Olympians Liu and Gu travel very different paths, and China-US relations hang over their stories

WASHINGTON (AP) — It is as captivating as it is divisive: the tale of two Chinese American athletic geniuses who have so much in common but make such different choices.

Associated Press This photo combo shows, from left, Gold medalist Alysa Liu of the United States in Milan, Italy, Thursday, Feb. 19, 2026 and Gold medalist China's Eileen Gu in Livigno, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026. (AP Photo/File) Gold medalist China's Eileen Gu celebrates winning the women's freestyle skiing halfpipe final at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Livigno, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson) Gold medalist Alysa Liu of the United States displays her medal after competing in the women's free skate program in figure skating at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Milan, Italy, Thursday, Feb. 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Stephanie Scarbrough) Olympic gold medalist and Grand Marhsal Eileen Gu smiles during the Chinese New Year Parade in San Francisco, Saturday, March 7, 2026. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu) Alysa Liu of the United States, center, reacts with other athletes after performing in the figure skating exhibition at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Milan, Italy, Saturday, Feb. 21, 2026. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis)

United States China Two Different Olympians

Eileen Gu, a 22-year-old freestyle skier, andAlysa Liu, a 20-year—old figure skater, were both born to Chinese immigrants in California, and both were brought up in single-parent households. Both are elite athletes who turned in gold-medal performances atthe 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Olympicslast month.

But public opinion diverges over their choices about the countries for which they compete.

Gu chooses to represent China, while Liu waves the U.S. flag. Those decisions are generating heated debates over loyalty — an issue interwoven with money, values and politics on both sides of the Pacific Ocean.

In China, many laud Gu for identifying herself as Chinese and competing for the honor of the motherland. But plenty praise Liu, too, for her free spirit and genuineness — sometimes with a subtle nod to her father's role inthe 1989 Tiananmen Square democracy proteststhat landed him in the United States.

In the U.S., Gu's choice has raised eyebrows among politicians, including Vice President JD Vance, and even prompted a congressional proposal threatening to tax 100% on athletes such as Gu who compete for countries like China and Russia in the Olympics.

"Any American who works with a foreign adversary has not only betrayed our country but must be stripped of all benefits from doing so," said Rep. Andy Ogles, a Republican from Tennessee.

For Gu, it's a Chinese dream come true

To a large extent, Gu's is a story of China's economic success, when its spectacular growth has made it alluring for those with Chinese roots to return for greater financial gains.

Gu was born in San Francisco to a Chinese mother working in finance. No information about her father is available. Gu competed for China in the Winter Games in both 2022 and 2026, and she has landed endorsements worth millions of dollars from major Chinese brands as well as multinationals eyeing the Chinese market.

In 2022, when she won two golds and one silver in Beijing, Gu was a national idol and fondly known by her Chinese nickname, Frog Princess. Video clips of her eating Chinese snacks went viral on social media. Her performances in Italy were closely followed and celebrated in China.

She has long said her decision to compete for China has more to do with getting girls involved in her sport — with a greater opportunity for growth there than in the United States — than about pure dollars and cents.

But controversy over Gu's citizenship has cast a shadow over her popularity, with members of the public questioning her loyalty, wondering aloud if she has given up her U.S. passport to comply with the Chinese law against dual citizenship. Gu has dodged the question, making it anyone's guess.

Hu Xijin, a former party newspaper editor in China, argued that what's important for China is attracting talents like Gu and chalking it up as a win over the United States.

"Today's China is stronger, and it can provide Gu with interests that cannot be realized if she represented Team U.S.A.," Hu wrote in a social media post. "She has the sharp judgment to pick Team China, and this is the magnetic effect resulted from China's growth."

Liu has chosen differently

For Liu, skating for China is out of the question.

