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Three Big Things

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  • US closer to resuming 'major combat operations' with Iran: officials

    The U.S. is edging closer to restarting major combat operations against Iran, senior officials said Monday, with the final decision resting with President Donald Trump and Tehran’s new leadership.

    The assessment came as the ceasefire was tested in the Strait of Hormuz at the start of Project Freedom.

    “We are closer to the resumption of major combat operations than we were 24 hours ago after Iran fired on US vessels and targeted UAE today with missiles and drones and fast boats," senior officials told Fox News.

    Officials also said it would be up to President Donald Trump and Iran’s leaders to determine whether military operations wold resume. No orders to end the ceasefire have been given, they said.

    The U.S. military “stands ready to respond.” It is “rearmed and retooled,” the officials added.

    No orders have been received to restart the bombing campaign. There has been “no un-pause of the ceasefire.”

    For now, the U.S. military is focused on defensive actions to protect ships in the Gulf.

    The UAE said Monday that more than a dozen Iranian missiles and drones were launched, leaving three people injured, while an Iranian drone strike sparked a fire at an oil facility that wounded three Indian nationals.

    The British military also reported two cargo vessels ablaze off the UAE, and the U.S. said it sank six Iranian boats targeting civilian ships.

    “The commanders on scene have all the authorities they need to protect themselves and commercial shipping,” according to one well-placed U.S. defense official.

    The commander can strike “if US forces see missile launchers moving or identity missiles being put on the rails or identify targets of opportunity that threaten commercial shipping.”

    “We preserve the right to eliminate those threats. We don’t have to wait. We can anticipate and preempt. There is a level of maneuverability.”

    “We can hit a known threat. We don’t have to wait until Iran fires first.”

    The difference between a defensive umbrella and escorting ships through the strait is akin to zone versus man-to-man defense, one source said.

    Trump launched Project Freedom Monday to help guide vessels that have been stuck for weeks in the key shipping route.

    The source also said escorting each ship through the strait is “inefficient,” but that a defensive umbrella of air and sea power and surveillance “creates a layered defense that takes advantage of numbers and capability.”


    Read more : Trump announces 'Project Freedom' to guide ships through Strait of Hormuz | Live Updates from Fox News Digital

  • No runoff elections in special AL primaries

    The winner of a special-called primary for Alabama’s congressional and State Senate races would take all without a runoff, according to two proposals introduced on the first day of the state’s surprise special session.


    READ MORE : No runoff elections in special AL primaries | News | lagniappemobile.com

  • Five Threatening Calls. Two Counties. Zero Real Emergencies.

    A frightening pattern is emerging across the Gulf Coast — and law enforcement in both Mobile and Baldwin counties wants the public to know they're taking it seriously.

    It started Saturday morning in Mobile. Springhill Medical Center received a threatening phone call around nine-thirty a.m. Hospital officials immediately activated safety protocols and went into lockdown. Mobile Police were called to the scene and remained on site while the situation played out. It never escalated to an active incident — patient care continued, and normal operations have since resumed. But here's what Springhill officials also confirmed: a second Mobile-area hospital received a similar threatening call around the same time. Both cases are now under investigation by Mobile Police.

    Then Sunday night, the threats moved into Baldwin County. Fairhope Police say the city's iconic pier was the target of a bomb threat — and it wasn't a real one. It was a swatting call. Swatting is when someone dials 911 or contacts law enforcement directly and fabricates a violent or dangerous crime in progress. The goal is to trigger a massive police response. It ties up officers, pulls resources away from the rest of the county, and puts real strain on emergency services — all for a call that turns out to be completely false.

    The Fairhope pier call was the third swatting incident in Baldwin County in less than a week. Before that, Summerdale was hit twice — once with a fake hostage situation, and once with a bomb threat. None of them were real. But the response to each one was very real.

    Baldwin County Sheriff Anthony Lowery says swatting is not a new problem. The FBI launched a national swatting database back in 2023 to help track these crimes. That same year, a swatting call sent officers swarming Robertsdale High School searching for a gunman, and students and staff were evacuated from Daphne Middle School after a fake bomb threat. Suspects in both of those cases were tracked down — not locally. They came from California and New York.

    Sheriff Lowery says that's the nature of this crime. It has no borders. The person making the call could be sitting in another state, another country — or halfway around the world.

    But make no mistake — if they're caught, the consequences are severe. Convictions can bring fines, jail time, and in cases where someone is injured or killed as a result of the response, a sentence of life in prison.

    Mobile Police are asking anyone with information on the hospital threats to come forward and contact them directly.

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