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Monday, March 2, 2026

2 New Advisors to CDC Vaccine Panel Ahead of March Meeting

 

One of the two new members of the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices questioned the safety of COVID-19 vaccines before the Texas Senate in 2021.

Ahead of a scheduled meeting later this month, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. has added two members to the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, continuing what has been a chaotic run for the committee under the second Trump administration.

The first of these new ACIP members is Sean Downing, a specialist in internal medicine and pediatrics who has been working in the primary care setting for more than 20 years, according to a news release on Friday. Joining Downing is Angelina Farella, also a pediatrician, and owner of the mental health center A Brighter Tomorrow Family Health and Wellness, located in Texas.

Together, Downing and Farella “bring decades of real-world experience” to ACIP, Kennedy said on Friday. “That frontline perspective is essential to making recommendations that are grounded in gold-standard science and worthy of public trust.”

In June 2025, Kennedy fired all 17 previous members of the ACIP, asserting the need for a “clean sweep” to “reestablish public confidence in vaccine science.” Not long after, the secretary reformed the group, with many of its current members sharing his skepticism toward vaccines.

Like several of her fellow ACIP panelists, Farella has spoken out against vaccines. In 2021, for instance, she came before the Texas Senate and cast doubt on the safety of COVID-19 shots, claiming that the vaccines skipped animal testing.

The ACIP advises the CDC on which vaccines the agency should recommend to the broader U.S. public. The CDC isn’t required to follow the committee’s advice, but it often does. The panel convenes three times a year and was originally scheduled to meet last week, but that meeting has been postponed to March 18-19 amid continued instability at ACIP, as well as mounting controversies regarding the country’s vaccine policies.

The upcoming meeting will include discussions on injuries purportedly linked to COVID-19 vaccines, as well as issues surrounding long COVID.

The new ACIP members in December voted to recommend delaying hepatitis B vaccination for infants not deemed high-risk to two months after birth—guidelines the CDC has since adopted. Then, in January, the CDC removed six of the 17 recommended shots for children from its vaccine schedule.

In response to the ACIP overhaul, the American Academy of Pediatrics in July last year sued the HHS, alleging that the move was illegal and that Kennedy has worked to erode the public’s confidence in vaccines since becoming health secretary.

The case continues. In January, a federal judge dismissed the government’s motion to junk the lawsuit. Last month, the same judge delayed his decision pending more information, giving the government’s lawyers more time to respond to additional statements from the professional group, according to reporting from STAT News.

https://www.biospace.com/policy/rfk-jr-appoints-2-new-advisors-to-cdc-vaccine-panel-ahead-of-march-meeting

Starmer: Gulf partners asked UK for more defense

 British Prime Minister Keir Starmer shared on Monday that the United Kingdom's partners in the Gulf region asked the country "to do more to defend them."

Addressing the House of Commons, Starmer reiterated that London has no intention to join the United States and Israel in its strikes on Iran or to allow access to its military bases for such actions. He repeated that the UK bases are only being used for "limited agreed defensive purposes."

He further noted that the UK plans to continue its defensive operations in the region, adding that the best outcome for the situation in the Middle East would be a "negotiated settlement." Starmer went on to criticize the Iranian regime, accusing it of murdering its own people, destabilizing the region, and "exporting terror around the world."

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/Starmer:-Gulf-partners-asked-UK-for-more-defense/65777583

US closes embassies across Middle East

 The United States has closed a number of embassies across the Middle East amid its ongoing clashes with Iran, the latest being Bahrain on Monday.

Previously, the US temporarily shut its consulates in Kuwait and, expectedly, Iran. Meanwhile, it also issued shelter-in-place advisories for its embassies in Qatar, Lebanon, and Israel.

Meanwhile, the country's Department of State issued security alerts to its citizens in Lebanon, Iraq, Cyprus, Bahrain, Jordan, and Kuwait, urging them to remain vigilant.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/US-closes-embassies-across-Middle-East/65776977

ISM: US manufacturing activity gain slows in February

 Activity in the United States' manufacturing sector expanded in February, albeit at a slower pace than the previous month, the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) said in its report published on Monday. The Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) dipped from the previous month's 52.6% to 52.4%, expanding for the second month in a row.

Meanwhile, the Employment Index rose by 0.7 percentage points compared to January to 48.8%. The Production Index went down by 2.4 percentage points to 53.5%. The New Orders Index decreased by 1.3 percentage points to 55.8.

