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Tag: Pentagon

  • Congress plans next steps after UFO hearing

    Congress plans next steps after UFO hearing

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    Congress plans next steps after UFO hearing – CBS News


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    Is there life beyond our little blue planet? And how much does the government know about it? Those were the questions a House Oversight Subcommittee attempted to answer Wednesday as they heard testimony from a former Air Force intelligence officer and two Navy veterans. CBS News congressional correspondent Scott MacFarlane reported on what came from the hearing on Capitol Hill.

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  • Congressional Hearing About UFOs Kicks Off This Week: “We’re Done With The Cover-Up”

    Congressional Hearing About UFOs Kicks Off This Week: “We’re Done With The Cover-Up”

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    Congress has typically been loath to discuss what the government knows about extraterrestrial life and unidentified flying objects but that ends this week as the House Oversight Committee plans to hold a hearing on Wednesday promising “three dynamite witnesses” who will reveal more details under oath.

    “This hearing is going to be different,” Tim Burchett, a House Republican who sits on the committee and who has been one of the most strident congressional voices in favor of releasing information related to unidentified aerial phenomena (UAPs), promised Thursday.

    “We’ve requested documents, we’ve gone to interview pilots and been stonewalled by our Pentagon. It’s ridiculous; it’s been going on since the ‘40s,” the Republican from Tennessee said Saturday afternoon on Fox News. “We are taking the gloves off.”

    And it’s not just Republicans. Top Senate Democrat and Majority Leader Chuck Schumer introduced an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) that would make public any government documents related to UAPs.

    “The American public has a right to learn about technologies of unknown origins, non-human intelligence, and unexplainable phenomena,” insisted the senior Senator from New York. “We are not only working to declassify what the government has previously learned about these phenomena but to create a pipeline for future research to be made public.”

    One of the scheduled witnesses will be David Grusch, a former intelligence official and the subject of an attention-grabbing headline in June that helped spark this most recent round of public interest in UFOs. In the piece, Grush alleged that the U.S. government was illegally withholding information related to its possession of “intact and partially intact craft of non-human origin”; subsequently, Grusch has suggested that the government has come into contact with “malevolent” alien pilots.

    As Vanity Fair’s Charlotte Klein reported at the time, the piece, which was written by two respected journalists and eventually published in a small science and defense outlet, had originally been brought to The New York Times, The Washington Post, and Politico, all of whom passed on the story.

    On Wednesday, Grusch will be joined by Ryan Graves, a former Navy pilot who claims to have seen multiple UAPs, and David Fravor, another former Navy pilot who witnessed what is now popularly known as the “tic tac” incident in 2004.

    According to Politico, the Pentagon was tracking around 650 incidents of unidentified aircraft as of April.

    Burchett said the US had evidence of technology that “defies all of our laws of physics.” He added: “We’re gonna get to the bottom of it, dadgummit. Whatever the truth may be. We’re done with the cover-up.”

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    Jack McCordick

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  • Kevin McCarthy Confirms House Extremists Have Him Wrapped Around Their Finger

    Kevin McCarthy Confirms House Extremists Have Him Wrapped Around Their Finger

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    Kevin McCarthy caved to the far-right flank of his conference Thursday, giving hardliners their way on several extreme amendments to the National Defense Authorization Act that could ultimately doom the annual Pentagon bill in a full House vote. “It’s really sad that the Republican Party doesn’t understand that diversity matters,” Adam Smith, the top Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, told the Washington Post, confirming that he would vote no on the legislation he helped draft. “They are basically dismissing the LGBTQ community and women and people of color.”

    Right-wingers had been threatening to block the NDAA—an $886 billion defense package seen in Washington as a must-pass—unless it targeted what they call “woke” military policies under President Joe Biden, setting up another potential standoff with the House speaker, who has been aiming to get the legislation through the House by the end of this week. In capitulating, he may have avoided—for now—another bruising political fight with the right, which can, under a key concession he made to get the gavel in January, call for a vote on his speakership at any time. But he has also put the bill’s passage in strong doubt, as Democrats lined up against it following the party-line votes Thursday. “I don’t think I’ve ever not voted for an NDAA,” number three Democrat Pete Aguilar told the New York Times after heated debate over the partisan amendments. “I’m a no.”

    The House did reject two amendments—put forth by Marjorie Taylor Greene and Matt Gaetz—to end military aid to Ukraine. But Republicans succeeded in attaching amendments that would restrict abortion access and prohibit transgender health care for military members, as well as end diversity and inclusion programs in the military. In arguing for the latter, one Republican—Eli Crane of Arizona—referred to Black people as “colored people”: “The military was never intended to be, you know, inclusive,” Crane said. “Its strength is not its diversity. Its strength is its standards.”

    That drew a sharp rebuke from Democrats, who got his words stricken from the record by unanimous consent. “I find it offensive and very inappropriate,” said Representative Joyce Beatty, former chair of the Congressional Black Caucus. The words were taken down, but Crane’s amendment still passed 214-210 on Thursday night.

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    A number of Republicans seemed frustrated that the amendments were allowed to make their way to the floor for votes, aware that it would put the NDAA’s passage at risk. “We should not be taking this fucking vote, man,” Representative Nancy Mace told her staff in a Capitol elevator Thursday, appearing to describe a measure to restrict abortion care as an “asshole amendment.” But Mace would ultimately vote for that very amendment—a sign of just how powerless the supposedly “mainstream” members of the House GOP are to their more extreme colleagues. “House Republicans have turned what should be a meaningful investment in our men and women in uniform into an extreme and reckless legislative joyride,” House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries, Democratic Whip Kathleen Clark, and Aguilar, the caucus chair, said in a statement Thursday, criticizing the GOP for allowing “extreme MAGA Republicans” to “hijack” the legislation. “We will vote no on the final passage of this bill.”

    It remains to be seen if Republicans will be able to pass their partisan NDAA through the House on their own. But even if they do, it will die in the Democratically-held Senate, potentially setting up a fight between the two chambers. That could put McCarthy right back in the position he sought to avoid when he yielded to the hardliners this week—that is, caught between the demands of his job as speaker and the no-compromise caucus that could imperil that post. “This process is a joke,” Democrat Jim McGovern, a member of the House Rules Committee, said Thursday. “Speaker McCarthy may be the ringleader, but the clowns have taken over the circus.”

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    Eric Lutz

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  • Russia has ‘sufficient stockpile’ of cluster bombs to strike back, Putin warns

    Russia has ‘sufficient stockpile’ of cluster bombs to strike back, Putin warns

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    Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Sunday that Russia has a “sufficient stockpile” of cluster bombs and threatened to take “reciprocal action” if Ukraine used the weapons against Russian troops.

    The Pentagon confirmed on Thursday that Washington had delivered the cluster munitions, which over 110 countries worldwide have banned, to Ukraine.

    Kyiv says it needs the explosive shells to compensate for ammunition shortages as it is currently mounting a counteroffensive against Russia’s invasion. Ukraine has said that cluster bombs would only be used on its own territory to dislodge Russian soldiers from occupied areas. Cluster bombs are filled with submunitions that are released in the air and make the weapons more effective against enemy troops but can also pose a risk for civilians.

    “I want to note that in the Russian Federation there is a sufficient stockpile of different kinds of cluster bombs. We have not used them yet. But of course if they are used against us, we reserve the right to take reciprocal action,” Putin said in an interview Sunday with Russian state TV, according to Reuters.