Advertisement

Liu was born to Arthur Liu through surrogacy. Unlike Gu's mother, Liu's father fled China when he was wanted by the authorities for his involvement in the 1989 student movement that ended with a bloody crackdown in the heart of Beijing and forced many student activists into exile. Hundreds, perhaps thousands, were killed when the military quelled the protests on June 3-4, 1989.

"Chinese people still have no freedom of speech, no freedom of religion, and there are still political prisoners in China," Arthur Liu recently told Nikkei Asia. "Clearly, I wouldn't allow my daughter to compete for such a government."

While the Chinese government embraced Gu with flattering publicity and millions in state funding for her training, Liu said he only let his daughter compete in Beijing in 2022 with assurances from the State Department and the U.S. Olympic Committee about her safety. The FBI hadwarned himthat he and his daughter were targeted in a Chinese government spying operation. That year, Alysa Liu placed sixth in women's single skating.

This time, she became the first American woman to win Olympic figure skating gold in 24 years. Her story spread wildly in China's social media, garnering praises such as "free spirit" and "more genuine." Some, however, pledged loyalty to Gu and suggested that Liu's success was nothing for the Chinese people to get excited about.

With Liu's rise, her father's story bubbled up in China's social media, though any mention was usually brief and cryptic because the 1989 Tiananmen Movement — generally known as 6-4 forthe date of the military crackdown, remains a deeply sensitive political taboo in China 37 years later. While some called the elder Liu a freedom fighter, others denounced him.

The comparison between his daughter and Gu was so prevalent that Arthur Liu was asked about it.

"Everyone is entitled to her own ambition," the father said in a YouTube chat with Zhang Boli, another former student activist. "The two have chosen different paths, and people immediately see the contrast. The contrast is so sharp that people cannot help but comment."

Asked about the comparison recently, Alysa Liu told Newsweek: "Oh, my God, I think this discourse is really silly because we're both half Chinese."

Backlash in the US

The backlash against Gu in the United States this time appeared to start with Vance, who told Fox News during the Games that "I certainly think that somebody who grew up in the United States of America, who benefited from our education system, from the freedoms and liberties that make this country a great place, I would hope that they want to compete with the United States of America."

In response, Gu said, "I'm flattered. Thanks, JD! That's sweet," USA Today reported.

Ogles' bill aside, Rep. Lisa McClain, a Michigan Republican, slammed Gu for not even having "the respect for the country which has given them so much to represent that country."

Citizenship change is nothing new in competitive sports, and other Chinese Americans or Chinese Canadians have played for Team China. But they have not riled up public opinion as Gu has, noted Susan Brownell, a professor at the University of Missouri-St. Louis who studies Chinese sports and the Olympic Games. "It does really appear," she said, "that part of the issue here is if you're good enough to beat the U.S."

Badiucao, a Chinese-Australian artist, illustrated the comparison in two drawings: one of Alysa Liu skating triumphantly along with the Statue of Liberty, the other of Gu draped in an oversized, blood-dripping piece of Chinese currency, its image of Mao Zedong looking over her shoulder.

"In a world of Eileen Gu," the artist wrote, "be Alysa Liu."

AP sports writer Stephen Wade in Tokyo contributed to this report.

Olympians Liu and Gu travel very different paths, and China-US relations hang over their stories

WASHINGTON (AP) — It is as captivating as it is divisive: the tale of two Chinese American athletic geniuses who have so ...
NFL free agency grades 2026: Breaking down biggest deals, trades

NFL free agencydoesn't have the overall shock value it once did.

USA TODAY Sports

With fewer and fewer top players reaching the open market thanks to extensions and franchise tags, all-out spending sprees by teams are increasingly rare. Whenagreements began materializing Monday, March 9, as the league's negotiating window opened, only a handful of pacts entailed truly surprising sums.

But the stakes are still high in March, and several teams took bold action to reshape their fortune for the coming season – and not always for the better.

