Australia Hanukkah attack, US approval dips, Gaza deaths surpass milestones amid fragile ceasefires
Early December 2025 has seen escalating global instability, with violence, political shifts, and humanitarian crises dominating news cycles from November 25 onward. A horrific mass shooting at a Hanukkah event in Sydney’s Bondi Beach killed 15 and injured 42, targeting Jewish celebrants—perpetrators linked to extremism, sparking international condemnation and debates on hate crimes.
In the US, President Trump‘s approval hovers at 42% per NBC/SurveyMonkey poll, underwater amid economic concerns and controversial pardons of 77 allies tied to 2020 election fraud claims. Trump vows retaliation after Americans killed in Syria ISIS attack; administration halts asylum decisions post-National Guard shooting. Redistricting battles in Texas highlight Latino voter shifts impacting GOP seats.
Middle East remains flashpoint: Gaza death toll exceeds 70,000; Israeli strikes kill Hamas commanders despite ceasefire violations. West Bank shootings, Syrian raids add layers. Asia: South Korea indicts ex-president Yoon on martial law charges; Chile elects far-right Kast.
Natural disasters compound woes: Morocco floods kill dozens; Southeast Asia monsoons claim thousands. Diplomacy flickers—Russia-Ukraine strikes continue; Venezuela airspace closure condemned.
These events underscore interconnected crises: political violence, migration, climate impacts. As UN warns, 2025 tests global resilience. Leaders face urgent calls for de-escalation.