    “Until now, we have not done this, we have not used it, and we have not had such a need,” the president said. He said that he regarded the use of cluster bombs as a crime.

    There is strong evidence, however, suggesting that Moscow has used cluster bombs in its war against Ukraine. In a report in May, Human Rights Watch said that “since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022, Russian armed forces have used cluster munitions in attacks that have caused hundreds of civilian casualties and damaged civilian objects, including homes, hospitals, and schools.”

    Neither Russia nor Ukraine nor the U.S. has ratified the international convention on banning cluster bombs.

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  • Scoop! Why Ben from Ben & Jerry’s blames America for war in Ukraine

    Scoop! Why Ben from Ben & Jerry’s blames America for war in Ukraine

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    Ben Cohen wasn’t talking about ice cream. He was talking about American militarism.

    At 72, the co-founder of Ben & Jerry’s ice cream is bald and bespectacled. He looks fit, cherubic even, but when he got going on what it was like to grow up during the Cold War, his tone became less playful and more assertive — almost defiant. 

    “I had this image of these two countries facing each other, and each one had this huge pile of shiny, state-of-the-art weapons in front of them,” he said, his arms waving above his head. “And behind them are the people in their countries that are suffering from lack of health care, not enough to eat, not enough housing.”

    “It’s just crazy,” he added. “Approaching relationships with other countries based on threats of annihilating them, it’s just a pretty stupid way to go.”

    It wasn’t a new subject for the famously socially conscious ice cream mogul; Cohen has been leading a crusade against what he sees as Washington’s bellicosity for decades. It’s just that with the war in Ukraine, his position has taken on a new — morally questionable — relevance.

    Cohen, who no longer sits on the board of Ben & Jerry’s, isn’t just one of the most successful marketers of the last century. He’s a leading figure in a small but vocal part of the American left that has stood steadfast in opposition to the United States’ involvement in the war in Ukraine.

    When Russian President Vladimir Putin sent tanks rolling on Kyiv, Cohen didn’t focus his ire on the Kremlin; a group he funds published a full-page ad in the New York Times blaming the act of aggression on “deliberate provocations” by the U.S. and NATO.

    Following months of Russian missile strikes on residential apartment blocks, and after evidence of street executions by Russian troops in the Ukrainian city of Bucha, he funded a 2022 journalism prize that praised its winner for reporting on “Washington’s true objectives in the Ukraine war, such as urging regime change in Russia.”

    In May, Cohen tweeted approvingly of an op-ed by the academic Jeffrey Sachs that argued “the war in Ukraine was provoked” and called for “negotiations based on Ukraine’s neutrality and NATO non-enlargement.”

    Ben Cohen outside the U.S. Department of Justice in Washington this month, before getting arrested | Win McNamee/Getty Images

    I set up a video call with Cohen not because I can’t sympathize with his mistrust of U.S. adventurism, nor because I couldn’t follow the argument that U.S. foreign policy spurred Russia to attack. I called to try to understand how he has maintained his stance even as the Kremlin abducts children, tortures and kills Ukrainians and sends thousands of Russian troops to their deaths in human wave attacks.

    It’s one thing to warn of NATO expansion in peacetime, or to call for a negotiated settlement that leaves Ukrainian citizens safe from further aggression. It’s another to ignore one party’s atrocities and agitate for an outcome that would almost certainly leave millions of people at the mercy of a regime that has demonstrated callousness and cruelty.

    Given the scale of Russia’s brutality in Ukraine, I wanted to understand: How does one justify focusing one’s energies on stopping the efforts to bring it to a halt?

    Masters of war

    Cohen’s political awakening took place against the background of the Cold War and the political upheaval caused by Washington’s involvement in Vietnam.

    He was 11 during the Cuban missile crisis that brought the world to the brink of nuclear war. Part of the reason he enrolled in college was to avoid being drafted and sent to the jungle to fight the Viet Cong.

    When I asked how he first became interested in politics, he cited Bob Dylan’s 1963 protest song “Masters of War,” which takes aim at the political leaders and weapons makers who benefit from conflicts and culminates with the singer standing over their graves until he’s sure they’re dead.

    “That was kind of a revelation to me,” Cohen said. Behind him, the sun filtered past a cardboard Ben & Jerry’s sign propped against a window. “I hadn’t understood that, you know, there were these masters of war — essentially I guess what we would now call the military-industrial-congressional complex — that profit from war.”

    Cohen saw people from his high school get drafted and never come back from a war that “wasn’t justified.” As he graduated in the summer of 1969, around half a million U.S. troops were stationed in ‘Nam. Later that year, hundreds of thousands of protesters marched on Washington, D.C. to demand peace.

    It was only much later, while doing “a lot of research” into the “tradeoffs between military spending and spending for human needs,” that Cohen came across a 1953 speech by Dwight D. Eisenhower, which foreshadowed the U.S. president’s 1961 farewell address in which he coined the phrase “military-industrial complex.”

    A Republican president who had served as the supreme allied commander in Europe during World War II, Eisenhower warned against tumbling into an arms race. “Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed,” he said.

    “That is a foundational thing for me, very inspiring for me, and captures the essence of what I believe,” Cohen said. 

    “If we weren’t wasting all of our money on preparing to kill people, we would actually be able to save and help a lot of people,” he added with a chuckle. “That goes for how we approach the world internationally as well,” he added — including the war in Ukraine. 

    Pierre Ferrari, a former Ben & Jerry’s board member who was with the company from 1997 to 2020, said Cohen’s view of the world was shaped by the events of his youth.

    “We were brought up at a time when the military, the government was just completely out of control,” he said. “We’re both children of the sixties, the Vietnam War and the new futility of war and the way war is used by the military-industrial complex and politics,” Ferrari added, pointing to the peace symbol he wore around his neck.

    Jeff Furman, who has known Cohen for nearly 50 years and once served as Ben & Jerry’s in-house legal counsel, acknowledged that his generation’s views on Ukraine were informed by America’s misadventures in Vietnam.

    “There’s a history of why this war is happening that’s a little bit more complex than who Putin is,” he said. “When you’ve been misled so many times in the past, you have to take this into consideration when you think about it, and really, really try to know what’s happening.”

    Ice-cold activism

    Politics has been a part of the Ben & Jerry’s brand since Cohen and his partner Jerry Greenfield started selling ice cream out of an abandoned gas station in 1978.

    The company’s look and ethos were pure 1960s; they named one of their early flavors, Cherry Garcia, after the lead guitarist of the Grateful Dead, Jerry Garcia, whose psychedelic riffs formed the soundtrack of the hippy counterculture.

    Social justice was one of the duo’s secret ingredients. For the first-year anniversary of the gas station shop’s opening, they gave away free ice cream for a day. On the flyers printed to promote the event was a quote from Cohen: “Business has a responsibility to give back to the community from which it draws its support.”

    In 1985, after the company went public, they used some of the shares to endow a foundation working for progressive social change and committed Ben & Jerry’s to spend 7.5 percent of its pretax profits on philanthropy.

    In the early years, the company instituted a five-to-one cap on the ratio between the salary of the highest-earning executive and its lowest-paid worker, dropping it only when Cohen was about to step down as CEO in the mid-1990s and they were struggling to find a successor willing to work for what they were offering.