USA TODAY Sports will be grading all of the biggest deals and trades, so check back often for all the latest:

<p style=OT Tytus Howard: Traded to Cleveland Browns (previous team: Houston Texans)

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=CB Trent McDuffie: Traded to Los Angeles Rams (previous team: Kansas City Chiefs)

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=RB David Montgomery: Traded to Houston Texans (previous team: Detroit Lions)

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=WR DJ Moore: Traded to Buffalo Bills (previous team: Chicago Bears)

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" />

2026 NFL offseason tracker: Player signings, trades

OT Tytus Howard:Traded to Cleveland Browns(previous team: Houston Texans)

Falcons add QB Tua Tagovailoa on one-year, $1.215 million deal

  • Grade: B+

It sure would be nice for Kevin Stefanski if he could fuse the best qualities of each of his quarterbacks – Tagovailoa's accuracy and Michael Penix Jr.'s ability to drive the ball into tight windows – into one passer. Instead, he's stuck with two players who each amount to a half-measure behind center. While it's fair to question whether Tagovailoa is a sustainable solution for the franchise, the Falcons weren't going to find meaningful competition for Penix elsewhere at this price point.Atlanta now has insurancein case the third-year signal-caller's return from a torn ACL has any hiccups, or if Stefanski merely wants a different look than a player who doesn't appear to be much of a fit in the coach's system due to his preference to work from the shotgun and his reluctance to operate over the middle.

Commanders add DE/OLB Odafe Oweh on four-year, $100 million deal

  • Grade: C+

Ahead of free agency, I wrote inmy latest mock draftthat the Commanders might be priced out of landing a big-name veteran pass rusher. Whoops. Washington instead doled out one of the morestunning sums to land Oweh, who came on strong late with all 7 ½ of his sacks after being traded to the Los Angeles Chargers last season. In terms of pure disruptiveness, there's plenty to like about the five-year veteran. But he's never played the role of lead option and true catalyst for a pass rush before, and Washington is betting $68 million guaranteed that he can make the leap. Maybe it was a nearly necessary one given how badly the team has whiffed on cobbling together an edge rush, but it's an inherently risky gamble.

Titans add WR Wan'Dale Robinson on four-year, $78 million deal

  • Grade: C

Tennessee wasn't trigger-shy at the outset of free agency, pulling in three players on deals of $60 million or more. The richest agreement came in thedeal for Robinson. It's difficult to square what he can offer an offense as a run-after-catch threat with this kind of payout. There's something to be said for providing Cam Ward with an option who will encourage more checkdowns and fewer heroic efforts in and out of the pocket. But it feels as though the Titans overbid for another piece new offensive coordinator Brian Daboll knows and is comfortable with.

49ers add WR Mike Evans on three-year, $42.4 million deal

  • Grade: A

This is probably the rare case when you can believe an agent when he says a decision wasn't driven by money.Evans' dealwas first reported as a $60.3 million pact, but that's actually the maximum value with incentives rather than the base. And with only $16.3 million guaranteed, this partnership is pure upside for San Francisco. Evns sizes up as the kind of well-built X receiver to whom Kyle Shanahan used to love funneling targets. He doesn't need to be anything beyond what he is at this stage in his career to make a massive difference for the 49ers offense. San Francisco just needs to settle the Trent Williams saga to make sure the offense is in top form for a title push.

Saints add RB Travis Etienne Jr. on four-year, $52 million deal

  • Grade: C-

Similar to the Chiefs, the Saints seemed desperate to invigorate a lackluster ground game, which ranked 31st in yards per carry. But what's the rush? New Orleans isn't anywhere close to Kansas City in establishing contending credentials, and the famously atypical spender doesn't need to get bogged down in paying top dollar for running backs – especially one who is an effective but not transcendent talent. Having Tyler Shough on a rookie contract confers some advantages and flexibility. Still, the more reasonable route might have been to look to the middle rounds of the draft for a ball carrier. New Orleans has more work to do up front to get its rushing attack right, though linking up with offensive guard David Edwards was a nice start to that effort.

