Some West African farmers turn to TikTok as part of agriculture's changing image

DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — When Senegalese farmer Pape Fall first downloaded TikTok, it was to watch football and funny videos. In the last two years, however, he's experimented with it to promote his produce and now sells most of it via the platform.

Associated Press Nogaye Sene, a West African farmer who turned to Tiktok as part of agriculture's changing image, films herself on her farm in Joal Fadiout, Senegal, Thursday Dec. 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Caitlin Kelly) Nogaye Sene, a West African farmer who turned to Tiktok as part of agriculture's changing image, checks a plant on her farm in Joal Fadiout, Senegal, Thursday Dec. 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Caitlin Kelly) Pape Fall, a West African farmer who turned to Tiktok as part of agriculture's changing image, shows his account in Thies, Senegal, Thursday Dec. 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Caitlin Kelly) Cows are moved through fields on the outskirts of Joal Fadiout, Senegal, Thursday, Dec. 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Caitlin Kelly) A farmer, one of the 40 workers employed by Nogaye Sene on her farm, rakes hay on the outskirts of Joal Fadiout, Senegal, Thursday, Dec. 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Caitlin Kelly)

Africa TikTok Agriculture

A looped video on his TikTok profile shows a pile of cucumbers with slow-paced Senegalese rap playing in the background. A caption reads: "1.5 tonnes, available tomorrow, god willing." It includes his phone number.

Fall is one ofmillions of farmers in West Africabelieved to be using TikTok and other social media to do business, share ideas and change the perception of agriculture as the work of poor people in this part of the world.

They and experts acknowledge the region is plagued byhigh levels of hunger and povertythat have been worsened by theloss of foreign fundingfrom the U.S. and other donors. But they say the improved knowledge and market access that come with social media has resulted in better yields.

The average farm in Senegal income is $1,000 a year, according to a study by the International Food Policy Research Institute published in 2017, but successful farming entrepreneurs can make up to $3,000-$4,500.

"Social media is democratizing access to information for farmers," said Abbie Phatty-Jobe, a specialist in digital agriculture for Caribou, a U.K.-based private research company that is the first to look into regional farmers' use of TikTok.

Caribou has helped to establish a network of 24 agri-influencers across 11 countries in Africa whose content reaches a combined 5 million people. They help to turn scientific research into information more accessible for farmers.

Fall recalled watching a Moroccan farmer on TikTok talk about a common cucumber mistake: cutting the lower stems of the plant. But you should leave them to ensure higher yields, the video said.

"I've followed that advice ever since. It works," Fall said. He said he watches videos from farmers around the world, from North Africa to Asia.

Watching out for scams

African farmers' use of social media differs by region, language and type of business.

In West Africa, farmers prefer TikTok because of the video content and use of local languages, Phatty-Jobe said. In East Africa, the preference is for Facebook's written posts because of the higher levels of literacy, she said.

Among the agri-influencers who create educational content and sell consultancy services is Nogaye Sene, who manages farmland for clients with little farming knowledge or for the Senegalese diaspora eager to invest back home.

"The success of my business is thanks to social media," said the 29-year-old, who has 40 staffers and credits Instagram and TikTok for 70% of her clients.

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She said she wants to change how young people see agriculture. Her videos teach a wide range of subjects including how to cultivate chili plants, drive a tractor and use modern technology. Low levels of mechanization in the region are a reason why farm productivity and profitability are low, experts say.

"We're not used to seeing this type of modern production in Senegal, but social media is helping to change the perspective of agriculture, that it's profitable," Sene said.

To encourage more young female farmers, she helped organize a training in December for 50 women on farming and social media. Most farming is still done by men.

Sene warned, however, that the majority of her clients say they have been scammed online by people posing as farming consultants and influencers.

Phatty-Jobe encouraged partnerships with research institutions and government extension services as one way to prevent scams and misinformation.