    Most companies try to separate politics and business. Cohen and Greenfield cheerfully mixed them up and served them in a tub of creamy deliciousness (the company’s rich, fatty flavors were in part driven by Cohen’s sinus problems, which dulls his taste).

    In 1988, Cohen founded 1% for Peace, a nonprofit organization seeking to “redirect one percent of the national defense budget to fund peace-promoting activities and projects.” The project was funded in part through sales of a vanilla and dark-chocolate popsicle they called the Peace Pop.

    It was around this time that Cohen opened Ben & Jerry’s in Russia, as “an effort to build a bridge between Communism and capitalism with locally produced Cherry Garcia,” according to a write-up in the New York Times. After years of planning, the outlet opened in the northwestern city of Petrozavodsk in 1992. (The company shut the shop down five years later to prioritize growth in the U.S., and also because of the involvement of local mobsters, said Furman, who was involved in the project.)

    Cohen, with co-founder Jerry Greenfield, actress Jane Fonda and other climate activists, in front of the Capitol in 2019 | Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call via Getty Images

    Even after Ben & Jerry’s was bought by Unilever in 2000, there were few progressive causes the company wasn’t eager to wade into with a campaign or a fancy new flavor.

    The ice cream maker has marketed “Rainforest Crunch” in defense of the Amazon forest, sold “Empower Mint” to combat voter suppression, promoted “Pecan Resist” in opposition to then-U.S. President Donald Trump and launched “Change the Whirled” in partnership with Colin Kaepernick, the American football quarterback whose sports career ended after he started taking a knee during the national anthem in protest of police brutality.

    More recently, however, the relationship between Cohen, Greenfield and Unilever has been rockier. In 2021, Ben & Jerry’s announced it would stop doing business in the Palestinian territories. Cohen and Greenfield, who are Jewish, defended the company’s decision in an op-ed in the New York Times.

    After the move sparked political backlash, Unilever transferred its license to a local producer, only to be sued by Ben & Jerry’s. In December 2022, Unilever announced in a one-sentence statement that its litigation with its subsidiary “has been resolved.” Ben & Jerry’s ice cream continues to be sold throughout Israel and the West Bank, according to a Unilever spokesperson.

    Cohen himself is no stranger to activism: Earlier this month, he was arrested and detained for a few hours for taking part in a sit-in in front of the U.S. Department of Justice, where he was protesting the prosecution of the activist and WikiLeaks publisher Julian Assange.

    Unilever declined to comment on Cohen’s views. “Ben Cohen no longer has an operational role in Ben & Jerry’s, and his comments are made in a personal capacity,” a spokesperson said.

    Ben & Jerry’s did not respond to a request for comment.

    The world according to Ben

    For Cohen, the war in Ukraine wasn’t just a tragedy. It was, in a sense, a vindication. In 1998, a group he created called Business Leaders for Sensible Priorities published a full-page ad in the New York Times titled “Hey, let’s scare the Russians.”

    The target of the ad was a proposal to expand NATO “toward Russia’s very borders,” with the inclusion of Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic. Doing so, the ad asserted, would provide Russians with “the same feeling of peace and security Americans would have if Russia were in a military alliance with Canada and Mexico, armed to the teeth.”

    Cohen is by no means alone in this view of recent history. The American scholar John Mearsheimer, a prominent expert in international relations, has argued that the “trouble over Ukraine” started after the 2008 NATO summit in Bucharest when the alliance opened the door to membership for Ukraine and Georgia.

    In the U.S., this point has been echoed by progressive outlets and thinkers, such as Jeffrey Sachs, the linguist Noam Chomsky, or most recently by the American philosopher, activist and longest-of-long-shots, third-party presidential candidate Cornel West.

    “We told them after they disbanded the Warsaw Pact that we could not expand NATO, not one inch. And we did that, we lied,” said Dennis Fritz, a retired U.S. Air Force official and the head of the Eisenhower Media Network — which describes itself as a group of “National Security Veteran experts, who’ve been there, done that and have an independent, alternative story to tell.” 

    It was Fritz’s organization that argued in a May 2023 ad in the New York Times that although the “immediate cause” of the “disastrous” war in Ukraine was Russia’s invasion, “the plans and actions to expand NATO to Russia’s borders served to provoke Russian fears.” 

    The ad noted that American foreign policy heavyweights, including Robert Gates and Henry Kissinger, had warned of the dangers of NATO expansion. “Why did the U.S. persist in expanding NATO despite such warnings?” it asked. “Profit from weapons sales was a major factor.”

    Cohen and Greenfield announce a new flavor, Justice Remix’d, in 2019 | Win McNamee/Getty Images

    When I spoke to Cohen, the group’s primary donor, according to Fritz, he echoed the ad’s key points, saying U.S. arms manufacturers saw NATO’s expansion as a “financial bonanza.”

    “In the end, money won,” he said with a resigned tone. “And today, not only are they providing weapons to all the new NATO countries, but they’re providing weapons to Ukraine.”

    I told Cohen I could understand his opposition to the war and follow his critique of U.S. foreign policy, but I couldn’t grasp how he could take a position that put him in the same corner as a government that is bombing civilians. He refused to be drawn in.

    “I’m not supporting Russia, I’m not supporting Ukraine,” he said. “I’m supporting negotiations to end the war instead of providing more weapons to continue the war.” 

    The Grayzone

    I tried to get a better answer when I spoke to Aaron Maté, the Canadian-born journalist who won the award for “defense reporting and analysis” that Cohen was instrumental in funding.

    Named after the late Pierre Sprey, a defense analyst who campaigned against the development of F-35 fighter jets as overly complex and expensive, the award recognized Maté’s “continued work dissecting establishment propaganda on issues such as Russian interference in U.S. politics, or the war in Syria.”

    Maté, who was photographed with Cohen’s arm around his shoulders at the awards ceremony in March, writes for the Grayzone, a far-left website that has acquired a reputation for publishing stories backing the narratives of authoritarian regimes like Putin’s Russia or Bashar al-Assad’s Syria. His reports deny the use of chemical weapons against civilians in Syria, and he has briefed the U.N. Security Council at Moscow’s invitation.

    When I spoke to Maté, he was friendly but guarded. (The Pierre Sprey award noted that “his empiricist reporting give the lie to the charge of ‘disinformation’ routinely leveled by those whose nostrums he challenges.”)

    He was happy however to walk me through his claims that, based on statements by U.S. officials since the start of the war, Washington is using Kyiv to wage a “proxy war” against Moscow. Much of his information, he said, came from Western journalism. “I point out examples where, buried at the bottom of articles, sometimes the truth is admitted,” he explained.

    He declined to be described as pro-Putin. “That kind of ‘guilt-by-association’ reasoning is not serious thinking,” he said. “It’s not how adults think about things.” When I asked if he believed that Russia had committed war crimes in Ukraine, he answered: “I’m sure they have. I’ve never heard of a war where war crimes are not committed.”

    Still, he said, the U.S. was responsible for “prolonging” the war and “sabotaging the diplomacy that could have ended it.”

    ‘Come to Ukraine’

    The best answer I got to my question came not from Cohen or others in his circle but from a fellow traveler who hasn’t chosen to follow critics of NATO on their latest journey.

    A self-described “radical anti-imperialist,” Gilbert Achcar is a professor of development studies and international relations at SOAS University of London. He has described the expansion of NATO in the 1990s as a decision that “laid the ground for a new cold war” pitting the West against Russia and China.