Advertisement

Raiders add C Tyler Linderbaum on three-year, $81 million deal

  • Grade: B-

Few numbers from Monday were as jarring asLinderbaum's $27 million per yearaverage annual value, which represented a 50% increase over Creed Humphrey's previous market-setting rate at center. For a Raiders team flush with cap space, however, paying a premium for protection doesn't seem so outlandish. Linderbaum will fit in perfectly with new coach Klint Kubiak's zone runs, and reliability at the pivot could pay off in a big way for expected No. 1 pick Fernando Mendoza's development. The Raiders' free agency strategy at times resembled mashing all the buttons on a controller at once, but this addition could help establish the foundation needed for the Silver and Black to get off the ground floor for once.

Colts trade WR Michael Pittman Jr. for late-round pick swap

  • Steelers grade: C+

  • Colts grade: B-

For some teams, free agency can be a mechanism by which teams change their identities. For the Steelers, however, it seems to be a way in which the team can lean into its long-running vision for itself. Pittman, who averaged a meager 9.9 yards per catch last season and posted the fewest receiving yards since his rookie year, can still feast on in-breaking routes as a short-to-intermediate threat. But don't expect him to revolutionize the outlook for a receiving corps that still might be a little stale even after his addition. This will be easier to stomach if the Steelers keep at that mission, but it still feels a bit risky to hand the 28-year-old a three-year, $59 million extension. The Colts' salary dump might not move the needle much, but Indianapolis managed to navigate keeping Pittman in he fold until it had worked out the extension with Pierce.

Dolphins add QB Malik Willis on three-year, $67.5 million deal

  • Grade: A-

Ahead of this week, there was plenty of handwringing about the kind of offer that Willis might field after starting just three games in the last two years as Jordan Love's backup on the Green Bay Packers. The actual bottom line, however, is entirely reasonable for the Dolphins.Miami gets to pivot from the Tua Tagovailoa erainto an outlook with a decidedly higher upside, as Willis and De'Von Achane might be one of the NFL's most explosive backfield tandems. New general manager Jon-Eric Sullivan and coach Jeff Hafley know Willis' capabilities thanks to their shared time in Green Bay. And with the alternative being forging ahead with Quinn Ewers, the Dolphins at least went with the more promising choice among unproven passers. The financial commitment isn't daunting, either, as the cap space allotted to Willis might simply have gone to waste elsewhere as part of a significant rebuild.

Panthers add DE/OLB Jaelan Phillips on four-year, $120 million deal

  • Grade: B

Whether it's via the draft or the open market, upgrading a pass rush will come with a hefty price tag. Carolina tried to take the former route last year with Day 2 picks Nic Scourton and Princely Umanmielen, but that just led the team to a point of impatience. Enter Phillips, who isn't in the league's first tier of edge threats but already can be a fearsome presence. Now, for the first time since the Panthers traded Brian Burns to the New York Giants, defensive coordinator Ejiro Evero has a legitimate force off the edge capable of creating havoc.

Chiefs add RB Kenneth Walker III on three-year, $43.05 million deal

  • Grade: B-

Seems only natural that Kansas City would try to solve its explosiveness problem in the ground game by securing a running back who had more than three times as many 20-plus yard runs (10) as the team's entire offense engineered last season (3). With Eric Bieniemy back as offensive coordinator andWalker stepping in, it seems like a good bet that the Chiefs make a large leap with their rushing attack. But the cost here was fairly exorbitant for a team that was saddled with cap problems and now might need to get creative to find solutions for a tattered secondary. Kansas City's insistence on rediscovering its big-play roots feels a bit misplaced amid wider roster problems, but at least there's reason to believe Walker's arrivalcould expedite an overall offensive resurgence, even if the resource allocation is questionable at best.

