied relief: the Little Sisters of the Poor and Notre Dame University. Notre Dame did not file an emergency appeal to the Supreme Court. Instead, they caved and made coverage of emergency contraception available under their plan. The Little Sisters, represented by the Becket Fund, would file an emergency application with Circuit Justice Sotomayor. With modern emergency docket litigation, plaintiffs often seek universal relief, whether through nationwide injunctions, vacatur, certified classes, or broad associational standing. Outside death penalty cases, it is rare for the Supreme Court to grant emergency one-off relief. Mirabelli is one such case.

Second, the Clean Power Plan litigation was somewhat unique in that the case began at the D.C. Circuit. There were no district court proceedings. Moreover, the Supreme Court issued its stay of the executive action before the D.C. Circuit had an opportunity to rule. By contrast, for the contraception mandate, the District Court and the Tenth Circuit both denied relief after full briefing and consideration. Justice Sotomayor’s order in no way short-circuited the appellate process. Moreover, Sotomayor did what virtually every court had done at that point.

Third, on December 31, 2013, Justice Sotomayor granted what we would now call an administrative stay:

IT IS ORDERED that [the government is] temporarily enjoined from enforcing against [the Little Sisters of the Poor] the contraceptive coverage requirements imposed by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, and related regulations pending the receipt of a response and further order of the undersigned or of the Court. The response to the application is due Friday, January 3, 2014, by 10 AM.

To be precise, if the shadow docket was born with the Little Sisters, the birth occurred twenty-one days later on January 24, 2014, when the full Court issued a one-paragraph order:

The application for an injunction having been submitted to Justice Sotomayor and by her referred to the Court, the Court orders: If the employer applicants inform the Secretary of Health and Human Services in writing that they are non-profit organizations that hold themselves out as religious and have religious objections to providing coverage for contraceptive services, the respondents are enjoined from enforcing against the applicants the challenged provisions of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and related regulations pending final disposition of the appeal by the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit. To meet the condition for injunction pending appeal, applicants need not use the form prescribed by the Government and need not send copies to third-party administrators. The Court issues this order based on all of the circumstances of the case, and this order should not be construed as an expression of the Court’s views on the merits.

A few things stand out here. The Court to did not enjoin the contraceptive mandate altogether. It granted relief to one party, and only one party. There was no suggestion at the time this ruling set a precedent, which other parties could rely on. Notre Dame, which did not appeal, did not benefit from this ruling. Instead, the Court effectively granted an accommodation to a single plaintiff. This sort of tailored remedy stands in stark contrast with the sweeping relief granted in the Clean Power Plan case. That ruling completely enjoined the policy nationwide.

Fourth, in the Clean Power Plan case, it is pretty clear the Obama Administration was trying to rush the policy to “bake it in” before the Supreme Court could review it. Will Baude suggested that the Chief Justice was “concern[ed] that the executive branch [was] openly circumventing the federal courts.” The Obama Administration was not trying to circumvent all federal court review. They were content to run out the clock in the favorable D.C. Circuit. DOJ was trying to avoid Supreme Court review.  There was some gamesmanship.

But I don’t think there was a similar gaming for the contraceptive mandate. The ACA statute provided that the employer mandate would go into effect on January 1, 2014 (though the statute itself said nothing at all about contraception coverage). You may recall that initially, the Obama Administration argued that the “penalty” enforcing the individual mandate was a tax, and since the tax would not be collected until 2014, the challenge to Obamacare in 2010 was not yet ripe in light of the Tax Anti-Injunction Act. This was a clever way of “baking in” Obamacare before the Supreme Court could review it. But DOJ abandoned this strategy once they realized they needed the taxing power argument to save the law. There is lots of gamesmanship and playing keep-away from SCOTUS

Fifth, there is another reason to distinguish the Clean Power Plan and the Little Sisters of the Poor. This reason is somewhat political, but not really. There were no recorded dissents for the nuns. The Justices all likely agreed that the District Court in Colorado committed a clear error, and the ex ante status quo had to be preserved. In other words, the claim for legal relief was clearly established. That would seem to be a very strong factor in favor of granting emergency relief. The Clean Power Plan case split hard by a 5-4 vote. Such a sharp disagreement is almost certain proof that the basis for legal relief is not clearly established. This is what Justice Kagan wrote in her memorandum, and in many subsequent published dissents.