    But while he sees the war in Ukraine as the latest chapter in this showdown, he has warned against calls for a rush to the negotiating table. Instead, he has advocated for the complete withdrawal of Russia from Ukraine and “the delivery of defensive weapons to the victims of aggression with no strings attached.”

    “To give those who are fighting a just war the means to fight against a much more powerful aggressor is an elementary internationalist duty,” he wrote three days after Russia launched its attack on Kyiv, comparing the invasion to the U.S.’s intervention in Vietnam. 

    Achcar said he understood the conclusions being drawn by people like Cohen about Washington’s interventions in Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan. But, he said, “it leads a lot of people on the left into … [a] knee-jerk opposition to anything the United States does.” 

    What they fail to account for, however, is the Ukrainian people.

    “In a way, part of the Western left is ethnocentric,” said Achcar, who was born in Senegal and grew up in Lebanon. “They look at the whole world just by their opposition to their own government and therefore forget about other people’s rights.”

    Cohen, with late-night TV host Jimmy Fallon in 2011 | Mike Coppola/Getty Images for Ben & Jerry’s

    His point was echoed in the last conversation I had when researching this article, with Tymofiy Mylovanov, president of the Kyiv School of Economics and a former economy minister.

    It doesn’t really matter who promised what to whom in the 1990s,Mylovanov said. “What matters is that there was Mariupol and Bucha, where tens of thousands of people were killed.”

    Mylovanov taught economics at the University of Pittsburgh until he returned to Ukraine four days before Putin’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

    “Things like war are difficult to understand unless you experience them,” he said. “This is very easy to get confused when you are sitting, you know, somewhere far from the facts and you have surrounded yourself by an echo chamber of people and sources that you agree with.”

    “In that sense,” he added. “I invite these people to come to Ukraine and judge for themselves what the truth is.”

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    Nicolas Camut

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  • President Biden Defends Controversial Decision to Send Cluster Bombs to Ukraine

    President Biden Defends Controversial Decision to Send Cluster Bombs to Ukraine

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    President Joe Biden defended his controversial decision to send cluster bombs to Ukraine in a Sunday morning interview with CNN’s Fareed Zakaria.

    “This is a war relating to munitions, and they’re running out of ammunitions,” Biden said of the Ukrainian armed forces. “They either have the weapons to keep the Russians from stopping the Ukrainian offensive…or they don’t. And I think they needed them.” Biden added that the move “was a very difficult decision on my part” and that he had “discussed this with our allies” and “our friends on the Hill.”

    The bombs, banned by more than 100 countries, including many U.S. allies, are designed to break apart midair and detonate upon impact, but historically have had an extremely high failure rate. Cluster munitions that fail to explode initially can detonate years later, and have often caused indiscriminate harm to civilians. In the years since World War II, this type of weapon has killed between 56,5000 and 86,500 civilians worldwide, The New York Times reported.

    The munitions transfer is part of an $800 million military package the Pentagon announced on Friday, intended to boost the progress of Ukraine’s flagging summer counteroffensive. Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky called the aid package “timely, broad, and much-needed.”

    The decision immediately drew backlash from Democratic lawmakers. On Friday, a group of 19 House progressives issued a letter condemning the weapons. “The U.S. history of using cluster munitions — particularly the legacy of long-term harm to civilians in Southeast Asia — should prevent us from repeating the mistakes of our past,” they wrote.

    Human rights groups also condemned the announced weapons transfer. Amnesty International described cluster munitions as “a grave threat to civilian lives, even long after the conflict has ended.” “There’s just not a responsible way to use cluster munitions,” Brian Castner, the weapons expert on Amnesty International’s Crisis Response Team, told The New York Times.

    A recent Human Rights Watch report found that, in 2022, Ukrainian forces “used cluster munitions that caused numerous deaths and serious injuries to civilians.” HRW has also documented hundreds of civilian deaths caused by Russia’s use of the weapon. ​​“Both sides should immediately stop using them and not try to get more of these indiscriminate weapons,” argued Mary Wareham, acting arms director at HRW.

    In his Sunday interview, Biden echoed an argument made by National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan on Friday: that the cluster bombs the U.S. is sending Ukraine have a very low failure rate compared to the ones Russia has been using, which Sullivan said has failure rates between 30 and 40%. Sullivan also said that “Ukraine is committed to post-conflict de-mining efforts to mitigate any potential harm to civilians, and this will be necessary regardless of whether the United States provides these munitions or not, because of Russia’s widespread use of cluster munitions.”

    “We deferred the decision for as long as we could,” Sullivan said Friday, acknowledging the risk of “civilian harm from unexploded ordnance.” “But there is also a massive risk of civilian harm if Russian troops and tanks roll over Ukrainian positions and take more Ukrainian territory and subjugate more Ukrainian civilians because Ukraine does not have enough artillery,” he argued.

    Saturday marked the 500th day of the Russian invasion.

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    Jack McCordick

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  • Western powers race to finish security pledges for Ukraine

    Western powers race to finish security pledges for Ukraine

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    A small group of Western allies are engaged in “advanced” and “frantic, last-minute” negotiations to finalize a security assurance declaration for Ukraine ahead of this week’s NATO summit in Lithuania, according to four officials familiar with the talks.

    For weeks, the United States, the United Kingdom, France and Germany have been discussing the issue with Kyiv, and have also reached out to other allies in NATO, the EU and the G7. The idea is to create an “umbrella” for all countries willing to provide Ukraine with ongoing military aid, even if the details vary from country to country.

    The effort is part of broader negotiations at NATO and among several groups of nations over how Western allies should display long-term support for Ukraine. 

    Kyiv wants to join NATO as soon as possible, giving it access to the alliance’s vaunted Article 5 clause — an attack on one is an attack on all. But many allies within the alliance broadly agree Ukraine can only join after the war ends, at the earliest. 

    So the alliance’s biggest powers have been working to see what stop-gap security commitments they can each give Ukraine in the meantime. That view is not universal, however, with countries along NATO’s eastern flank pushing for Ukraine to get a quicker path to ascension, even as the fighting rages on. 

    The Western powers’ goal is to unveil their umbrella framework around NATO’s annual summit, according to officials in Berlin, Paris, London and Brussels, all of whom spoke under the condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the discussions. The two-day event starts Tuesday in Vilnius.

    “A discussion is under way; it’s quite advanced, in fact it’s very advanced, and we’re very hopeful that it can be concluded by the end of the summit,” a French official told reporters at a briefing. 

    A senior NATO diplomat agreed, telling reporters in a separate briefing there are “frantic last-minute negotiations” occurring at the moment “on what this should look like.” 

    Last-minute details

    U.S. President Joe Biden is slated to meet with U.K. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak on Monday in London, where their two staffs will huddle to try and iron out last-minute details, according to a second NATO diplomat with knowledge of the plans. On the U.S. side, Pentagon policy chief Colin Kahl is tasked with getting the agreement to the finish line.

    The initiative may ultimately amount to promises to continue much of the aid allies are already providing: arms, equipment, training, financing and intelligence. But the intent is to offer a more-permanent signal of unity for Ukraine, especially as Kyiv is unlikely to get the firm pledge on NATO membership it wants at this week’s summit.

