ERIK PRINCE: Off Leash update 9 April
Off Leash update 9 April
IRAN
•American and Iranian delegations will meet in Islamabad starting tomorrow to try to negotiate a more permanent peace than the current, 14-day ceasefire that both sides have already accused the other of violating.
•Ahead of that summit, Iran…— ErikDPrince (@realErikDPrince) April 9, 2026
IRAN
•American and Iranian delegations will meet in Islamabad starting tomorrow to try to negotiate a more permanent peace than the current, 14-day ceasefire that both sides have already accused the other of violating.
•Ahead of that summit, Iran circulated its draft 10-point counterproposal, which the White House claimed was different from the plan it had called “a workable basis on which to negotiate.”
•The public draft Iran circulated yesterday contained several points that the U.S. delegation won’t be able to agree to and preemptively criticized as “fundamentally unserious.” For example, it explicitly allows Iran to enrich uranium and control transit through the Strait of Hormuz, and demands a U.S. military withdrawal from the entire Gulf region and reparations for war damages.
•The White House is working on its own proposal that’s sure to be starkly different from Iran’s. It’s hard to imagine the two sides reaching any middle ground from such distant starting positions.
•It doesn’t seem like the two sides even agree about the terms of the current, 14-day ceasefire. One of its key tenets – at least as Pres. Trump pitched it – was reopening the Strait of Hormuz for shipping, but Iran still controls traffic through the Strait and is even strengthening its tolling system with a new plan to charge transiting ships $1 per barrel of oil aboard, payable in Bitcoin (so it can’t be traced or confiscated).
•Gulf countries also reported continued incursions by Iranian missiles and drones after the ceasefire was announced.
LEBANON
•Another reason the current, 14-day U.S.-Iran ceasefire is wobbling is because of a disagreement over whether it extends to Lebanon. Iran and Pakistan say it does; the U.S. and Israel say it does not.
•Israel forced the issue by carrying out its deadliest strikes yet on Hezbollah targets in Lebanon yesterday, killing at least 254 in what Lebanon’s Pres. Aoun called a “massacre.”
•U.S. Vice President JD Vance – who will lead the U.S. delegation in truce talks with Islamabad this weekend – said yesterday that Israel offered to restrain its (future) strikes on Lebanon for the sake of ongoing peace talks.
•That may be too little, too late for Iran, whose deputy foreign minister called Israel’s strikes on Lebanon a “grave violation” of the temporary ceasefire.
VENEZUELA
•Venezuela’s interim president, Delcy Rodriguez, announced a “responsible increase” in the public sector minimum wage starting next month – as opposed to the highly irresponsible past wage hikes that triggered inflation crises.
•The country’s minimum wage has been stuck at an unliveable 130 bolivares – about $0.28 at official rates – per month since March 2022, forcing many workers to sustain themselves from bonuses or side hustles.
•Rodriguez didn’t give a figure for the new minimum wage, but she said oil and mining revenues would pay for it.
SAHEL
•Two leading jihadist groups in the Sahel – Al Qaeda-linked Jama’at Nusrat al Islam wal Muslimin (JNIM) and Islamic State in the Sahel Province (ISSP) – took their long-running rivalry to Niger for the first time, with a series of skirmishes in Tillaberi, western Niger.
•JNIM and ISSP have been fighting each other in the Sahel since at least 2019, but their previous clashes have been restricted to Mali and Burkina Faso.
•Analysts say the spillover into Niger is a sign that JNIM sees an opportunity to follow ISSP’s lead in exploiting security gaps in Niger and northern Nigeria, while ISSP resents the competition and is willing to fight to retain exclusive control.
SOCIAL MEDIA
•Greece became the third country – after Australia and Spain – to announce plans to ban minors from social media. Several other countries – including Denmark, France, Indonesia, and Malaysia – are considering similar bans.
•Proponents of the bans believe social media usage harms children and a ban will prevent harm, but critics say bans will only push online minors to darker and less-regulated parts of the internet.






