For these reasons, and others, I think it is tough to view the Clean Power Plan and the Little Sisters of the Poor on the same wavelength. I spoke with several DOJ lawyers at the time. They were a “little bit surprised” by the Court’s ruling. But this reaction pales in comparison to the shock the Obama Administration had after the Clean Power Plan ruling, where the Justices bypassed the lower court altogether.

Here is an excerpt from Chapter 15, titled “New Year’s Resolution.” As I’ve noted in other contexts, I wrote this book behind the veil of ignorance. The shadow docket wasn’t even a glimmer in my eye at the time. Indeed, if memory serves, I wrote this chapter before the Clean Power Plan ruling. (The book was sent to the press circa June 2016.)

15.1. “Adhere to Their Religious Conviction”

In September 2013, as a government shutdown loomed, and with only three months before the contraceptive mandate went into effect, the Little Sisters of the Poor finally challenged Accommodation 2.0 in court. One of their attorneys told me that they were very late to file because the Little Sisters didn’t want to have anything to do with litigation. But as New Year’s Eve drew near, the order of nuns were left with no other options. Over the next three months their lawyers at the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty anxiously waited for a decision. “We kept calling, saying, ‘hey we have an emergency coming up,'” the lawyer told me. “We needed an answer.”

Finally, late in the afternoon on Friday, December 27, the district court ruled against the Little Sisters. Judge William J. Martínez did not question whether the mandate conflicts with their religious beliefs. However, Martínez did “analyze the challenged regulations to determine whether their implementation will cause the allegedly harmful act to in fact occur.”1 Despite the Little Sisters’ objection to filling out the form, the court concluded that “nothing on the face of the Form expressly authorizes [providing] contraceptive care.” Signing the form “does not authorize any organization to deliver contraceptive coverage to Little Sisters’ employees,” the court concluded. As a result, Accommodation 2.0 does “not substantially burden Plaintiffs’ religious beliefs,” and the Little Sisters are not actually “required to buy into a scheme that substantially burdens their religious beliefs.”

At that time, the overwhelming majority of courts had already granted interim relief to religious non-profits. One of the attorneys for the Little Sisters was shocked that the court ruled against them. “I would have thought that of all the clients in the country who were going to get relief from the lower courts, the one I don’t need to worry about is the Little Sisters of the Poor, because who’s really going to turn down Little Sisters of the Poor? They’re so obviously religious that it’s idiotic to not call them a religious employer.”

After an all-nighter, the very next day the Becket Fund lawyers requested an emergency injunction from the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver. The twenty-one-page brief explained: “By midnight on New Year’s Eve, Mother Provincial Loraine Marie Maguire must decide whether the Little Sisters should adhere to their religious conviction that they cannot participate in the Mandate, or whether they should sacrifice that religious belief to spare their ministry from the government’s crushing fines.” This prayer for relief would also go unanswered.

Three days later, at noon on December 31, 2013 – as it had done a year earlier with Hobby Lobby – the Tenth Circuit denied the injunction. Judges Paul Joseph Kelly, Jr. and Carlos F. Lucero found that under the accommodation, stage is not warranted.”

Like the year before, the Tenth Circuit’s refusal to put the mandate on hold was at odds with virtually all other federal courts to consider the issue. In seventeen out of nineteen cases, the courts had granted an injunction for the religious non-profits before the December 31 deadline. Leading up to New Year’s Eve, only the Little Sisters and Notre Dame University were denied an injunction by the lower courts.2

In early December, Father Jenkins, who had invited Obama to speak at Notre Dame four years earlier, explained that succumbing to the mandate will lead us “down a path that ultimately will undermine those [religious] institutions.”3 However, with a decision that surprised many, Notre Dame acquiesced to the Seventh Circuit’s order. A spokesperson for the university announced on December 31, “Having been denied a stay, Notre Dame is advising employees that pursuant to the Affordable Care Act, our third party administrator is required to notify plan participants of coverage provided under its contraceptives payment program.”4 Coverage of emergency contraceptives such as Plan B and Ella would soon become available through Notre Dame’s insurance plan.