    “It is basically a guarantee towards Ukraine that we will, for a very long time to come, we will equip their armed forces, we will finance them, we will advise them, we will train them in order for them to have a deterrent force against any future aggression,” the senior NATO diplomat said. 

    Many specifics of this support would be left for later, however. The diplomat said it would be up to each interested country to bilaterally determine with Ukraine “what your commitment will be. And it could be anything, from air defense to tanks to whatever.”

    Last week, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz issued an “appeal to all countries that want to support Ukraine,” saying they should “make decisions for themselves that enable them to continue to keep up that support for one, two, three, and, if need be, more years, because we do not know how long the military conflict will last.”

    German Chancellor Olaf Scholz | Pool photo by Kai Pfaffenbach/AFP via Getty Images

    Separate from the security assurance declaration that Western powers are finalizing, NATO is also drawing up new ways to aid Ukraine’s military for years to come. 

    At the summit, NATO will agree on plans to help modernize Ukraine’s defenses, alliance chief Jens Stoltenberg told reporters on Friday. The plan, he said, will involve “a multi-year program of assistance to ensure full interoperability between the Ukrainian armed forces and NATO.”

    That multi-year effort will also focus on Ukrainian military modernization programs, and like the “umbrella” initiative, will depend on individual countries contributing what they see fit.

    NATO aspirations

    NATO leaders will also create a new NATO-Ukraine forum, giving the two sides a space to work on “practical joint activities,” Stoltenberg added. 

    The broader security assurance conversation has inevitably become intertwined with the debate around Ukraine’s NATO aspirations, which will be high on the agenda when leaders gather in Vilnius.

    In the formal communiqué that will be issued during the summit, “we will be addressing Ukraine’s membership aspirations and that is something that NATO allies continue to work on,” U.S. Ambassador to NATO Julianne Smith told reporters on Friday.

    Specifically, leaders are aiming to update the alliance’s vague 2008 promise that Ukraine “will become” a NATO member at some point. But they aren’t expected to offer Kyiv the “clear invitation” that Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelenskyy is seeking.

    Scholz conceded as much last week. 

    “Certainly, we will also discuss the question of how to continue to deal with the perspective of the countries that look to NATO and want to join it,” Scholz said. Yet, he added, “it is also clear that no one can become a member of a defense alliance during a war.”

    Stoltenberg nonetheless struck an upbeat tone on Friday.

    “I’m confident that we’ll have a message which is clear,” he said. “We have to remember that Allies also agree already on a lot of important principles when it comes to Ukraine and membership.”

    Jacopo Barigazzi contributed reporting.

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  • Guardsman in Pentagon docs leak pleads not guilty

    Guardsman in Pentagon docs leak pleads not guilty

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    Guardsman in Pentagon docs leak pleads not guilty – CBS News


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    Jack Teixeira, a 21-year-old National Guardsman accused of leaking classified military documents that were made public through the social media platform Discord, pleaded not guilty Wednesday to multiple federal charges.

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  • 6/19: CBS News Mornings

    6/19: CBS News Mornings

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    6/19: CBS News Mornings – CBS News


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    Secretary Blinken speaks after holding talks with China’s Xi Jinping; Wyndham Clark wins U.S. Open.

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  • Blinken meets with Chinese President Xi Jinping on pivitol diplomatic trip

    Blinken meets with Chinese President Xi Jinping on pivitol diplomatic trip

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    Blinken meets with Chinese President Xi Jinping on pivitol diplomatic trip – CBS News


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    U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with Chinese President Xi Jinping on Monday in Beijing. The meeting comes amid growing tension with China, which has made a series of “provocative” actions recently, according to the Pentagon. Margaret Brennan reports from Beijing.

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  • Lawmakers again target military contractors’ price gouging

    Lawmakers again target military contractors’ price gouging

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    A bipartisan group of lawmakers is set to reintroduce a bill to rein in price gouging by military contractors, CBS News has learned. 

    The Stop Price Gouging the Military Act, first introduced by Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Rep. John Raymond Garamendi in June of last year, would close acquisition law loopholes, tie financial incentives for contractors to performance and provide the Department of Defense with information needed to prevent future rip-offs. 

    “Defense contractors have been exploiting loopholes in the law and raking in massive profits by price-gouging the Pentagon and American taxpayers,” Warren said in a statement, adding that the bill “would close these loopholes and ensure that DOD has the necessary tools to prevent these abuses.”

    The main changes to the bill since it was first introduced will focus on ensuring that the companies that do the most business with the Defense Department are the ones subject to increased transparency and accountability, a Warren aide said. 

    Price gouging has long been a problem for the Pentagon. The DOD has been on the Government Accountability Office’s high-risk list for financial management since the 1990s. In 2020, the Pentagon’s Office of Inspector General reported that roughly 20% of its ongoing investigations were related to procurement fraud. 

    Contractors overcharge the DOD on almost everything the military buys each year, experts told “60 Minutes” over the course of a recent six-month investigation. Almost half of the Pentagon’s budget for the upcoming fiscal year, the largest ever, will go to defense contractors. 

    Some of those contractors withhold pricing information from the Defense Department. Boeing refused to share cost information for nearly 11,000 items between October of 2020 and September of 2021, according to an annual DOD report to Congress on pricing data. That same report found TransDigm, a subcontractor, was responsible for 275 data denials. 

    There were 401 instances of pricing data denials listed in a previously undisclosed Pentagon report for October 2021 through September of 2022. Each one involved items whose original equipment manufacturer’s parent company was TransDigm. 

    Warren and Garamendi on May 25 sent letters to Boeing, TransDigm and the DOD regarding pricing transparency. 

    “These denials make it impossible for DOD officials to make sure the agency is not being ripped off,” they wrote in the letter to the Pentagon.

    In their letter, Warren and Garamendi gave the Defense Department, Boeing and Transdigm until June 12 to respond to questions. An aide for Warren confirmed the lawmakers had received responses, but said those responses needed to be reviewed in more detail.

    “We take very seriously our responsibility to support the warfighter and our commitments to the U.S. government and taxpayer,” a Boeing spokesperson said about the letter.

    While TransDigm did not respond to a request from CBS News for comment, a company spokesperson previously told “60 Minutes” that the company follows the law and charges market prices. 

    The Defense Department also did not comment on the letter, but responded to the “60 Minutes” price gouging report last month, saying in part: “The Department is committed to evaluating all DOD contracts for fair and reasonable pricing in order to minimize cost to the taxpayer and maximize the combat capability and services delivered to the Department. Robust competition within the defense industrial base is one of the surest ways to obtain reasonable pricing on DOD contracts. For some defense requirements, however, the Department is reliant on single suppliers, and contracting officers must negotiate sole-source contracts using statutory and regulatory authorities that protect the taxpayers’ interests.”

    A bipartisan group of senators in May asked the Defense Department to launch an investigation into longstanding price gouging. They called out Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Raytheon and TransDigm. 

    “These companies have abused the trust government has placed in them, exploiting their position as sole suppliers for certain items to increase prices far above inflation or any reasonable profit margin,” the senators wrote. 

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  • The US wants Europe to buy American weapons; the EU has other ideas

    The US wants Europe to buy American weapons; the EU has other ideas

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    This article is part of the Europe’s strategic impotence Special Report.

    At NATO summit after NATO summit, European leaders get a clear public message from Washington — increase spending on defense.