Still out of reach for many

There is still a significant divide among farmers that's rooted in access to technology and financial backing.

Nicolas Paget, a researcher on digital agriculture at French research institute CIRAD, said some 80% of the farmers he has met don't have smartphones with access to apps like TikTok and Instagram, and internet data is expensive for those who do. Data packages in West Africa are more costly than they are in Europe, Paget said.

"There is a very high risk of excluding farmers if governments and development agencies focus on this type of technology," Paget said of social media.

In 2023, the World Bank invested $57.4 million in a digital agriculture platform in Ivory Coast, aiming to increase access to markets and purchases of agricultural inputs.

However, "most people didn't really care about specific or tailor-made platforms," Paget said. "Farmers are using (existing apps) in very creative ways and adapting them to their needs."

Marketing cucumbers on TikTok may seem simple, but Phatty-Jobe said it's a way to break free of middlemen who control prices.

For more on Africa and development:https://apnews.com/hub/africa-pulse

The Associated Press receives financial support for global health and development coverage in Africa from the Gates Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP'sstandardsfor working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas atAP.org.

Some West African farmers turn to TikTok as part of agriculture's changing image

DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — When Senegalese farmer Pape Fall first downloaded TikTok, it was to watch football and funny videos...
Analysis-Netanyahu's war alliance with Trump faces test as Iran crisis widens

By Maayan Lubell and Rami Ayyub

Reuters

JERUSALEM, March 4, (Reuters) - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu delivered on a career-long ambition to topple Iran's leadership, but his lockstep alignment with U.S. President Donald Trump faces a test as their joint military campaign threatens to drag on, with its goals potentially shifting in the coming weeks.

At the outset of the bombing campaign on Saturday, both Trump and Netanyahu said regime change was the goal. But in remarks at the White House on Monday, two days after ‌Israeli air strikes killed Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and much of his leadership, Trump did not mention overthrowing Iran's government as his top priority.

The U.S. goal, he said, was to destroy Iran's missiles and navy, and to stop it from obtaining a ‌nuclear weapon. His Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth said at a press conference that same day that the operation was not a "so-called regime-change war."

Netanyahu, by contrast, has called on Iran's citizens to take to the streets and overthrow their rulers as recently as Monday night. "We're going to create the conditions, first, for the Iranian people to get control of their destiny," he told ​Fox News.

Asked about the U.S. and Israeli goals, a U.S. official familiar with the White House's objectives told Reuters that the two countries' military campaigns have different objectives. "Regime change is one of theirs," said the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

In the build-up to war, Netanyahu successfully convinced Trump that it was a now-or-never moment to prevent Tehran from acquiring nuclear weapons and destroy its ballistic missile capabilities. Trump has said the operation could take "four or five weeks" or "whatever it takes."

"I don't get bored, I never get bored," he said at the White House on Monday in response to questions about his capacity for sustained focus.

But Israeli officials privately acknowledge that ultimately it will be Trump who decides when the war ends. Dan Shapiro, a former U.S. ambassador to Israel under the Obama administration, said that Trump may decide to seek an "early off-ramp" from the war.

"If President Trump decides that he's reached the end of this operation before ‌Netanyahu wants it to end, he's still going to end it," said Shapiro, of the Washington-based Atlantic ⁠Council think-tank.

President Trump faces domestic pressures that could affect his thinking as the war drags on and expands.

The operation is unpopular in the United States, with only one in four Americans saying they back U.S. strikes on Iran, according to Reuters/Ipsos polling. Primary votes began Tuesday in the battleground states of Texas and North Carolina that may decide who controls Congress after the fall midterm elections.

With the crisis disrupting shipping and energy production, rising gas prices could become a daily ⁠reminder of the affordability crisis facing many Americans. Gas is up 11 cents per gallon in the U.S. this week, with much higher spikes in global markets suggesting more increases for American consumers.

Inside the U.S., support for Israel has become a partisan issue, with some 59% of Americans holding an unfavourable view of Israel's government, up from 51% a year ago, according to a Pew Research Center poll from October.

