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Monday, April 6, 2026

'North Korea Keeping Iran At Arm's Length, Hoping To Improve Ties With Trump'

 When the Ukraine war began over four years ago, North Korea only deepened its relations and defense cooperation with Moscow. Later into the conflict, it even sent thousands of troops to assist Russian military and security forces - and an undisclosed number of DPRK troops died or suffered wounds while fighting Ukraine.

When it comes to Iran, many pundits assumed Pyongyang might also do something similar in defense of Tehran, give the Middle East nation and fellow 'rogue' ally is under US and Israeli bombs; however, there are signs North Korea is actually distancing itself in this case.

via Reuters

Seoul’s National Intelligence Service (NIS) sees no evidence that North Korea has sent weapons or supplies to Tehran since since Trump's Operation Epic Fury began, and is even remaining far away from such a move.

Lawmaker Park Sun-won, who attended a closed-door briefing held by the NIS, described Sunday that North Korea is not at all rushing to the Islamic Republic's aid.

This is also consistent with the Kim Jong Un government's public statements on the crisis, which have by and large been mute:

While Iran’s other allies China and Russia have frequently issued statements on the US-Israel war on Iran, North Korea’s Foreign Ministry has only issued two toned-down statements so far, said the NIS.

While Pyongyang did condemn the US and Israeli attacks on Iran as illegal, it did not issue public condolences after Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s death or send a congratulatory message when Khamenei’s son, Mojtaba Khamenei, succeeded him.

The spy agency said Pyongyang is likely adopting this cautious approach to position it for a new diplomatic chapter with the US once the Middle East conflict subsides, said Park.

Trump actually mentioned North Korea several times in Monday remarks from the White House on the Iran situation. He charged that a certain past president failed to act properly to prevent Pyongyang from going nuclear - and that the last several presided did as well.

He concluded that Kim Jong Un would not have nuclear weapons if that job was done right. The said that they are afraid to take "strong action".

It could be that Pyongyang is staying on the sidelines, and not offering direct support to its ally the Islamic Republic, given the obvious mismatch in military strength as the Iranians get pummeled by superior US aerial firepower.

In the case of Russa-Ukraine it is the opposite - where North Korea is on the side of the militarily stronger power and so perhaps feels more at east supporting its ally Moscow in such a context.

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/north-korea-keeping-iran-arms-length-hoping-improve-ties-trump

Healthcare REIT National Healthcare Properties files for an estimated $200 million IPO

 National Healthcare Properties, a healthcare REIT focused on outpatient medical and senior housing properties, filed on Monday with the SEC to raise up to $100 million in an initial public offering. However, the deal size may be a placeholder for an offering that we estimate could raise at least $200 million.


National Healthcare Properties is a self-managed real estate investment trust that owns a portfolio of senior housing and healthcare properties across 29 states. The company operates through two primary segments: Senior Housing Operating Properties (SHOP), which consists of assisted living and memory care communities operated under RIDEA structures, and Outpatient Medical Facilities (OMF), which comprises medical office buildings largely affiliated with or adjacent to hospital systems. The SHOP portfolio is managed through third-party operators, while the OMF segment transitioned to in-house property management in 2025. As a REIT, the company plans to pay a quarterly distribution.

National Healthcare Properties' IPO filing follows the recent listing of Janus Living (JAN), another REIT focused on senior living properties utilizing a RIDEA structure. Janus priced at the high end of the range in mid-March, and has since traded up 19.5% from offer.

National Healthcare Properties has two classes of preferred stock listed on the Nasdaq: 7.375% Series A Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual Preferred Stock (Nasdaq: NHPAP) and 7.125% Series B Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual Preferred Stock (Nasdaq: NHPBP).

The New York, NY-based company was founded in 2012 and booked $342 million in revenue for the 12 months ended December 31, 2025. It plans to list on the Nasdaq under the symbol NHP. National Healthcare Properties filed confidentially on January 16, 2026. Wells Fargo Securities, Morgan Stanley, BMO Capital Markets, Goldman Sachs, RBC Capital Markets, Baird, Capital One Securities, Citizens JMP, Fifth Third Securities, Huntington Investment, and KeyBanc Capital Markets are the joint bookrunners on the deal.