Colts re-sign WR Alec Pierce to four-year, $116 million deal

  • Colts grade: B-

Is it an overpay? Almost certainly. It's difficult to look at a$29 million average annual value– not to mention the $84 million guaranteed – and conclude otherwise for a player who still relies so heavily on his wins in the vertical game to sustain himself. But general manager Chris Ballard and coach Shane Steichen are entering a make-or-break campaign, and they couldn't afford to flinch as they try to reassemble the pieces that made them successful in the first half of last season. Indianapolis might not have managed this in an ideal fashion, but at least the team avoided the very real threat of losing Pierce in a booming receiver market.

Packers trade DE Rashan Gary to Cowboys

  • Cowboys grade: C

  • Packers grade: A

So much for Jerry Jones' rumination that the Cowboys could be uncharacteristically aggressive in free agency this year. This feels less like a splash and more like a belly flop for Dallas' defense. Gary's 7 ½ sacks last season belie his limited effectiveness as a pass rusher, with a pressure rate that has continued to plunge yearly before falling to 12.1% last year. He neither properly capitalized on Micah Parsons' arrival nor stepped up when the All-Pro edge rusher was lost for the season to a torn ACL. Gary can stop the run and register some clean-up sacks, but that hardly feels like an efficient use of a $19.5 million cap hit. Meanwhile, Green Bay somehow extracts a fourth-round pick – albeit in 2027 – for a player who otherwise might have just been cut loose.

Dolphins trade S Minkah Fitzpatrick to Jets

  • Jets grade: B

  • Dolphins grade: Incomplete

Despite entering Monday with a good deal of spending space, Gang Green mostly scrounged through the bargain bin in the early stages of free agency. Their one splurge might have come in the form ofacquiring Fitzpatrick, whom they signed to a three-year, $40 million extension– essentially the going rate for a nice-but-not-elite safety. The five-time Pro Bowler is hardly at his playmaking peak anymore, but he's a respected leader who can get the back end of the Jets' defense in order. That's nothing to sneeze at for Aaron Glenn and Darren Mougey, who don't have much to count on beyond their floor-raising pick-ups in free agency. New Dolphins general manager Jon-Eric Sullivan, meanwhile, gets a reprieve for cleaning up the missteps of his predecessor.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:NFL free agency grades 2026: Best and worst contracts, trades

NFL free agency grades 2026: Breaking down biggest deals, trades

NFL free agencydoesn't have the overall shock value it once did. With fewer and fewer top players reaching ...
New Mexico authorities search Zorro Ranch formerly owned by Epstein

Authorities in New Mexico launched a search this week of a sprawling ranch formerly owned by convicted sex offenderJeffrey Epstein, which has comeunder renewed interestafter allegations surrounding the estate were included in files recently released by the US Justice Department.

CNN A drone view shows Zorro Ranch, a property formerly owned by Jeffrey Epstein, near Stanley, New Mexico, on Sunday, March 8. - Rebecca Noble/Reuters

The New Mexico Department of Justice announced the Monday morning search of the property, known as Zorro Ranch, in abrief statementposted to its website. It is part of the criminal investigation announced by state authorities last month into allegations of illegal activity surrounding the ranch at the time Epstein, who died in 2019, owned it.

The statement did not indicate whether anything of interest has been found during the search or how long it is expected to continue.

The ranch had previously not been subject to the same level of law enforcement scrutiny as Epstein's other properties in New York, South Florida and the Caribbean. But following the release of troves of federal government files related to Epstein, New Mexico Attorney General Raúl Torrezordered the reopeningof the state's criminal investigation into the property, which he said closed in 2019 at the request of federal prosecutors.

Included in the millions of files released by the Justice Department in late January was a 2019 email received by a local radio host that alleged that "somewhere in the hills outside the Zorro, two foreign girls were buried on orders of Jeffrey and Madam G." That allegation is unverified, but it is also not clear to what extent it had been investigated by law enforcement before the recent renewed interest in Epstein.