The White House and Netanyahu's office did not respond to requests for comment.

PLANNING FOR WAR

In power for most of the last three decades, Netanyahu has often clashed with American leaders, notably publicly criticizing former Democratic President Barack Obama for negotiating a nuclear deal ​with ​Iran. Democratic President Joe Biden's administration often clashed with Netanyahu and withheld some weapons from Israel during its military assault in Gaza.

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After Trump's return to office in 2025, ​Netanyahu met with the president seven times and repeatedly pushed in phone calls to focus his attention away from ‌Israel's war in Gaza and toward Iran's ballistic missiles and nuclear ambitions, painting the clerical rulers in Tehran as a common enemy, a U.S. official with direct knowledge of their conversations said.

The officials and others who shared details about U.S.-Israeli planning and objectives spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe sensitive military discussions.

Even as Trump dispatched envoys to nuclear talks with Iran in Geneva and Oman, the U.S. and Israel had been at work for months planning their military operation, and timing for the attack was decided weeks ago, an Israeli official said.

Netanyahu's last meeting with Trump was a hastily-arranged visit on February 11, 2026 which included a three-hour meeting at the White House, uncharacteristically closed to the press.

The day after that meeting, the USS Gerald Ford aircraft carrier, the world's largest warship, departed the Caribbean where it was supporting U.S. military action in Venezuela, for the Mediterranean.

"I have tried to persuade successive American administrations to take firm action, and President Trump did," Netanyahu told Fox News on Monday.

Trump rejected the notion that Israel might have forced his country into war, telling reporters at the White House on Tuesday: "Based on the way the negotiation was going, I think they were going to attack first, ‌and I didn't want that to happen. So if anything I might have forced Israel's hand."

A POLITICAL SURVIVOR

For the 76-year-old Netanyahu, his prosecution of a war that is ​supported by most Israelis represents an opportunity to seal his legacy ahead of elections, due by October, in which he faces formidable challenges.

His far-right coalition faces fissures, he's on trial ​for corruption he denies and Israelis are still reeling from a multi-front war that began in 2023 and which Netanyahu has promised ​will transform the Middle East.

Israel's longest-serving leader has shown remarkable political skill in the past. Despite successive polls showing that he will lose the ballot in October, Netanyahu still has a fair chance of victory if Israeli fatalities and the ‌economic costs to Israel of the war remain low, said Udi Sommer, a political scientist at Tel Aviv ​University.

"If it succeeds, relatively quickly (like) in June 2025, it will work very much ​in his favour as Israel's protector and the one who had woven a particularly successful relationship with the administration in Washington," Sommer said.

Netanyahu's security credentials were shattered on October 7, 2023, when Iran-backed Hamas militants launched a surprise attack on Israel, killing more than 1,200 people and taking 251 hostages.

It was followed by a two-year military campaign against Hamas in Gaza, where Israel's longest war has killed at least 72,000 people, according to Palestinian health officials, left much of the enclave in ruins, and exacted the highest Israeli military fatalities in decades.

Netanyahu ​has rejected responsibility for the security failures of October 7 and has pointed to Israel's subsequent gains in ‌weakening Iran's proxies, Hamas and Hezbollah in Lebanon. Their ally Bashar al-Assad in Syria has also been ousted.

Even if Israel achieves its military objectives in Iran, that will not wash away the outrage of many Israeli voters, including among Netanyahu's own right-wing ​base, said political analyst Amotz Asa-el of the Jerusalem-based Shalom Hartman research institute.

"The past three years' events have been so traumatic and so dramatic and so revolting to that swing vote that I don't think any kind of salvation in Iran will ​offset this," he said.

