M23 Rebels Face Burundian Forces in Eastern Congo, Heightening War Fears

Members of the M23 armed group drive by as residents come out to celebrate the takeover of the city by the M23 at the Governor's office compound in Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo, 31 January 2025. (EPA)
Members of the M23 armed group drive by as residents come out to celebrate the takeover of the city by the M23 at the Governor's office compound in Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo, 31 January 2025. (EPA)
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M23 Rebels Face Burundian Forces in Eastern Congo, Heightening War Fears

Members of the M23 armed group drive by as residents come out to celebrate the takeover of the city by the M23 at the Governor's office compound in Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo, 31 January 2025. (EPA)
Members of the M23 armed group drive by as residents come out to celebrate the takeover of the city by the M23 at the Governor's office compound in Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo, 31 January 2025. (EPA)

As Rwanda-backed M23 rebels in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo push south towards the city of Bukavu, they are likely to have to fight their way through thousands of troops from Burundi, ramping up the risk of a return to full-blown regional war.

Burundi has had soldiers in eastern Congo for years, initially to hunt down Burundian rebels there but, more recently, supporting Kinshasa's army in battles against M23.

Any showdown over Bukavu, some 200 km (125 miles) south of Goma, which they seized this week, could exacerbate ethnic tensions and openly pit national armies against each other, analysts told Reuters.

Although Rwanda denies accusation from the United Nations and others that it has sent troops in Congo, it says it will do anything necessary to defend itself. It accuses Congo's military of joining forces with Hutu-led militias it says are bent on slaughtering Tutsis in Congo and threatening Rwanda.

Burundi, whose ruling party draws heavily from the country's Hutu community, has had troops in Congo since 2021 and tensions have simmered between the two nations since Burundi accused Rwanda of masterminding a failed coup attempt in 2015.

"Today there are thousands of Burundian soldiers who are fighting against the M23 on the front lines. Some people say 8,000, others say 10,000," said Jason Stearns, a former UN investigator in Congo and currently a professor at Simon Fraser University.

M23 is the latest in a series of Tutsi-led rebellions that have emerged in Congo's east since the official end of a string of conflicts between 1996 and 2003 that sucked in most of Congo's neighboring countries and killed 6 million people, mostly from hunger and disease.

Earlier this month, Burundian troops fought a fierce battle in Nungu, in North Kivu, losing dozens of men after they were overrun by M23, four sources told Reuters.

"The Burundians have (since) pulled back to South Kivu," Stearns said. "They are among the forces that are trying to block the advance of M23 and the Rwandan army north of Kavumu."

Kavumu, a town 35 km north of Bukavu, is home to the city’s airport and hosts a number of Congolese drones and other aircraft.

A UN source and Rwanda's government gave similar figures for Rwandan troops in Congo.

A Burundian official said the number of Burundian troops in Congo was "of this order" and said the military had received an increasing number of requests for help from Congo's military in recent years.

"Our country has also paid a heavy price, which is why we have asked our two neighbors to sign a ceasefire and negotiate," the official said, asking not to be named due to the sensitivity of the matter.

Burundi's foreign minister did not respond to requests for comment. A spokesperson from the Congolese army did not respond to requests for comment.

Like Rwanda, Burundi has sought to heal deep divisions between its Tutsi and Hutu populations.

Under the peace deal that ended Burundi's 1993-2005 civil war, which killed 300,000 people, its military put in place an ethnic quota system that shared positions between Hutus and Tutsis equally.

Diplomats and experts said there is a risk that Burundian military units fighting in eastern Congo could fracture in fighting against the Tutsi-dominated and Rwandan-backed M-23.

Josaphat Musamba, PhD student at Ghent University, said Rwanda believes Burundi is harboring Hutu rebels near their border.

"As soon as Rwanda thinks it is a threat, that becomes a threat to other countries," he said.



Trump Says Khamenei 'Should be Very Worried'

US President Donald Trump speaks to reporters at the White House in Washington (Reuters)
US President Donald Trump speaks to reporters at the White House in Washington (Reuters)
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Trump Says Khamenei 'Should be Very Worried'

US President Donald Trump speaks to reporters at the White House in Washington (Reuters)
US President Donald Trump speaks to reporters at the White House in Washington (Reuters)

US President Donald Trump said Wednesday that Iran's supreme leader Ali Khamenei should be "very worried," as Washington builds up its military forces in the region.

"I would say he should be very worried, yeah, he should be," Trump said in an interview with US broadcaster NBC News.

"As you know, they are negotiating with us."

Trump's comments came as a report by the Axios news outlet said that US-Iran talks planned for Friday were "collapsing" after US officials declined to move the location of the talks or shift the format.

The White House did not immediately comment on the Axios report when asked by AFP.

Trump has sent a US aircraft carrier to the region and has not ruled out new military action to follow the US attacks on Iranian nuclear sites during Israel's June war against the Islamic republic.

Trump also said that Iran had eyed a new nuclear site after US strikes.

"They were thinking about starting a new site in a different part of the country," Trump told NBC.

"We found out about it, I said, you do that, we're going to do very bad things to you."

 


Man Who Tried to Shoot Trump at a Florida Golf Course Gets Life in Prison

A person walks past the Alto Lee Adams Sr. US Courthouse as the sentencing hearing of Ryan Routh takes place in Fort Pierce, Florida, USA, 04 February 2026. (EPA)
A person walks past the Alto Lee Adams Sr. US Courthouse as the sentencing hearing of Ryan Routh takes place in Fort Pierce, Florida, USA, 04 February 2026. (EPA)
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Man Who Tried to Shoot Trump at a Florida Golf Course Gets Life in Prison

A person walks past the Alto Lee Adams Sr. US Courthouse as the sentencing hearing of Ryan Routh takes place in Fort Pierce, Florida, USA, 04 February 2026. (EPA)
A person walks past the Alto Lee Adams Sr. US Courthouse as the sentencing hearing of Ryan Routh takes place in Fort Pierce, Florida, USA, 04 February 2026. (EPA)

A man convicted of trying to assassinate President Donald Trump on a Florida golf course in 2024 was sentenced Wednesday to life in prison.