US Tests Mach-5 Hypersonic Missile In Joint Army-Navy Launch

 by Georgina Jedikovska via Interesting Engineering,

The U.S. has carried out a successful launch of a hypersonic missile made to travel at speeds exceeding Mach 5, meaning over five times the speed of sound, which allows it to cover vas distances in a matter of minutes.

A common hypersonic missile launches from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida, on March 26, 2026. via DoW

The launch of the common hypersonic missile, which is capable of covering more than 3,836 miles per hour (mph), was conducted as part of a joint test by the US Army and Navy.

According to the U.S. Department of War, the event took place at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in the state of Florida. The push is part of the U.S.’ ongoing efforts to develop advanced strike capabilities.

“The U.S. Army’s Portfolio Acquisition Executive Fires, in partnership with the US Navy’s Portfolio Acquisition Executive Strategic Systems Programs, conducted a successful launch of a common hypersonic missile from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida, on March 26, 2026,” the U.S. Department of War stated.

A joint military test

Designed to travel faster than Mach 5, hypersonic weapons are considered a key part of future warfare and a military technology breakthrough. Their high speed makes them difficult to detect and intercept with existing defense systems.

The latest test by the U.S. Army and U.S. Navy marks another step toward deploying a shared hypersonic missile system. It is developed for both land- and sea-based platforms, and aims to help accelerate deployment and reduce costs.

Officials noted that the missile is being designed to strike time-sensitive, heavily defended, and high-value targets with minimal warning. What’s more, its extreme speed significantly reduces enemy reaction time.

“The Army and Navy partnership to field a common hypersonic missile across land- and sea-based platforms supports the National Defense Strategy by accelerating timelines, reducing costs, and delivering a highly survivable capability to defeat time-sensitive, heavily defended, and high-value targets at speeds exceeding Mach 5,” the U.S. Department of War continued in a statement shared on April 2.

Hypersonic push continues

According to reports, the test is part of a larger Pentagon plan to quickly roll out advanced technologies for combat use. On November 17, the US Department of War said that hypersonic weapons are one of six Critical Technology Areas (CTAs) seen as essential for battlefield advantage.

“Our adversaries are moving fast, but we will move faster,” Emil Michael, under secretary of war for research and engineering, revealed in a press release. “The warfighter is not asking for results tomorrow; they need them today.”

The six areas include Applied Artificial Intelligence (AAI), biomanufacturing (BIO), Contested Logistics Technologies (LOG), Quantum and Battlefield Information Dominance (Q-BID), Scaled Directed Energy (SCADE), and Scaled Hypersonics (SHY). All are aimed at strengthening battlefield performance.

Secretary of War Pete Hegseth said at the time that the nation’s military has long been at the forefront of military power. “Under Secretary Emil Michael’s six Critical Technology Areas will ensure that our warriors never enter a fair fight and have the best systems in their hands for maximum lethality.”

According to the U.S. Department of Defense, turning innovation into battlefield advantage will secure future dominance. “The War Department is committed to remaining the most deadly fighting force on planet Earth,” Hegseth concluded.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/us-tests-mach-5-hypersonic-missile-joint-army-navy-launch

US rescue inside Iran opens debate over war's next phase

 The mission to rescue an American pilot downed in Iran showed how a tactical success can open wider strategic possibilities, sharpening debate over how far the United States may expand its footprint inside Iran.

The operation may have cost the United States several military assets, but it also forced Iran to reveal what it considers key terrain, according to former intelligence officer Michael Pregent.

A veteran with more than 28 years of experience in security and terrorism in the Middle East, Pregent believes that in scrambling to protect what it thought would be the next landing zone, Iranian forces exposed troop movements and defensive priorities that US planners may now be able to exploit.

“You can see movement of assets to protect key terrain that we may not have thought was key terrain but the regime does, and that gives an opportunity to exploit the situation," Pregent told Iran International.

"The establishment of this base now changes that focus. It's not just about fixed airstrips. Air bases that the US can take over—now it's just flat terrain, because that's what this was.”

For Pregent, the deeper implication is what the mission revealed about the regime’s internal weakness.