(Reporting by Maayan Lubell and Rami Ayyub in Jerusalem with additional reporting by Alexander Cornwell in Tel Aviv. Editing by Michael Learmonth)

Analysis-Netanyahu's war alliance with Trump faces test as Iran crisis widens

By Maayan Lubell and Rami Ayyub JERUSALEM, March 4, (Reuters) - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu deli...
Florida public universities temporarily halt hiring foreigners on H1-B visas

By Jasper Ward

Reuters

March 3 (Reuters) - Florida's public universities will temporarily halt hiring foreign faculty members using the H-1B ‌visa program, which allows employers to recruit highly skilled ‌professionals in specialized occupations.

The move comes after Florida Governor Ron DeSantis directed schools ​last October to crack down on what he described as "visa abuse" in higher education.

The Florida Board of Governors, which oversees the state's public universities, voted for a temporary ban that will stay ‌in effect until January ⁠5, 2027, according to the regulation posted on the board's website.

The move will only affect new ⁠employees at the 12 universities in the State University System of Florida.

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Last year, U.S. President Donald Trump imposed a one-time $100,000 fee for ​new H-1B ​visa applicants amid his wider ​crackdown on immigration in ‌the United States.

The office of DeSantis and the board of governors were not immediately available for contact.

The H-1B visa program allows foreign professionals in specialized occupations - primarily in science, technology, engineering and mathematics - to work in the U.S. It offers 65,000 visas ‌annually, with another 20,000 visas for ​workers with advanced degrees, approved for ​three to six years.

More ​than 600 beneficiaries were approved for H-1B visas ‌by the 12 Florida schools last ​year, according ​to data on the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services' website.

Last October, DeSantis said U.S. universities "were importing foreign workers on ​H-1B visas instead of ‌hiring Americans who are qualified and available to do ​the job".

(Reporting by Jasper Ward in Washington; Editing by ​David Ljunggren and Daniel Wallis)

Florida public universities temporarily halt hiring foreigners on H1-B visas

By Jasper Ward March 3 (Reuters) - Florida's public universities will temporarily halt hiring foreign facu...
Macron orders France's nuclear-powered aircraft carrier to the Mediterranean

PARIS (AP) — French President Emmanuel Macron on Tuesday ordered France's nuclear-powered aircraft carrier to move from the Baltic Sea to the Mediterranean to help protect allied assets during the ongoing war in the Middle East.

Associated Press French President Emmanuel Macron leaves the podium afer his speech at the Nuclear submarines Navy base of Ile Longue in Crozon, France, Monday March 2, 2026. (Yoan Valat/Pool Photo via AP) French President Emmanuel Macron with members of the army at the end of his speech at the Nuclear submarines Navy base of Ile Longue in Crozon, France, Monday March 2, 2026. (Yoan Valat/Pool Photo via AP)

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Macron said the Charles de Gaulle carrier will be escorted by frigates and its air wing. In a pre-recorded speech on French TV, Macron added that Rafale fighter jets, air-defense systems and airborne radar systems have been deployed over the past few hours in the Middle East.

"And we will continue this effort as much as necessary," Macron said.

France, the U.K. and Germany have previously said that they weren't involved in the strikes on Iran by the United States and Israel that began late last week, but were prepared to take defensive action to destroy Iran's capability to fire missiles and drones.

Macron, however, said that French forces had shot down drones "in legitimate self-defense in the very first hours of the conflict, to defend the airspace of our allies, who know they can rely on us." He did not elaborate.

In explaining the need to move France's aircraft carrier, Macron cited Monday's strike on a British air force base on Cyprus, adding that Cyprus was a member of the European Union with which France has recently signed a strategic partnership.

"This requires our support," Macron said.

Macron also said that France has defense agreements binding the EU nation to Qatar, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates, as well as strong commitments to Jordan and Iraq.

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Noting that the war had spread to Lebanon, Macron said the Iran-backed militant Hezbollah group made "the grave mistake of striking Israel" and putting the Lebanese people in danger but warned against Israel launching a ground operation.