    In private, there’s another message that’s just as clear — make sure a lot of that extra spending goes on U.S. weapons.

    European leaders are resisting.

    “We must develop a genuinely European defense technological and industrial base in all interested countries, and deploy fully sovereign equipment at European level,” French President Emmanuel Macron said at the GLOBSEC conference in Bratislava last month.

    The decades of cajoling from Washington are paying off. Although most EU countries aren’t yet meeting NATO’s target of spending 2 percent of GDP on defense, the alliance has seen eight years of steady spending increases. In 2022, spending by European countries was up by 13 percent to $345 billion — almost a third higher than a decade ago — much of it a reaction to Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

    Now the question is how that money will be spent.

    The U.S. wants to ensure that European countries — which already spend about half of their defense purchasing on American kit — don’t make a radical switch to spending more of that money at home. 

    Some European leaders are hoping that’s exactly what happens, but it’s an open question whether the Continent’s defense industry can make that happen. 

    “Traditionally, there was a suspicion about a change in Europe’s defense capabilities which dates back more than 25 years,” said Max Bergmann, director of the Europe, Russia, Eurasia Program at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies. “What direction would the EU go, would it mean the EU would decouple from NATO, what would the impact be on U.S. defense industrial policy?” 

    Buying at home

    The current tensions in Brussels are over whether new EU-wide defense policy should be limited to EU companies — a position driven by Macron and Internal Market Commissioner Thierry Breton, a Frenchman. That confirms suspicions stateside about European protectionism when it comes to allowing U.S. companies to compete for EU contracts. 

    “Our plan is to directly support, with EU money, the effort to ramp up our defense industry, and this for Ukraine and for our own security,” Breton said last month. 

    Internal Market Commissioner Thierry Breton wants new EU-wide defense policy to be limited to EU companies | Olivier Hoslet/AFP via Getty Images

    But there’s an uncomfortable fact for the backers of European strategic autonomy: When it comes to arms, Europe still depends on the U.S. 

    While European companies have deep expertise in defense — building everything from France’s Rafale fighter to Germany’s Leopard tank and Poland’s man-portable Piorun air-defense system — the scale of the U.S. arms industry, as well as its technological innovation, makes it attractive for European weapons buyers. 

    The most common big-ticket item is Lockheed Martin’s F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, at a cost of $80 million a pop. There is also an immediate surge in demand for off-the-shelf items like shoulder-fired missiles and artillery shells.

    “Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, European states want to import more arms, faster,” said a report by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI).

    Buying abroad

    The war in Ukraine has underscored the dominance of the U.S. defense industry. 

    A host of European countries are buying Javelin anti-tank missiles produced by Raytheon and Lockheed Martin; Poland this year signed a $1.4 billion deal to buy 116 M1A1 Abrams tanks, as well as another $10 billion agreement to buy High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems produced by Lockheed Martin; Slovakia is buying F-16 fighters, while Romania is in talks to buy F-35s.

    Those deals are raising fears in Europe over whether they can wean themselves off of U.S. defense suppliers. In one example, France and Germany worry about Spain’s intentions as it kicks the tires on F-35s while also being a partner in developing the European Future Combat Air System jet fighter.

    But the need to restock weapons depots and continue shipping materiel to Ukraine is urgent, and after decades of contraction, the Continent’s defense industry is having a difficult time adjusting.

    “Our European allies and partners, they’ve never experienced anything like this,” said a senior U.S. Defense Department official, referring to the spasm of spending brought on by Russia’s invasion. The official was granted anonymity to discuss the situation. “They don’t yet have the defense production authorities they need [to move quickly] and they’ve really been looking to us to try to get a handle on how they can increase production, and I think they’re learning a lot from us.” 

    To help Europe get there, the United States has expanded the number of bilateral security supply arrangements it has with foreign partners since the Russian invasion, signing new agreements with Latvia, Denmark, Japan and Israel since October. These allow countries to more quickly and easily sell and trade defense-related goods and services. 

    The Biden administration also signed an administrative arrangement with the European Union in late April to establish working groups on supply-chain issues, while giving both sides a seat at the table in internal meetings at the European Defence Agency and the Pentagon. 

    But there are limits to how far and how fast both sides are able and willing to go. 

    In the near term, capacity issues and political will means the rhetorical sea change in EU military spending is unlikely to make a huge dent in U.S. military industrial policy. 

    While the past 18 months have seen a huge spike in defense budgets — Germany announced a  special debt-financed fund worth €100 billion after the Russian invasion of Ukraine; Poland’s defense expenditure is set to reach 4 percent of GDP this year — EU-wide projects are facing significant headwinds. European companies say they need longer lead times and long-term contracts to make needed investments. 

    “You need that visibility and certainty to make those investments. We’re in a chicken game between governments and industry — who are the first ones that are putting the money on the table,” said Lucie Béraud-Sudreau, director of the military expenditure and arms production program at SIPRI. 

    Ultimately, the global defense boom means that there should be plenty of military spending to go around, at least in the short term as countries rush to prove their worth to their NATO and EU allies and the Russian threat remains acute.

    Paul McLeary reported from Washington and Suzanne Lynch from Brussels.

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  • US investigates claims American gear used in raids on Russia

    US investigates claims American gear used in raids on Russia

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    KYIV — Washington is investigating reports that U.S. military vehicles were used in raids on Russia, a White House official said Wednesday, warning Ukraine and pro-Ukraine forces against using U.S. equipment to attack inside Russia.

    Two pro-Ukraine Russian paramilitary groups claimed responsibility for an incursion Monday into Russia’s Belgorod region from Ukraine, in which they overran several small villages. Moscow said Wednesday it had defeated the groups, killing more than 70 people and destroying U.S.-made military vehicles.

    U.S. National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby said Wednesday the White House is “looking into those reports that the U.S. equipment and vehicles could have been involved,” hinting at frustration in Washington.

    “We’ve been pretty darn clear: We don’t support the use of U.S.-made equipment for attacks inside Russia … we’ve been clear about that with the Ukrainians,” Kirby said. “I won’t get into private discussions that we’re having with them. But I think we’ve been nothing but consistent about our concerns in that regard.”

    Pentagon spokesperson Brig. Gen. Patrick Ryder on Tuesday said the U.S. had not authorized nor received Ukrainian requests for transferring equipment to paramilitary groups. He also expressed doubts about the Russian reports and images appearing to show U.S.-made vehicles. 

    “I don’t know if it’s true or not, in terms of the veracity of that imagery,” said Ryder. “You’ll recall [this week] there were some bogus images of reported, alleged explosions at the Pentagon. So, you know, we just — all of us, both within the [defense department] and I’m sure in the … journalistic community, have to take a look at these things and make sure we get the facts before we make assumptions.”

    Ukraine has denied involvement in the attack, saying the two groups — Legion of Free Russia and Russian Volunteer Corps — consist only of Russian citizens who are fighting on Kyiv’s side, aiming to create a demilitarized zone on the border with Ukraine.

    Andriy Cherniak, a representative of Ukraine’s Military Intelligence or HUR, told POLITICO that military aid provided by the U.S. and other Western allies is strictly limited for use by the Ukrainian army.

    “Every bullet is tracked not only by us but also by our Western allies,” Cherniak said, adding he did not know where the paramilitary groups got the U.S.-made vehicles. While he insisted the groups acted on their own, Cherniak said HUR has been in contact with them and has observed increased anti-Putin sentiment among Russians.