“It indicates a lack of command and control of regime forces due to the degradation, due to key leaders being taken out… the regime wasn't able to do anything about it. And that says something.”

That reading is echoed, though more cautiously, by Farzin Nadimi, a defense and military expert on Iran at the Washington Institute, who says the rescue proved American reach but also exposed how fragile that success was.

The mission itself was among the most daring US operations of the war so far. Special operations forces moved deep into Iran under cover of darkness, crossed mountainous terrain to reach the stranded weapons systems officer, and rushed him toward extraction before dawn.

But the operation nearly unraveled when two transport aircraft were unable to take off, forcing commanders to improvise a new extraction plan in real time to avoid leaving roughly 100 troops stranded inside Iran.

US troops destroyed the disabled MC-130s and four additional helicopters inside Iran rather than risk leaving sensitive equipment behind.

Ahead of the mission, the CIA reportedly ran a deception campaign inside Iran, planting false information that US forces had already found and moved the missing officer. As the rescue unfolded, US forces also jammed communications and struck key roads near the location to keep Iranian forces away.

"Over the past several hours, the United States military pulled off one of the most daring search and rescue operations in US history," Trump said in a statement. The airman was injured, but Trump said "he will be just fine."

For Nadimi, that near miss is the real takeaway.

“It was a very successful operation… It showed real reach, real flexibility, and real results. But at the same time, it also showed… that the mission could very well have failed. And that would leave almost 100 troops in the middle of Iran," he told Iran International.

That warning now carries added weight as the fate of Iran’s uranium stockpile remains unresolved.

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) had estimated Iran held roughly 440.9 kilograms of uranium enriched to near weapons-grade levels before the latest round of strikes, much of it still unaccounted for.

But when asked whether the rescue mission could make a future operation to secure that stockpile more likely, Nadimi is blunt.

“I think the simple answer is no.”

His assessment is that a mission to secure more than 400 kilograms of highly enriched uranium would require a fundamentally different scale of operation: heavy engineering equipment, excavation teams, perimeter defense, airlift support and the ability to seize and hold key terrain for days or even weeks.

Yet the political lesson may be moving in the opposite direction.

Shahram Kholdi, a Middle East historian whose own Iranian conscript service gives him firsthand insight into how the Islamic Republic prioritizes the IRGC and Basij in any domestic theater, says the operation may strengthen the hand of those in Washington arguing that half measures are no longer enough.

“Those so-called hawks now have a stronger view… to convince the president not to go in half-baked anymore… we are going to see blows that would be interdisciplinary actions.”

The Islamic Republic's rush to capture the downed airman may reinforce arguments among hawks that future operations should combine overwhelming air power with more deliberate ground-enabled missions, according to Kholdi.

The rescue not only brought both men home but also demonstrated that Washington can execute complex operations deep inside Iran—leaving the far bigger question of how, and how far, it may use that lesson next.

https://www.iranintl.com/en/202604063967

Iranian villagers protect downed U.S. airman, lefty Europeans root for mullah regime to capture him

 by Monica Showalter

It's an upside-down world when Iranian villagers seek to protect U.S. servicemen from Iran's mullah regime, while our purported European allies root for his capture.

That really happened with the recent incident regarding a downed U.S. airman whose case for rescue was made that much more dangerous by a leaker on the U.S. side, who alerted the Iranian goons of his presence on Iranian soil and got them hunting for him.

But the news was not all bad. Something unexpected happened -- in a spontaneous gesture, the Iranian villagers rushed in to protect him from capture by the Revolutionary Guard goons who were looking for him to capture. It was not without risk -- some may die as a result with angry mullah goons now looking for them. But it was the price of freedom, a price they were willing to pay.

Reports confirm the downed F-15 pilot in Iran was sheltered by heroic villagers in Yasuj’s Kakan region before US Special Forces arrived.

The regime has now arrested 20 of those villagers for aiding the American pilot.

Pray for these lions who risked everything. Free Iran. pic.twitter.com/e31At9oI4k

— Nicholas Lissack (@NicholasLissack) April 5, 2026

Early video footage shows heavy clashes between USAF CSAR teams and IRGC Basij militants attempting to capture the second F-15E crew member who had been given shelter by villagers in Kuh-e-Siah, Koohdasht county, Iran.