"This, too, would be a dangerous escalation and a strategic error," he said. "Hezbollah must imperatively cease all strikes, and I call on Israel to respect Lebanese territory and its integrity."

Reflecting France's traditional support for the rules of international law, Macron noted that France "cannot approve" of the strikes by Israel and the U.S. on Iran because they were outside of an international mandate.

He said it would it be "desirable" to end the strikes as quickly as possible, and that lasting peace in the region can only be achieved through the resumption of diplomatic negotiations.

"And I also wish here to express the hope that the Iranian people may themselves freely decide their own destiny," Macron added.

"That said, history never weeps for the executioners of their own people, and none of them will be mourned," he said in reference to the killings ofIran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khameneiand other Iran top officials.

Macron also insisted on Iran's responsibility for the conflict.

"It is Iran that developed a dangerous nuclear program and unprecedented ballistic capabilities; that armed and financed terrorist groups in neighboring countries—Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Houthis in Yemen, Shiite militias in Iraq—and that supported Hamas, while always affirming its objective of destroying the State of Israel," he said.

Macron orders France's nuclear-powered aircraft carrier to the Mediterranean

PARIS (AP) — French President Emmanuel Macron on Tuesday ordered France's nuclear-powered aircraft carrier to move fr...
Russia bans a prominent LGBTQ+ rights group as extremist in a new blow to the beleaguered community

A court in Russia on Tuesday designated a prominent LGBTQ+ rights group as an extremist organization, the latest blow to the country's beleaguered community that has faced an intensified crackdown in recent years under President Vladimir Putin.

Associated Press

In a hearing that took place behind closed doors, the St. Petersburg City Court banned the Coming Out group as "extremist." The authorities did not reveal any details of the lawsuit filed last month by Russia's Justice Ministry and classified as secret.

The group, which now operates from abroad, said it will continue to help LGBTQ+ people in Russia and beyond, and fight for their rights despite the ruling.

"We have been preparing for this development for a long time. We enhanced security, developed sustainable work formats and continue to act responsibly, first and foremost for those who count on us," Coming Out said in an online statement.

"Today it is especially important not to give into fear and not to be alone. Our community is stronger than any labels, and history has proven that."

Coming Out is the first LGBTQ+ rights group to be designated since the 2023 Supreme Court ruling that effectively banned any LGBTQ+ activism. Similar lawsuits have been filed against two other LGBTQ+ rights groups, with courts in St. Petersburg and the Samara region still to rule on them.

Russia's LGBTQ+ community has been under legal and public pressure for over a decade, but especially since the Kremlin invaded Ukraine four years ago. Putin has argued that the war in Ukraine is a proxy battle with the West, which he says aims to destroy Russia and its "traditional family values" by pushing for LGBTQ+ rights.

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Any depiction of gay and transgender people that portrays them in a positive or even neutral light has been banned ever since. Gender-affirming medical care and changing one's gender in official documents are prohibited.

In November 2023, Russia's Supreme Court declared what the government called "the international LGBT movement" to be an extremist organization, exposing anyone involved with that community to prosecution and potential imprisonment.

Days after the ruling, the community was rattled by news of police raiding gay bars, nightclubs and venues that hosted drag shows in Moscow, St. Petersburg and other cities. Criminal cases on the charges of involvement with the "LGBT movement" have followed, and some people have faced fines for displaying what the authorities determined to be "extremist" symbols such as a rainbow flag.

The Russian authorities are seeking to make the LGBTQ+ community "as vulnerable, as lonely as possible," said Denis Oleinik, executive director of the Coming Out LGBTQ+ rights group.

The group, formerly based in Russia's second-largest city of St. Petersburg, has been operating entirely from abroad since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. It no longer offers support groups or offline activities, but still provides psychological and legal support remotely. It also works with international organizations in advocating for LGBTQ+ rights in Russia and for helping those fleeing the country, Oleinik told The Associated Press in February.