    “Our main goal is to protect Ukraine. For us, those are Russian citizens who are against Putin and want to shake his regime. So we work with whoever we can to reach our main goal,” Cherniak said. “More and more in Russia understand they don’t want to die for [Putin] at war.”

    Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu described the groups as Ukrainian “nationalists” during a televised meeting with Russian military officials and displayed images of two severely damaged armored vehicles that look similar to those provided by the U.S. to Ukraine as part of military aid.

    “During counterterrorist operations, units of nationalist formations were blocked and defeated by air strikes and artillery fire and active actions. The remnants of the nationalists were thrown into the territory of Ukraine, where the fight continued until they were completely eliminated,” Shoigu said.

    The two groups themselves, however, claimed they were able to return to Ukraine with only two killed and 10 injured from the Legion of Free Russia, as well as two injured from the Russian Volunteer Corps.

    When asked about how they got U.S.-made vehicles, Russian Volunteer Corps’ Denis Kapustin, aka “White Rex” (the same name as his white nationalist clothing line), joked that his fighters could have purchased them at any military store — mocking remarks from Vladimir Putin about how Russian-backed militants got weapons to fight Ukraine in Donbas in 2014.

    Kapustin also claimed his group had taken back military vehicles stolen from Ukraine.

    “The goal of our peacekeeping operation into Belgorod region was also to destroy law enforcement serving Putin’s regime and also demonstrate to the people of Russia that resistance is possible,” the Legion of Free Russia said Tuesday.

    The Russian Volunteer Corps also claimed they wanted to show Russians they are not protected by Putin. 

    Alexander Ward reported from and Lara Seligman contributed reporting from Washington.

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  • Report: Pentagon Leaker Was Preparing for Race War

    Report: Pentagon Leaker Was Preparing for Race War

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    On April 13, a group of camouflage-clad FBI agents arrested 21-year old National Guardsman Jack Teixeira at his home in Massachusetts. Teixeira was charged with leaking classified documents containing national security secrets. He faces up to 25 years in prison, and has yet to enter a plea. 

    From the moment of Teixeira’s arrest, reports have emerged that the invitation-only Discord server where Teixeira leaked the documents was a cesspool of racist memes, offensive jokes, and gun fetishization. But on Saturday morning, the Washington Post released a much more wide-ranging report on Teixeira’s extremism, drawing on previously unpublished videos, chat logs, and interviews with several of Teixeira’s friends. This new evidence, writes the Post, suggests Teixeira was “readying for what he imagined would be a violent struggle against a legion of perceived adversaries — including Blacks, political liberals, Jews, gay and transgender people.” 

    In online posts, Teixeira called the mainstream media “zogshit,” a slur for “Zionist Occupied Government;” repeated January 6 false flag conspiracy theories; and referenced Waco and Ruby Ridge, two 1990s standoffs between law enforcement and armed extremists that have become a touchpoint for the far right. 

    “He used the term ‘race war’ quite a few times,” one close friend told the Post. “He did call himself racist, multiple times…I would say he was proud of it.” The friend, who said Teixeira was “very happy” after a white supremacist shooter killed 51 people at two mosques in New Zealand in 2019, added that Teixeira “ would send me a video of someone getting killed, ISIS executions, mass shootings, war videos…He absolutely enjoyed gore.” The friend said Teixeira had told him “multiple times” about “his desire to shoot up his school” when he was in high school. 

    The Post uncovered videos of Teixeira shooting guns in his backyard as well as at a nearby gun range. At the latter, Teixeira recorded a video of himself using a racist slur before emptying a magazine. In the house he shared with his mother and stepfather, Teixeira amassed what the Post described as “a small arsenal of rifles, shotguns and pistols, as well as a helmet, gas mask and night-vision goggles.”

    Teixeira remains in custody, as prosecutors argue that he poses a flight risk. A detention hearing originally scheduled for last Thursday was canceled

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  • DOJ: Suspected Pentagon Leaker Allegedly Talked About Wanting to Commit Mass Murder, Destroyed Laptop, Xbox Before Arrest

    DOJ: Suspected Pentagon Leaker Allegedly Talked About Wanting to Commit Mass Murder, Destroyed Laptop, Xbox Before Arrest

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    The Justice Department is claiming that Jack Teixeira, the Air National Guard member accused of sharing classified Pentagon documents in an online group chat, kept an arsenal of firearms, lobbed “racial threats,” and envisaged carrying out mass murder. In an 18-page memo, released the night before the airman’s Thursday detention hearing, Justice Department prosecutors said they believe that Teixeira should be held indefinitely, arguing that he poses a flight risk and a danger to the public. They also theorized that he might still possess information that would be of “tremendous value to hostile nation states that could offer him safe harbor and attempt to facilitate his escape from the United States,” per the court filing. Teixeira’s hearing is before a federal magistrate judge in Worcester, Massachusetts.  

    While his alleged infatuation with firearms and history of racist remarks were reported before his arrest, prosecutors for the Justice Department painted a far more nefarious portrait of the 21-year-old than previously known. They alleged that Teixeira kept a stash of firearms and tactical gear in his bedroom, including a Kalashnikov-style weapon, shotguns, and handguns. Prosecutors claimed that in a social media post made last year, he wrote of killing a “ton of people” and picking off “weak minded” members of society. In line with that desire, Teixeira allegedly fantasized earlier this year about driving an “assassination van” into a crowded residential or urban area and shooting from the vehicle.

    Other findings in the memo date back to Teixeira’s time in high school; he was suspended in March 2018 after a classmate overheard him allegedly making racist threats and discussing various weaponry. (Allen Franco, a lawyer representing Teixeira, said in a filing that the situation was “thoroughly investigated” at the time and that his client had received a psychiatric evaluation. He added that Teixeira was permitted to return to school after a “handful” of days.) This history was so well known that it was even flagged by local police when they denied Teixeira’s application for a firearms identification card.

    Teixeira still managed to obtain a security clearance and serve as an information technology specialist for the Massachusetts Air National Guard. In February of last year—just days after the Russian invasion of Ukraine—he allegedly began using that position to surreptitiously access “hundreds of classified documents” unrelated to his work. “There is no allegation in the affidavit that Mr. Teixeira had any intent for these documents to become widely available on the internet or desired to disrupt the geopolitical affairs of the United States,” his attorney wrote in his filing. “Thus, there is no reason to suggest that, if released, Mr. Teixeira has any motivation, desire, or current ability to commit any actions like those alleged in the complaint affidavit or in the government’s supplemental motion for detention.”

    Prosecutors further bolstered their call for Teixeira’s detention by alleging that he took “a series of obstructive steps” prior to his April 13 arrest, including the attempted destruction and disposal of his tablet, Xbox gaming console, and laptop.

    The airman has been charged with two separate counts related to the unauthorized removal, retention, and transmission of classified materials that covered the Russia-Ukraine war and intelligence the US had gathered on allied nations. The receptacle of choice for his document dumps was Discord, a social media platform popular with gamers, where he fostered a small, tight-knit community. The files were subsequently circulated onto other parts of the internet by members of Teixeira’s Discord group. (Though, in a recent piece, The New York Times reported that Teixeira allegedly posted classified materials to another Discord server that had hundreds of members.) The Justice Department will likely seek an indictment before a grand jury.