The A-10C+ pilot protecting the HH-60W CSAR helicopters… pic.twitter.com/ZfulTyc2GD

— Special Ops Magazine (@realmacsavage) April 5, 2026

Iranian villagers searching for a US pilot. 😂

Country duty! pic.twitter.com/IpPf0Agrf3

— Sentletse 🇿🇦🇷🇺🇵🇸🇱🇧 (@Sentletse) April 3, 2026

Which tells us what this war is really about -- freeing the Iranian people even as we free the American people from the mullah regime's long reign of torture and terror.

The Iranians have longed for freedom for decades and have demonstrated it again and again, since at least 2009, and actually, earlier, only to be machine-gunned down in the streets without consequences by the mullah regime, not drawing so much as a stern warning from the United Nations in response. The international community has simply ignored them and moved on. Yet that hasn't stomped out the Iranian desire for freedom.

Yes, it's "Bush war" logic to make a war about freeing another people, and Trump doesn't seem to have much appetite for even regime-change, let alone nation-building, but it's still true. People who live in hellholes welcome any liberator with open arms and may just make sacrifices for them. 

They did with the U.S. airman, who was rescued on Sunday, the Iranian villagers giving just enough ground obstacles to delay the mullah goon on a manhunt and make the rescue that much more likely. It was beautiful, and Americans everywhere are always going to be grateful to the brave Iranian villagers who knew that they might be arrested, and some have been -- and did it anyway.

And then there's our purported allies in Europe, who've been putting out this kind of talk:

UK: Our British allies were hoping the Iranians captured the downed US airman in Iran. Allies? pic.twitter.com/gp5PX0b7pZ

— @amuse (@amuse) April 6, 2026

I'm sure he's a nice guy. He says he doesn't wish anyone ill. And like Jimmy Carter, he assumed the mullahs have all the best of intentions. and would treat the airman well, which certainly wasn't the case with U.S. diplomatic personnel in 1979, and certainly wouldn't be the case with a foreign fighter in 2026.

But he made the argument for the airman's capture by saying he would like to volunteer him into becoming a bargaining chip for the mullahs' perpetuation in power, and get Trump to stop the military action.

What a thing for a purported ally to wish -- at no risk to himself, he was actually rooting for the enemy, while Iranian villagers took massive risks to thwart their oppressors. He was all in on keeping the mullahs in power, while Iranians helped the airman, and cheered the destruction of their oppressors' arms:

Some allies.

Yet the rescue happened, and it was downright biblical:

🚨 JUST IN: Pete Hegseth delivers a POWERFUL message about how God saved our F-15 WSO

"When he was finally able to activate his emergency transponder, his first message was simple. And it was powerful. He sent a message: "GOD is good'"

"Shot down on a Friday. Good Friday.… pic.twitter.com/ccImwqXlHq

— Nick Sortor (@nicksortor) April 6, 2026

I just hope the brave Iranian villagers get some kind of recognition from the U.S. when in the end, they are liberated, while the Europeans learn the hard way about wishing ill on an ally.

https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2026/04/iranian_villagers_protect_downed_u_s_airman_while_lefty_europeans_root_for_the_mullah_regime_to_capture_him.html

Organogenesis Cleared to Begin Rolling BLA for ReNu Knee Osteoarthritis Therapy



Organogenesis (Nasdaq: ORGO) said it completed a Type B meeting with the FDA and received confirmation that the ReNu clinical development program is appropriate for a rolling Biologics License Application (BLA) submission expected by the end of 2025. The program includes two large Phase 3 randomized controlled trials, extensive commercial history, and RMAT designation.

The company plans to initiate a rolling BLA for ReNu before the end of December and said, if approved, ReNu could address knee osteoarthritis pain for millions of patients.

Bahrain, Saudi Arabia report missile alerts

 


Bahrain and Saudi Arabia reported missile alerts early hours of Tuesday local time, with authorities warning residents to take precautionary measures.

Bahrain’s interior ministry said sirens had been activated and urged people to remain calm and “head to the nearest safe place”.

The kingdom’s defence ministry later said four ballistic missiles were intercepted in the eastern region, without providing further details.

https://www.iranintl.com/en/liveblog/202604067622