The host, Eddy Aragon, previously told CNN that he believed the email was sent to him by someone who worked on the ranch but wouldn't disclose who he thought the person was. He said he tried sending an email to the address, but it had bounced back. The files show he forwarded the allegations to a redacted email address four days after receiving it.

The radio host added that he went to the local FBI office with the email and forwarded it to a local FBI agent. Following the reopening of the state investigation, Aragon told CNN on Tuesday that he reached out to the New Mexico Department of Justice and had an approximately 30-minute interview.

Advertisement

The release of the email sent to Aragon prompted Stephanie Garcia Richard, New Mexico's commissioner of public lands, to send a letter last month asking the state Department of Justice to investigate the claims. She told CNN in February that the special investigative office of the New Mexico DOJ later reached out to her for "background information" on state lands and her agency's processes and documents it released in 2019.

Apart from the criminal inquiry, the state's House of Representatives last month voted to create a bipartisan "Truth Commission" looking into allegations of criminal activity surrounding the ranch. The commission has the power to issue subpoenas and compel the attendance of witnesses at its hearings.

The property is now owned by the family of Don Huffines, a businessman and former Texas state senator who is running for state comptroller. Huffines previously said he would cooperate with any law enforcement investigation surrounding the ranch. The New Mexico Department of Justice said in its statement that the owners and staff are cooperating with the search.

Authorities asked members of the public to stay away from the ranch, which is in a remote area about 30 miles south of Santa Fe, to avoid interfering with law enforcement.

This story has been updated with additional details.

CNN's Kaanita Iyer contributed to this report.

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

New Mexico authorities search Zorro Ranch formerly owned by Epstein

Authorities in New Mexico launched a search this week of a sprawling ranch formerly owned by convicted sex offenderJeffre...
Iran live updates: Tuesday to mark 'most intense' US strikes in Iran, Hegseth says

President Donald Trump announced "major combat operations" against Iran on Feb. 28, with massive joint U.S.-Israel strikes attack targeting military and government sites, officials said.

ABC News

Iranian state television confirmed that Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was among those killed in Tehran on the first day of strikes. His son Mojtaba Khameneiwas chosenon Sunday to succeed him.

Iran is responding to the operation with missile and drone attacks targeting Israel, regional U.S. bases and multiple Gulf nations. Israel is also intensifying its long-running strike campaign against the Iran-backed Hezbollah militia in Lebanon.

(Read previous Iran live updates here.)

Watch special coverage onNightline, "War with Iran," each night on ABC and streaming on Disney+ and Hulu.

Latest Developments

Mar 10, 1:17 PMRussia told Trump it isn't sharing US military asset intelligence with Iran, Witkoff says

Russian officials denied in a phone call with President Donald Trump on Monday that they are sharing intelligence on U.S. military assets with Iran, U.S. special envoy Steve Witkoff said."We can take them at their word," Witkoff said Tuesday in an interview with CNBC. "That's a better question for the intel people, but let's hope that they're not sharing."Trump spoke with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday for about an hour. Witkoff also indicated during the interview that Trump is still open to dialogue with Iran."I think the president is always willing to talk, but the question is whether it would be productive or not," Witkoff said. "Do they actually want to make have a diplomatic solution here? And so far the evidence suggests no."

Mar 10, 12:05 PMHistoric Iranian landmarks damaged amid ongoing war

A number of historical sites and monuments across Iran are damaged as the war continues, the Iran's Cultural Heritage Ministry said Tuesday.ABC News has verified photos showing damage to historical sites in Isfahan and Tehran.

@Iran_Gov/X - PHOTO: Damage is seen at the Chehel Sotoun Palace a UNESCO-listed heritage site with significant cultural and historical importance in Isfahan Province, Iran.

Several buildings are damaged in Isfahan, a city in central Iran known as the "cultural capital" of the country, home to many historical sites and monuments. Among them are Chehel Sotoun and Ali Qapu, which are UNESCO-listed palaces with significant cultural and historical importance as well as being popular tourist destinations, according to photos verified by ABC News.

