🟡 AirspaceViolation | 7/10
🇱🇻 🇪🇪 🇷🇺
Latvia and Estonia closed airspace for Ukrainian drones heading to Russia
Evidence shows Latvia and Estonia officially closed or restricted airspace over their eastern regions to facilitate the unimpeded passage of Ukrainian strike drones toward Russian borders.
Newspaper withdrawal at the breakfast table
Mornings haven’t been quite the same around the house since Feb. 26–the last one that started with a print copy of the Washington Post landing somewhere near our front walk, making less of a thud than it once did, sometime before dawn.
That marked the end of a streak of Post home delivery that had run decades, going back to my first apartments out of college in Arlington and D.C. The wanton destruction of much of my old newsroom, followed by my seeing the sad results of Jeff Bezos’s act of civic vandalism and then facing an imminent renewal of our print subscription, pushed me to terminate that streak–in sorrow, not anger.
(The Post’s site didn’t even offer me a discount on my way out.)
Since then, the demise of a daily habit of analog news reading has left me with a breakfast-table problem: What do I read instead to ensure I still start the day by informing myself? Ideally, without bringing a touchscreen device to the table?
One early answer had been collecting dust on other household surfaces: the print magazines we get.
I’m one of the many people who subscribed to Wired in early 2025 in appreciation of that publication’s outstanding coverage of the Trump administration’s abuses of power. But until the dead-tree edition of the Post wasn’t occupying space on the breakfast table, I let copies of that magazine pile up.
We also have back issues of such other print mags as the Air & Space Museum’s Air & Space quarterly and the UVA and Georgetown alumni magazines my wife and I get. I’ve been reminded that they’re worth reading with a morning coffee–among other things, I now know that the coffee company I keep buying from at Costco was founded by another Hoya.
And there’s a slightly less-portable form of printed media, books. My current read is my Post friend Sara Kehaulani Goo’s memoir Kuleana, in which she unpacks her Hawaiian heritage and her family’s struggles to hold on to the last of some ancestral land.
If I must turn to a touchscreen, I’ve realized that my digital reading should be one of the most newspaper-like forms of online publishing, RSS. Catching up with favorite sites via that online-syndication format seems healthier than flipping over to social media.
I can also read the Washington Post on the web or in its Android or iPad apps–my Arlington and D.C. library cards provide free online access, notwithstanding the occasional glitch renewing that freebie. And yet I don’t turn to what I think of as my alma mater of journalism as often as I did when I paid for it. I feel a little bad about that.
#AirSpace #books #digitalMedia #Georgetown #Kuleana #mags #newspaper #printPaper #printSubscription #ReallySimpleSyndication #RSS #SaraGoo #washingtonPost #WiredTrump’s abrupt U-turn on a plan to reopen the Strait of #Hormuz came after backlash from #allies
source: nbcnews.com/politics/white-hou…
#Trump surprised #Gulf allies by announcing “Project Freedom” on social media Sunday afternoon, the officials said, angering leadership in #SaudiArabia. In response, the Kingdom informed the U.S. it would not allow the U.S. #military to fly aircraft from Prince Sultan #Airbase southeast of #Riyadh or fly through Saudi #airspace to #support the effort, the officials said.#war #usa #Iran #GulfWar #diplomacy #fail #pentagon #politics #whitehouse #government #problem #news #worldorder #worldtrade #trade #shipping #world #middleeast #power #airforce #conflict #straitofhormuz

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s abrupt reversal on his plan to help ships go through the Strait of Hormuz came after a key Gulf ally suspended the U.S. military’s ability to use its bases and airspace to carry out the operation, according to two U.S. officials.
Fico’s Trip Troubles Reflect EU’s Ongoing Russia Rift
UAE Airspace Operations Resume Normalcy Post-Precautionary Measures
UAE airspace operations are back to normal after temporary measures linked to the 'US-Israel-Iran war' were lifted on March 5, 2026.
#UAE #Airspace #Aviation #Travel #Security
https://newsletter.tf/uae-airspace-operations-resume-normalcy-march-5-2026/
Finland imposes a no-fly zone after a drone sighting near its southeastern border.
The latest drone incursion came as Ukraine attacked the major Russian oil port of Primorsk on the Gulf of Finland.