The ruling makes it unsafe for people to share any Coming Out content publicly or for anyone inside Russia or who travels there to donate money to the group, he said.

The "extremist" designation also sometimes scares people away from reaching out for help, as well as other rights groups or media outlets from working with them, Oleinik said. There also might be risks for relatives of activists who speak openly in public.

But otherwise, "we can provide help, and receiving our help is also allowed," he said.

Russia bans a prominent LGBTQ+ rights group as extremist in a new blow to the beleaguered community

A court in Russia on Tuesday designated a prominent LGBTQ+ rights group as an extremist organization, the latest blow to ...
Cheap, effective and battle-tested by Russia: Iran leans on Shahed drones to penetrate U.S. defenses

As the United States and its Middle East allies face Tehran's response to President Donald Trump's renewed bombardment of Iran, they must find a solution to a growing problem: drones.

NBC Universal Iranian-made Shahed-136 drone flies over the sky of Kermanshah, Iran. (Middle East Images / AFP via Getty Images)

Cheap and simple to produce, Iran's Shahed drones are unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) used to overwhelm air defenses in conjunction with other missiles. They have been used to successfully bombard a U.S. embassy, a radar system, an airport and a high-rise, videos on social media show. The issue, experts say, is the long-term ability to intercept them.

"The threat from one-way attack UAVs has remained persistent," Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said at a briefing Monday. "Our systems have proven effective in countering these platforms, engaging targets rapidly."

The U.S. has not released data on the munitions it faced and shot down. Information from the United Arab Emirates' Defense Ministry shows that Iran has launched hundreds of Shahed drones at the Gulf state, of which just over 90% have been intercepted.

Those interceptions have come at a high cost. The U.S. and its allies generally deploy aircraft or the Patriot air defense system to protect from bombardment, but while the price of one Shahed isestimated to be $30,000 to $50,000, one interceptorcan cost 10 times thator more while exhausting already dwindling stockpiles.

"If this goes on longer, they're probably going to have to find more sustainable ways of doing this," said Kelly Grieco, a senior fellow at the Stimson Center, a Washington think tank.

Grieco calculated that for every $1 Iran spent manufacturing a Shahed drone, it costs the UAE about $20 to $28 to intercept it, according to the available data.

"A war like this is literally what Iran built them for," said Kyle Glen, an investigator with the London-based nonprofit Center for Information Resilience.

The U.S. and Israel unloaded a wave of fire on Iran since the military operation began overnight Friday, targeting its naval bases and ballistic missile storage sites to limit its capacity for response. Iran retaliated by launching hundreds of drones and missiles at U.S. bases, airports and energy infrastructure, apparently in an attempt to inflict both a political and an economic cost on the U.S. and its allies.

Iran has always counted on facing a superior military, Glen said. That has pushed it to explore asymmetric warfare, in which smaller or technologically inferior forces look for ways to frustrate or exhaust the enemy.

Drones are a prime example. The Shahed can be made cheaply with dual-use components and launched off the back of a truck. Unlike missiles, which require vast infrastructure, the drones can be assembled covertly.

Russia saw the benefits of the Shahed drones early. In November 2022, it purchased the technology and 6,000 units for $1.75 billion from Iran, according to areport by C4ADS, a Washington-based nonprofit global security organization.

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"Russia has put a hell of a lot more development into these weapons than Iran has in recent years," Glen said.

The Russians have launched 57,000 such drones at Ukrainian cities and infrastructure so far, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in a video address Saturday. Their telltale buzz has become so ubiquitous in the Ukrainian skies that they have become colloquially known as "mopeds."

Ukraine has built out a multipronged system involving mobile groups, interceptor drones and other missiles to defend itself against that type of weapon, which Russia has continued to upgrade.

"Thanks to the fact that the Shahed has passed its baptism by fire in Ukraine, they managed to substantially improve it, modernize it, install additional communication channels, protection from electronic warfare systems — that is, test this weapon in battle," said Col. Yuri Ihnat, a spokesman for the Ukrainian air force.

