The Ceasefire That Isn’t: Why Gaza’s Truce Exists Mainly on Paper

As the war in Gaza grinds past its second year, diplomatic efforts have repeatedly produced ceasefire frameworks that fail to translate into protection for civilians on the ground. The January 2025 truce — brokered with heavy US and Qatari involvement — offered the most concrete hope yet. But within weeks of its implementation, reports of […]
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The people who struggle most with compliments aren’t humble. They’re recalibrating in real time against a version of themselves they never quite believe they’ve earned.

Compliment-struggle isn't modesty or grace. It's a real-time audit where accomplished people try to reconcile external praise with an internal self-image that refuses to update without documentation.
The post The people who struggle most with compliments aren’t humble. They’re recalibrating in real time against a version of themselves they never quite believe they’ve earned. appeared first on Space Daily.
Hanoi’s $75 Billion Question: Why Vietnam’s Rail Gamble Is Really About Beijing

Vietnamese Communist Party General Secretary and President To Lam wrapped a four-day state visit to China that put high-speed rail, not South China Sea tensions, at the center of the bilateral agenda. The trip produced signed cooperation deals on railways, public security, technology, and inter-party exchanges, and it set the terms under which Chinese engineering […]
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New EU Space Act draft seen as a step backward

A revised draft of a proposed European Union space regulation is a step backward, creating uncertainty about how the law would be applied outside the EU, critics argue.