Many criticized the university for not having a strong enough commitment to fight the mandate all the way. Father Bill Miscamble, a professor of history at Notre Dame, told the National Catholic Register that he was disappointed “with the tepid way in which Notre Dame has acquiesced with the Obamacare provisions and authorized its health-insurance administrator to implement the HHS mandate.”5 Notre Dame did not seek an injunction from the Supreme Court. I asked one of the attorneys for the Little Sisters why Notre Dame did not request emergency relief from the Justices. He replied, “I don’t know, and you will never find out.” Notre Dame continued to challenge the mandate in the lower courts, but by that point it had already complied with the accommodation.

Later that month, Pope Francis spoke about Notre Dame, saying, “[I]t is my hope that the University of Notre Dame will continue to offer unambiguous testimony to this aspect of its foundational Catholic identity, especially in the face of efforts, from whatever quarter, to dilute that indispensable witness…. And this is important: its identity, as it was intended from the beginning. To defend it, to preserve it and to advance it!” Notre Dame Professor Carter Snead saw the Pope’s remarks as encouraging the university to continue its fight against the contraception mandate: “The Holy Father’s words strike me as a timely and profound encouragement to Notre Dame in its continuing efforts to defend its religious liberty in court.”6 Patrick Deneen, also a Professor at Notre Dame, told National Review that “[o]n the same day that Pope Francis’s statement was publicized, members of the university community were given notice that we would be receiving new health ID cards for ‘women’s preventive services.'”7

The Little Sisters of the Poor would not be so easily deterred. Mother Provincial Loraine joked with one of her attorneys, “Well, really, how many nuns can they put in jail?”

15.2. “Sotomayor Drops Ball on Obamacare”

With less than twelve hours till the new year, the contraceptive mandate was barreling toward the Little Sisters like an oncoming train. Justice Sonia Sotomayor – who at that very moment was riding Amtrak to New York City – would soon pull the emergency brake. The Bronx native was invited to push the button to start the New Year’s Eve ball drop. The president of the Times Square Alliance exclaimed, “Who better to join us in the crossroads of the world than one of New York’s own?”8 Sotomayor would receive notice of the Little Sisters’ emergency petition around 5:00 PM while she was on the northbound train from Union Station to Penn Station. Fortunately, Amtrak’s wireless Internet actually worked that evening.

The Little Sisters made their case: “Mother Loraine must make that decision by midnight tonight, unless relief is granted by this Court.” There was a strong sense of déjà vu to this appeal. The Becket Fund represented both Hobby Lobby and the Little Sisters. And just like the year before, the attorneys were forced to frantically file a last-minute appeal with Circuit Justice Sotomayor on December 31. The year before, Sotomayor rebuffed Hobby Lobby. Fortunately, should old acquaintance be forgot and never brought to mind, this prayer for extraordinary relief was answered.

Before Justice Sotomayor released the Waterford Crystal Ball over the Crossroads of the World, she would first release an injunction halting the contraceptive mandate. Or, as The Drudge Report more colorfully captioned it, “Sotomayor Drops Ball on Obamacare.”9 At 10:00 PM, Mark Rienzi’s phone rang. It was Danny Bickel, the Supreme Court’s Emergency Applications clerk. Capital defense lawyers have dubbed Bickel “the death clerk” because he handles the eleventh-hour requests to stay executions.10 But tonight, there was a far less somber call to make. Bickel told the Becket Fund attorney that the Court would soon issue an order, and he would send him a copy. Around 10:15 PM, as hundreds of thousands massed in Times Square, Sotomayor issued a one-paragraph order:

IT IS ORDERED that [the government is] temporarily enjoined from enforcing against [the Little Sisters of the Poor] the contraceptive coverage requirements imposed by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, and related regulations pending the receipt of a response and further order of the undersigned or of the Court. The response to the application is due Friday, January 3, 2014, by 10 AM.