Despite Ukraine's unique experience, partners have not directly requested help countering Shaheds, Zelenskyy said in a voice memo responding to reporter questions.

"Regarding our drone and air operators, we have very experienced personnel," he said. "We are ready to share this knowledge."

The use of expensive and difficult-to-manufacture methods to knock down such an unsophisticated weapon points to the apparent failure of the U.S. to learn the lessons from Ukraine, said George Barros, a senior analyst at the Institute for the Study of War think tank.

"None of these things are novel techniques," Barros said.

It puts the U.S. in a vulnerable position as the number of global conflicts grows and allies clamor for Patriot interceptors, of which the U.S. produces only about 600 annually, Barros said.

Grieco of the Stimson Center said: "For 30 years, the United States and other Western air forces had easily gained air superiority — if not air supremacy — over enemy battlefields and therefore neglected investing in air and missile defense capabilities. And what we have found is that it's really hard to ramp up this production."

U.S. adversaries, meanwhile, grow their drone production. Even if the majority of drones and missiles are intercepted, the ones that puncture defenses can cause deadly damage. The Iranians can choose to engage in a war of attrition, as the Russians have, firing their cheap munition for as long as they can while watching U.S. defensive stockpiles draw down.

Other countries will take note. Last year, Ukrainian intelligence services warned that North Korea may have received Shahed drone technology from Russia. Iran also provided the weapon to the Houthis in Yemen and the Islamic Resistance in Iraq, according to theOpen Source Munitions Portal, a weapons tracking project. Seeing their effectiveness, other cash-strapped regimes may be inspired to create their own versions.

"Everything points to this being a grave threat to the world, to the West, to stability," said Omar Al-Ghusbi, an analyst at C4ADS and a co-author of the Shahed report. "I don't see it going away anytime soon."

Cheap, effective and battle-tested by Russia: Iran leans on Shahed drones to penetrate U.S. defenses

As the United States and its Middle East allies face Tehran's response to President Donald Trump's renewed bombar...
British woman, 29, found dead on £27m superyacht in Mallorca

Police are investigating the death of a British woman on board a £27m superyacht that was moored inMallorca.

The Telegraph The woman's body was found on a superyacht called Lind in Mallorca

The 29-year-old was found in one of the vessel's cabins on Sunday night. Paramedics rushed to Palma, where the yacht was moored, but the woman was pronounced dead at the scene.

An autopsy was expected to take place on Tuesday as Civil Guard investigators seek to establish what happened.

No obvious signs of violence were found on or near the body of the woman, but a forensic expert and police officers were unable to determine her cause of death ahead of a post-mortem.

A source close to the investigation said: "Everything is pointing to her death being the result of natural causes. At this moment in time, it is not being treated as a crime although the results of the autopsy are still pending."

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Police are investigating the cause of the woman's death

Police are not expected to name the woman. She is understood to have been a crew member believed to help with maintenance. The alarm was raised by colleagues, who went to check on her after she failed to respond to messages or answer calls.

The vessel has been identified as Lind, a custom-built motor yacht said to cost nearly £300,000 a week to charter in the high season.

The Cayman Islands-flagged 170ftsuperyacht, built in the Netherlands with an exterior design by the award-winning Tim Heywood, has a top speed of just over 15 knots and can accommodate up to 10 guests and 13 crew members.

Its facilities include an open-air cinema, jacuzzi, gym and inflatable trampolines.

The superyacht's current owner is reported to be Peter-Alexander Wacker, a German billionaire who owns around 10 per cent of chemical company Wacker Chemie AG.

Try full access to The Telegraph free today. Unlock their award-winning website and essential news app, plus useful tools and expert guides for your money, health and holidays.

British woman, 29, found dead on £27m superyacht in Mallorca

Police are investigating the death of a British woman on board a £27m superyacht that was moored inMallorca. T...

 

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