Search This Blog

Saturday, July 4, 2026

'Iran cannot make peace with US or Israel, 'retribution' is a duty for all'

 

Hamidreza Moghadamfar, media and cultural adviser to the commander of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, said on Saturday on official media “retribution” has no connection to negotiations, describing it as a “duty” and a “historical obligation” for all Iranians.

“Qisas (retribution) has nothing to do with negotiations. Retribution is an obligation and a duty upon us; it is a historic demand. All of us have a duty—the military and the people alike, young and old. This retribution is a historic matter and a duty for everyone," Moghadamfar said.

"As for the United States and Israel, since the beginning of the Revolution—47 years now—even if the 12-day war and this recent war had not happened or were not the last one, we fundamentally cannot make peace with the United States. These negotiations and understandings are not related to peace or friendship with the US Our relationship with the United States and Israel, and our opposition to them, is existential in nature," he added.


https://www.iranintl.com/en/liveblog/202607049017

'Bank Melli says temporary card service disruption in Iran'

 

Bank Melli Iran said on Saturday that services linked to its cards will be temporarily unavailable early Sunday due to "system maintenance and infrastructure upgrades" aimed at improving stability, Tasnim reported.

BMW Puts Next-Gen Humanoid Robots To Work On Factory Floors In SC

 Before humanoid robots enter the modern battlefield alongside ground bots and low-cost suicide drones, these bipedal robots are first being unleashed on factory floors and inside warehouses, where the physical world of AI is beginning to take shape. 

The latest development in humanoids entering factory floors comes from BMW's Spartanburg factory, where the Figure 03 robots were deployed earlier this week. 

"Following the successful deployment of Figure 02 on the assembly line in 2025, our latest generation robot - Figure 03 - arrived in Hall 52, one of the assembly and logistics halls at BMW Group Plant Spartanburg," robot startup Figure wrote in a press release.

JPMorgan analyst Jose Asumendi attended the "Home of X" event at the Spartanburg plant on Tuesday, which showcased the German automaker's commitment to the US, where it's becoming the test bed for "physical AI." 

"At the same time, we have seen that the Plant Spartanburg is advancing the next stage of innovation through physical AI. By utilizing humanoid robots from Figure AI, Plant Spartanburg has become a pioneer of BMW's Physical AI Initiative," Asumendi wrote in a note to clients.

The analyst continued, "These humanoid robots are actively engaged in tasks such as transporting materials, handling components, and organizing parts within the facility. Their involvement supports associates by taking on physically demanding and repetitive work, allowing employees to concentrate on the precision, craftsmanship, and quality that are hallmarks of every BMW vehicle. This collaboration between humans and robots is setting a new standard for manufacturing efficiency and innovation at Plant Spartanburg." 

What the analyst saw on the manufacturing line:

Humanoids on the factory floors of BMW's Spartanburg plant are part of the car company's $1.7 billion investment in South Carolina, laying the groundwork for U.S. production of fully electric BMW vehicles. The company plans to begin assembling the fully electric iX5 in Spartanburg before the end of 2026 and at least six fully electric models in the U.S. by 2030.

Last month, Deutsche Bank's Head of APAC Automation & Industrials Research, Iris Zheng, shared with clients that the humanoid robot market is beginning to show signs of life, driven by faster ramp-ups from Chinese manufacturers and Tesla's push toward mass production.

This prompted Zheng's team to raise its 2026 to 2029 forecast for the global humanoid robot market; now expecting global shipments of humanoid robots to approach 50,000 units in 2026, up from the previous forecast of 17,500 in 2025 (more than doubling), before rising to about 700,500 units by 2030 and 70 million by 2050.

Related:

Bernstein analyst Eunice Lee recently noted that car companies are beginning to develop humanoids themselves:

Complete overview of the auto industry by company developing humanoids:

What's important to understand right now is that this is the early stage of physical AI, and some automakers are deploying these robots on factory floors, while others, such as Tesla, are developing them. The new model for car companies to create new revenue streams will be the production of robots because they share a similar parts ecosystem with EVs.  

https://www.zerohedge.com/technology/bmw-puts-next-gen-humanoid-robots-work-factory-floors-south-carolina

Airbus CEO 'not necessarily optimistic' on European defence cooperation

 Airbus CEO Guillaume Faury said on Friday he was "not ‌necessarily optimistic" on defence cooperation in Europe ‌as countries are under pressure and have enough funds to ​invest.