Success! But this was an ephemeral victory, and the nuns’ angst was not quite over. Sotomayor’s December 31 order was only temporary. That evening, Mark Rienzi called Mother Loraine, who had “been praying about what she was going to do tomorrow.” He told her, “[W]e at least have life for a little while.”

As the nuns hailed Mary, Miley Cyrus twerked away 2013 in Times Square.11 Fortunately, the New York Times observed, “Viewers should not expect to see Ms. Cyrus twerking near Justice Sotomayor.”12 The Justice had a private space to handle these more pressing matters.13

15.3. Accommodation 3.0

On Friday, the government submitted its reply, and urged the Court that the injunction should be denied. “Applicants claim a right to extraordinary relief,” the solicitor general wrote, “even though compliance with the procedure they challenge will not result in anyone else’s provision of the items and services to which applicants object.” Recall that under Accommodation 2.0, the nuns, would not have to pay for the contraceptives. The Becket Fund lawyers replied that same day in a plea to keep the injunction in place:

The temporary injunction issued Tuesday night saved Mother Provincial Loraine Marie Maguire from the choice of violating her faith by executing the government’s required form, or exposing the Little Sisters’ ministry to decimation by IRS penalties. She exercised her religion that night, and each day since, by acting in accordance with God’s will as she understands it. The temporary injunction protected, and continues to protect, that religious exercise. That injunction should remain in place.

Twenty-one days of silence from the Court would follow. Then on January 24, the Justices issued a one-paragraph order:

The application for an injunction having been submitted to Justice Sotomayor and by her referred to the Court, the Court orders: If the employer applicants inform the Secretary of Health and Human Services in writing that they are non-profit organizations that hold themselves out as religious and have religious objections to providing coverage for contraceptive services, the respondents are enjoined from enforcing against the applicants the challenged provisions of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and related regulations pending final disposition of the appeal by the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit. To meet the condition for injunction pending appeal, applicants need not use the form prescribed by the Government and need not send copies to third-party administrators. The Court issues this order based on all of the circumstances of the case, and this order should not be construed as an expression of the Court’s views on the merits.

Simply stated, if the Little Sisters notify the government in writing that they “have a religious objection to providing coverage for contraceptive service,” which they obviously do, they are exempted from the contraceptive mandate altogether. I will refer to this approach as Accommodation 3.0, although in effect it mirrors the exemption given to the houses of worship. Rather than having to certify a religious objection, which would serve as notice for the insurer to begin paying for contraceptive coverage, under Accommodation 3.0, the employees of the Little Sister would not receive the coverage at all. There was no need for the Little Sisters to use the form provided by the government. Critically, however, the Justices stressed that “this order should not be construed as an expression of the Court’s views on the merits.” With that order, the Little Sisters finally received the relief they needed.

There was no recorded dissent to the order, but that does not mean that all of the Justices in fact agreed. For example, when the court refuses to halt an execution, Justice Ginsburg has explained that the lack of dissent on a last-minute appeal does not mean everyone concurs: “When a stay [of execution] is denied,” she observed, “it doesn’t mean we are in fact unanimous.”14

A senior DOJ official told me that they “were a little bit surprised” by the claim of the Little Sisters of the Poor and other religious non-profits. In contrast with Hobby Lobby, where the position of the government was that there was no RFRA claim at all, for the Little Sisters, there had been this evolution of working to try to frame that accommodation that would work for religious non-profits, or at least the vast majority of them. He added that there had been a lot of discussions between the administration and representatives of religious organizations to try to find some common ground, to find some way to make it work. That resulted in these changes over time in the nature of accommodation. That is, the upgrade from Accommodation 1.0 to 2.0. The Justice Department, he explained, did think by the time we’ve gotten to the idea of the form, that it would be perceived that we had avoided a substantial burden on religion and come up with a system that really seemed fair and would work. He shrugged his shoulders, and said, “So I think we were a little surprised about the stay.”

The Little Sisters’ fight was far from over. The case would be sent back to the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals for another round of litigation. But first, exactly two months later on March 25, 2014, the Supreme Court would hear oral arguments in Sebelius v. Hobby Lobby Stores.

The post "Sotomayor Drops The Ball on Obamacare" And The Shadow Docket appeared first on Reason.com.

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