"In February, US manufacturing activity remained in expansion territory, although growing at a slower pace than the month before. Of the five subindexes that make up the PMI, two (New Orders and Production) indicated slower growth compared to the previous month, and the Employment and Inventories indexes remained in contraction," ISM Chair Susan Spence commented.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/ISM:-US-manufacturing-activity-slows-in-February/65777195

Kremlin: Putin, MbS discuss situation in M. East

 Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MbS) over the phone on Monday, discussing the situation in the Middle East, the Kremlin shared in a statement.

During the conversation, Putin stressed that all the parties in the Middle East conflict need to resolve this "extremely dangerous situation" through diplomatic means.

On his part, Mohammed bin Salman commented that Moscow could play a "positive, stabilizing role," citing its "friendly relations with both Iran and the Persian Gulf countries."

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/Kremlin:-Putin-MbS-discuss-situation-in-M.-East/65777543

'Macron unveils 'advanced nuclear deterrence''

 French President Emmanuel Macron announced on Monday that France will launch "advanced nuclear deterrence," including expanding its conventional weapon arsenal to increase its defense and extend it to its European allies. He said that he asked for an increase in the number of nuclear warheads and said that the government will no longer reveal the exact number of warheads in its arsenal. He also said that France could deploy strategic resources on the territory of its allies, while its nuclear submarines will patrol European waters.

"We cannot be happy with the current trajectory," Macron said, assuring the nation that the French deterrence will "remain credible and will shield us from blackmail and capitulation." He said that France will not engage in an arms race and seeks only to ensure that any potential adversary is met with the "certainty damage from which it will not recover."

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/Macron-unveils-'advanced-nuclear-deterrence'/65776836

Iranian Drones Strike EU Country In War First

 The Iran war has just for the first time, and rather quickly given it's only the third day of the conflict, expanded to include an EU nation in the Mediterranean. Iranian drones have reached Cyprus and at least one has made ground impact.

The British Royal Air Force (RAF) base in Akrotiri, Cyprus came under attack Monday morning, with an Iranian drone striking the runway in the early hours, several reports say. This comes as Britain has mulled directly joining Trump's Iran operation, but now appears to be pulling back from the prospect.

General view of RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus, via PA/The Independent

"Our force protection in the region is at the highest level and the base has responded to defend our people," a British Ministry of Defence spokesperson has told international media.

Hours after the initial salvo, two more unmanned aerial vehicles were successfully intercepted while inbound over the same base. "Our armed forces are responding to a suspected drone strike at RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus at midnight local time," the MoD statement continued. "Our force protection in the region is at the highest level and the base has responded to defend our people."

The RAF is now taking emergency precaution measures is at least partially evacuating the base after a prior build-up:

The attacks on Akrotiri, a British sovereign base area, comes after the RAF recently moved additional defensive capabilities to the location—including radar systems, anti-drone defenses, and F-35 jets—as part of ongoing efforts to support stability in the Middle East.

Showcasing the widening impact of the Iran conflict, an airport in Paphos, Cyprus, was later evacuated after a suspect object was picked up on radars.

Cooper spoke of the “international” threat Monday morning and expressed the importance of recognizing “the responsibilities we have around defensive support for areas where there are British citizens."

Cooper further said that in private conversations with officials throughout the Gulf region, the leaders expressed they were "frankly shocked and horrified at the way their countries have been targeted by Iran over the weekend."

Family members of UK military members have been ordered to leave the base as it is now clearly being targeted:

Family members of British military personnel have been asked leave to leave the base for their own safety, and will be based elsewhere in Cyprus until the alert passes.

The drone struck hours after the UK agreed to let the US use British military bases to attack Iranian missile sites, but officials indicate the possible flight times mean it was launched before the prime minister announced the new policy.

Cyprus President Nikos Christodoulides has stated that "All the competent services of the republic are on alert and in full operational readiness." He also clarified his country has nothing to do with the war.

"I want to be clear: Our country does not participate in any way and does not intend to be part of any military operation," the Cyprus president added.

There's growing concern that the drones could have been sent from Iran's proxy arm in Lebanon: Hezbollah. Israel has just renewed its bombing of Beirut and other parts of Lebanon after the Shia paramilitary group (or possibly another group) fired rockets on northern Israel.

Lebanon is only a short, hours-long boat ride away from Cyprus. Israel is also not very distant. The British military has two sovereign military bases which it has maintained on Cyprus since the independence of its former colony in 1960.

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/iranian-drones-strike-eu-country-first-war