US District Judge Aileen Cannon pronounced Ryan Routh’s fate in the same Fort Pierce courtroom that erupted into chaos in September when he tried to stab himself shortly after jurors found him guilty on all counts.

Prosecutors had asked for life without parole, saying Routh is unrepentant and has never apologized. A defense attorney brought in for his sentencing asked for 27 years, noting that Routh is already turning 60.

Routh also received a consecutive seven-year sentence for one of his gun convictions.

Routh's sentencing had initially been scheduled for December, but Cannon agreed to move the date back after Routh decided to use an attorney during the sentencing phase instead of representing himself as he did for most of the trial.

Prosecutors said in a sentencing memorandum that Routh has yet to accept any responsibility and should spend the rest of his life in prison, in accordance with federal sentencing guidelines. He was convicted of trying to assassinate a major presidential candidate, using a firearm in furtherance of a crime, assaulting a federal officer, possessing a firearm as a felon and using a gun with a defaced serial number.

“Routh remains unrepentant for his crimes, never apologized for the lives he put at risk, and his life demonstrates near-total disregard for law,” the memo said.

Routh's new defense attorney, Martin L. Roth, asked for a variance from sentencing guidelines: 20 years in prison on top of a seven-year, mandatory sentence for one of the gun convictions.

“The defendant is two weeks short of being sixty years old,” Roth wrote in a filing. “A just punishment would provide a sentence long enough to impose sufficient but not excessive punishment, and to allow defendant to experience freedom again as opposed to dying in prison.”

Prosecutors said Routh spent weeks plotting to kill Trump before aiming a rifle through shrubbery as the Republican presidential candidate played golf on Sept. 15, 2024, at his West Palm Beach country club.

At Routh’s trial, a Secret Service agent helping protect Trump on the golf course testified that he spotted Routh before Trump came into view. Routh aimed his rifle at the agent, who opened fire, causing Routh to drop his weapon and run away without firing a shot.

In the motion requesting an attorney, Routh offered to trade his life in a prisoner swap with people unjustly held in other countries, and said an offer still stood for Trump to “take out his frustrations on my face.”

“Just a quarter of an inch further back and we all would not have to deal with all of this mess forwards, but I always fail at everything (par for the course),” Routh wrote.

In her decision granting Routh an attorney, Cannon chastised the “disrespectful charade” of Routh's motion, saying it made a mockery of the proceedings. But the judge, nominated by Trump in 2020, said she wanted to err on the side of legal representation.

Cannon signed off last summer on Routh’s request to represent himself at trial. The US Supreme Court has held that criminal defendants have the right to represent themselves in court proceedings, as long as they can show a judge they are competent to waive their right to be defended by an attorney.

Routh’s former federal public defenders served as standby counsel and were present during the trial.

Routh had multiple previous felony convictions including possession of stolen goods, and a large online footprint demonstrating his disdain for Trump. In a self-published book, he encouraged Iran to assassinate him, and at one point wrote that as a Trump voter, he must take part of the blame for electing him.


Rubio Says US Ready to Meet Iran but Must Discuss Missiles

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio holds a news conference during the first Critical Minerals Ministerial at the State Department's Harry S. Truman Building on February 04, 2026 in Washington, DC. (Getty Images/AFP)
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio holds a news conference during the first Critical Minerals Ministerial at the State Department's Harry S. Truman Building on February 04, 2026 in Washington, DC. (Getty Images/AFP)
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Rubio Says US Ready to Meet Iran but Must Discuss Missiles

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio holds a news conference during the first Critical Minerals Ministerial at the State Department's Harry S. Truman Building on February 04, 2026 in Washington, DC. (Getty Images/AFP)
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio holds a news conference during the first Critical Minerals Ministerial at the State Department's Harry S. Truman Building on February 04, 2026 in Washington, DC. (Getty Images/AFP)

The United States is ready to meet Iran this week, but discussions must cover its missile and nuclear programs, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Wednesday.

Rubio did not confirm a meeting on Friday with Iran's clerical state, which has violently put down some of the most serious protests against its rule since the 1979 revolution.

"If the Iranians want to meet, we're ready," Rubio told reporters.

"They've expressed an interest in meeting and talking. If they change their mind, we're fine with that too," he said, after President Donald Trump ordered a sharp military buildup near Iran's coast and threatened to strike.

"In order for talks to actually lead to something meaningful, they will have to include certain things, and that includes the range of their ballistic missiles, that includes their sponsorship of terrorist organizations across the region, that includes their nuclear program and that includes the treatment of their own people," Rubio said.

Iran in previous talks on its disputed nuclear program has ruled out discussions on its missiles, casting the weapons that can hit Israel as a tool of self-defense to which every country has a right.

But Iran has been under growing pressure from the protests and after an Israeli bombing campaign last year. Iran has also lost key regional allies with Israel's severe degrading of Lebanon's Hezbollah and the fall of veteran Syrian president Bashar al-Assad.

Iranian state media said Wednesday that talks with the United States would take place Friday in Oman, after diplomats earlier said the meeting would happen on Friday in Türkiye.

Rubio said that US envoy Steve Witkoff had been ready to meet with Iran in Türkiye but then received "conflicting reports" on whether Tehran had agreed.

"That's still being worked out," he said of the location for the talks.