@Iran_Gov/X - PHOTO: Damage is seen at the Chehel Sotoun Palace a UNESCO-listed heritage site with significant cultural and historical importance in Isfahan Province, Iran.

Tehran's Golestan Palace, also a UNESCO-listed landmark, has been damaged. Pictures show considerable damage to the palace's famous Mirror Hall and the Berelian Hall, according to photos verified by ABC News.

@Iran_Gov/X - PHOTO: Damage is seen at the Golestan Palace, a UNESCO-listed landmark in Tehran. @Iran_Gov/X - PHOTO: Damage is seen at the Golestan Palace, a UNESCO-listed landmark in Tehran.

Iran's Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei urged an international response to the attacks, writing that "the aggressors' brutal crimes threaten the shared heritage of humankind," in a post on X on Wednesday.Iran's Ministry of Cultural Heritage listed other sites including Isfahan's Imam Mosque and the historic valleys of Khorramabad as locations exposed to potential damage.-ABC News' Somayeh Malekian,Maryam Moqaddam, Camilla Alcini, Helena Skinner and Zoe Magee

Mar 10, 11:49 AMOver 40,000 Americans have returned from Middle East, State Department says

The State Department says it is now aware of more than 40,000 American citizens who have returned to the U.S. since Feb. 28 and that its 24/7 task force has helped more than 27,000 Americans abroad.The department's figure on charter flights stands at "over two dozen," which have "safely evacuated thousands." It says these operations are continuing for the time being even though demand is lessening and flights are operating at a 40% capacity.

Mar 10, 11:35 AMBritish Airways cancels many Middle East flights this month

British Airways announced on Tuesday that it is canceling all of its flights to and from Amman, Jordan; Doha, Qatar; Dubai, UAE; Tel Aviv and Bahrain until later this month.The airline cited "continuing uncertainty of the situation in the Middle East and airspace instability."The airline also canceled all of its flights to Abu Dhabi until later this year.

Advertisement

Mar 10, 10:30 AM43% of Americans disapprove of the U.S. strikes on Iran, 29% approve, new polling says

A new Ipsos poll found that 43% of Americans disapprove of the U.S. strikes on Iran, while 29% approve of them. Another 26% are unsure.The polling, which ran from March 6 to 9, found that 64% say that President Donald Trump has not explained the objectives of the war clearly.As a result of the U.S. military action in Iran, 67% think gas prices will get worse over the next year, including 85% of Democrats, 73% of independents and 44% of Republicans, the polling found. Nearly half of the respondents think the conflict will have a mostly negative impact on their own personal financial situation.Americans are also more likely to think U.S. military involvement in Iran will go on for an "extended period of time," 60%, rather than "end pretty quickly in a matter of weeks," 36%.

Mar 10, 9:16 AM9 drone strikes reported in UAE

Nine Iranian drones were able to make it through air defenses in the United Arab Emirates on Tuesday, the UAE Ministry of Defense said in a post on X.Twenty-six drones and eight ballistic missiles were intercepted on Tuesday, according to the ministry.

Mar 10, 8:31 AMIran not 'more formidable' than US expected, Caine says

Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said on Tuesday that while Iran was "adapting" during the conflict, Tehran's military was not "more formidable" than the U.S. had expected.

Mark Schiefelbein/AP - PHOTO: Pete Hegseth,Dan Caine

"I mean, I think they're fighting and I respect that, but I don't think they're more formidable than what we thought," he said.

Mar 10, 8:19 AMIran campaign not 'endless nation building,' Hegseth says

The U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran are not part of an "endless nation-building" effort, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said on Tuesday."This is not 2003. This is not endless nation building under those types of quagmires we saw under Bush or Obama," Hegseth said during a Pentagon press briefing. "It's not even close. Our generation of soldier will not let that happen again."