Faury was speaking at annual economic forum Les Rencontres économiques d'Aix-en-Provence- a few weeks after the collapse of Franco-German-Spanish fighter programme FCAS. Paris and Berlin ‌announced putting an ⁠end to the project following months of tension between industrial partners Airbus and ⁠Dassault over workshare. "If we miss the window of opportunity in the next few years, we'll end ​up with ​fragmented national solutions for ​decades to come", Faury ‌said, adding that both Berlin and Paris were very eager to find solutions for defence cooperation. "We keep believing in European cooperation at Airbus", he said.

Earlier this week, Dassault Aviation CEO Eric Trappier ‌told a French senate committee ​that he was open ​to cooperation after ​the breakdown of the Future Combat ‌Air System project. "We are capable ​of cooperating, ​we have shown it in the past, but we want to cooperate with rules that ​are accepted from ‌the start," he added.

https://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/airbus-ceo-not-necessarily-optimistic-182012732.html

Iraq seeks Chevron participation in oil pipeline projects

 Authorities in Iraq have invited supermajor Chevron to invest in and operate an oil pipeline project aimed at reducing the country's dependence on the Strait of Hormuz for its oil exports.

https://www.upstreamonline.com/production/iraq-seeks-chevron-participation-in-oil-pipeline-projects/2-1-2013131

Sunday talkies: Mike Johnson, Hanson, Ron Johnson, Malliotakis, Burgum

 Fox News’s “Fox News Sunday”: House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.), Maryland Gov. Wes Moore (D), Fox News contributor and former NASA astronaut Butch Wilmore, American historian Victor Davis Hanson

Fox News’s “Sunday Morning Futures”: Ret. Army Gen. Jack Keane, Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), Sen. Roger Marshall (R-Kansas), Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (R-N.Y.), former Deputy National Security Advisor Victoria Coates

CNN’s “State of the Union”: Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro (D)

CBS News’s “Face the Nation”: NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman, Rep. Carlos Gimenez (R-Fla.), Rep. Adriano Espaillat (D-N.Y.), NCAA President Charlie Baker, Former CDC Chief Medical Officer Debra Houry

ABC’s “This Week”: Interior Secretary Doug Burgum

NBC News’s “Meet the Press”: Documentary filmmaker Ken Burns, presidential historian Doris Kearns Goodwin, Smithsonian Secretary Lonnie Bunch

https://thehill.com/homenews/sunday-talk-shows/5953676-sunday-shows-preview-after-america-250-gop-shifts-focus-back-to-trumps-agenda/

Houthis Say Forces 'Repelled' Saudi Warplanes From Threatening Iranian Civilian Airliner

 Via The Cradle

Yemen's Houthis announced Friday that they had "repelled" an attempt by Saudi warplanes to prevent an Iranian civilian aircraft from landing at Sanaa airport.

Yemeni Armed Forces (YAF) spokesman Brigadier General Yahya Saree said that Saudi warplanes violating Yemeni airspace were targeted with several air-defense missiles, forcing them to withdraw.

via Reuters

Saree stressed that the Iranian civilian aircraft was carrying more than 200 Yemeni citizens who had been stranded in Iran, including many who were sick or wounded.

“We warn the criminal Saudi enemy against repeating any attempt to violate our airspace or any aggression targeting our country. Such actions will be met with a comprehensive response targeting its airports and vital interests on land and sea,” Saree said in a video statement.

The YAF spokesman further stressed that "our hand is on the trigger" to implement any directives issued by Ansarallah leader Abdul Malik al-Houthi "within the framework of breaking the Saudi-American siege on our people and expelling the occupiers."

Saree also praised Iran's role in "breaking the siege" on Yemen by operating flights to transport patients and stranded people and to alleviate humanitarian suffering in Yemen.

After landing in Sanaa, the Iranian plane safely returned to Tehran carrying an official delegation of the Republic of Yemen to participate in the funeral of slain Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei.

Since 2015, Saudi Arabia has imposed a blockade on Yemen's land, sea, and air ports, severely restricting vital commercial and humanitarian imports, including fuel and food.

The blockade triggered what the UN called one of the most severe humanitarian crises globally, leading millions towards famine and drastically damaging healthcare and water systems.

The Saudi siege on Yemen was partially lifted following April 2023 negotiations with the Ansarallah resistance movement, which leads the YAF and is closely allied with Iran.

The US and Israel also fought a war with Yemen following the start of what Ansarallah condemned as genocide of Palestinians in Gaza in 2023. 

In response to the genocide, the YAF imposed a blockade on Israeli-linked ships passing through the Bab al-Mandab Strait along the Yemeni coast of the Red Sea, eventually prompting the US and European navies to flee the Red Sea.

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/houthis-say-forces-repelled-saudi-warplanes-threatening-iranian-civilian-airliner