Majid Asgaripour/West Asia News Agency via Reuters - PHOTO: A man walks next to a poster of Iran's late supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, in Tehran, Iran, March 10, 2026.

Hegseth added that President Donald Trump would not allow such open-ended conflict, saying he "very clearly ran against those kinds of never-ending nebulously scoped missions. Those days are dead."

Mar 10, 8:10 AMTuesday to mark 'most intense' US strikes in Iran, Hegseth says

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth said on Tuesday that U.S. strikes on Tehran would continue to amplify, meaning Tuesday's aerial strikes would mark "the most intense" of the 10-day conflict.

Iranian Red Crescent Society via Reuters - PHOTO: Rescuers work in the rubble of residential buildings after air strikes, in the Resalat neighborhood, in Tehran, Iran, in this screengrab obtained from a handout video released March 9, 2026.

"Iran stands alone and they are badly losing on day 10 of Operation Epic Fury," Hegseth said. "We are winning with an overwhelming and unrelenting focus on our objectives, which are the same as the day I gave my first briefing here on Operation Epic Fury."

Mar 10, 7:50 AMIran's top security official responds to Trump: 'Beware lest you be the ones to vanish'

Ali Larijani, the head of Iran's Supreme National Security Council, said on Tuesday in a post on social media that Iranians don't fear "hollow threats," a response to an earlier social media post from U.S. President Donald Trump.

AFP via Getty Images - PHOTO: A man rides a motorcycle past a banner displayed at Valiasr Square in central Tehran on March 10, 2026.

"The Ashura-loving Iranian people do not fear your hollow threats; for those greater than you have failed to erase it… So beware lest you be the ones to vanish," Larijani said.Trump had earlier said the U.S. would amplify its strikes on Iran if the country moved to further restrict traffic in the Strait of Hormuz.-ABC News' Morgan Winsor

Click here to read the rest of the blog.

Iran live updates: Tuesday to mark 'most intense' US strikes in Iran, Hegseth says

President Donald Trump announced "major combat operations" against Iran on Feb. 28, with massive joint U.S.-Isr...
Oysters and clams in 9 states could be contaminated with norovirus, FDA warns

The FDA on Monday warned consumers aboutoysters and clamswhich could be contaminated with norovirus and were sent to nine states, including California, Florida and New York.

NBC Universal Close-up of oysters in plate on table. (TK / 500px via Getty Images)

The shellfish caution covers "certain raw oysters" harvested by Drayton Harbor Oyster Company and Manila clams harvested by Lummi Indian Business Council between Feb. 13 through March 3,according to an FDA statement.

Thesepotentially bad oysters and clamswere sent to food retailers and restaurants in nine states — Arizona, California, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Nevada, New York, Oregon and Washington, the FDA said.

The agency urged restaurants and retailers "not serve or sell the potentially contaminated oysters or Manila clams," but instead "dispose of any products by throwing them in the garbage or contacting their distributor to arrange for destruction."

Advertisement

There's also a threat of cross-contamination from those tainted products touching processing equipment that contacts other food in the kitchen, the agency said.

Representatives for Drayton Harbor Oyster Company and the Lummi Indian Business Council could not be immediately reached for comment on Tuesday.

The tribe, however, issued a statement on Friday warning of possible norovirus associated with shellfish coming out ofDrayton Harbor. The warning stopped short of a recall and urged consumers not to eat the shellfish raw.

Consuming tainted shellfish could lead to symptoms in 13 to 48 hours before getting better in another 24 to 72 hours, the FDA said.

Norovuris symptoms include dehydration, vomiting, diarrhea, dizziness, nausea, stomach pain, fever, headache and body aches.

Oysters and clams in 9 states could be contaminated with norovirus, FDA warns

The FDA on Monday warned consumers aboutoysters and clamswhich could be contaminated with norovirus and were sent to nine...

 

MON SEVEN © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com