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  • Ukrainian troops to begin training on US-made tanks in next few weeks

    Ukrainian troops to begin training on US-made tanks in next few weeks

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    RAMSTEIN AIR BASE, Germany — American-made Abrams tanks that Ukrainians will use for training will arrive in Germany in the next few weeks, allowing soldiers to begin learning to use the much-anticipated armor, according to two U.S. Defense Department officials. 

    U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin is expected to announce the move at a Friday press conference after the 11th meeting of the Ukraine Defense Contact Group, a gathering of more than 40 nations dedicated to supporting Kyiv against Russia’s all-out assault, said one of the DoD officials, who was granted anonymity to discuss sensitive operations.

    The 31 M1A1 Abrams tanks — a Ukrainian battalion’s worth — will arrive at the Grafenwoehr Training Area in Germany by mid-to-late May, according to the officials. The training will begin a week or two later, after the tanks go through a maintenance period. 

    But the tanks the Ukrainian armed forces will train on in Germany are different from the ones that will eventually arrive in Ukraine for use on the battlefield, the first DoD official added, noting that those are still being refurbished.

    The training on how to operate and maintain the Abrams is expected to take up to 10 weeks and may include instruction on how to maneuver in combat, the official said. Some 250 Ukrainians are expected to go through the training program, which is run by 7th Army Training Command.

    The U.S. is accelerating the delivery of the Abrams by opting to send older M1A1 versions, rather than the newer M1A2 type originally planned to go to Ukraine. The Pentagon anticipates the tanks will arrive on the battlefield by the end of the year.

    During his opening remarks ahead of the contact group meeting, Austin applauded his counterparts for their donations. He noted that Italy, France, Canada and Norway are also providing air defense systems, while Estonia has spent more than 1 percent of its GDP on Ukraine.

    “Our common efforts have made a huge difference to Ukraine’s defenders on the battlefield. And they underscore just how badly the Kremlin miscalculated,” Austin said. “After more than a year of Russian aggression and deceit, this contact group is as united as ever and more global than ever.”

    The group is also working to deliver defense systems to counter Russian missile and drone attacks on Ukrainian cities and infrastructure, Austin said. Two Patriot missile defense systems, including one from the U.S. and one made up of components from Germany and the Netherlands, arrived in Ukraine on Wednesday.

    In total, the members of the contact group have provided more than $55 billion in security assistance for Ukraine since the group’s founding a year ago. The U.S. alone has provided $35 billion in security assistance to Ukraine since the full-scale invasion began, including the most recent package of $325 million.

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  • Britain’s semiconductor plan goes AWOL as US and EU splash billions

    Britain’s semiconductor plan goes AWOL as US and EU splash billions

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    LONDON — As nations around the world scramble to secure crucial semiconductor supply chains over fears about relations with China, the U.K. is falling behind.

    The COVID-19 pandemic exposed the world’s heavy reliance on Taiwan and China for the most advanced chips, which power everything from iPhones to advanced weapons. For the past two years, and amid mounting fears China could kick off a new global security crisis by invading Taiwan, Britain’s government has been readying a plan to diversify supply chains for key components and boost domestic production.

    Yet according to people close to the strategy, the U.K.’s still-unseen plan — which missed its publication deadline last fall — has suffered from internal disconnect and government disarray, setting the country behind its global allies in a crucial race to become more self-reliant.

    A lack of experience and joined-up policy-making in Whitehall, a period of intense political upheaval in Downing Street, and new U.S. controls on the export of advanced chips to China, have collectively stymied the U.K.’s efforts to develop its own coherent plan.

    The way the strategy has been developed so far “is a mistake,” said a former senior Downing Street official.

    Falling behind

    During the pandemic, demand for semiconductors outstripped supply as consumers flocked to sort their home working setups. That led to major chip shortages — soon compounded by China’s tough “zero-COVID” policy. 

    Since a semiconductor fabrication plant is so technologically complex — a single laser in a chip lithography system of German firm Trumpf has 457,000 component parts — concentrating manufacturing in a few companies helped the industry innovate in the past.

    But everything changed when COVID-19 struck.

    “Governments suddenly woke up to the fact that — ‘hang on a second, these semiconductor things are quite important, and they all seem to be concentrated in a small number of places,’” said a senior British semiconductor industry executive.

    Beijing’s launch of a hypersonic missile in 2021 also sent shivers through the Pentagon over China’s increasing ability to develop advanced AI-powered weapons. And Russia’s invasion of Ukraine added to geopolitical uncertainty, upping the pressure on governments to onshore manufacturers and reduce reliance on potential conflict hotspots like Taiwan.

    Against this backdrop, many of the U.K.’s allies are investing billions in domestic manufacturing.

    The Biden administration’s CHIPS Act, passed last summer, offers $52 billion in subsidies for semiconductor manufacturing in the U.S. The EU has its own €43 billion plan to subsidize production — although its own stance is not without critics. Emerging producers like India, Vietnam, Singapore and Japan are also making headway in their own multi-billion-dollar efforts to foster domestic manufacturing.

    US President Joe Biden | Samuel Corum/Getty Images

    Now the U.K. government is under mounting pressure to show its own hand. In a letter to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak first reported by the Times and also obtained by POLITICO, Britain’s semiconductor sector said its “confidence in the government’s ability to address the vital importance of the industry is steadily declining with each month of inaction.”

    That followed the leak of an early copy of the U.K.’s semiconductor strategy, reported on by Bloomberg, warning that Britain’s over-dependence on Taiwan for its semiconductor foundries makes it vulnerable to any invasion of the island nation by China.  

    Taiwan, which Beijing considers part of its territory, makes more than 90 percent of the world’s advanced chips, with its Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) vital to the manufacture of British-designed semiconductors.

    U.S. and EU action has already tempted TSMC to begin building new plants and foundries in Arizona and Germany.

    “We critically depend on companies like TSMC,” said the industry executive quoted above. “It would be catastrophic for Western economies if they couldn’t get access to the leading-edge semiconductors any more.”

    Whitehall at war

    Yet there are concerns both inside and outside the British government that key Whitehall departments whose input on the strategy could be crucial are being left out in the cold.

    The Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) is preparing the U.K.’s plan and, according to observers, has fiercely maintained ownership of the project. DCMS is one of the smallest departments in Whitehall, and is nicknamed the ‘Ministry of Fun’ due to its oversight of sports and leisure, as well as issues related to tech.

    “In other countries, semiconductor policies are the product of multiple players,” said Paul Triolo, a senior vice president at U.S.-based strategy firm ASG. This includes “legislative support for funding major subsidies packages, commercial and trade departments, R&D agencies, and high-level strategic policy bodies tasked with things like improving supply chain resilience,” he said.

    “You need all elements of the U.K.’s capabilities. You need the diplomatic services, the security services. You need everyone working together on this,” said the former Downing Street official quoted above. “There are huge national security aspects to this.”

    The same person said that relying on “a few [lower] grade officials in DCMS — officials that don’t see the wider picture, or who don’t have either capability or knowledge,” is a mistake. 

    For its part, DCMS rejected the suggestion it is too closely guarding the plan, with a spokesperson saying the ministry is “working closely with industry experts and other government departments … so we can protect and grow our domestic sector and ensure greater supply chain resilience.”

    The spokesperson said the strategy “will be published as soon as possible.”

    But businesses keen for sight of the plan remain unconvinced the U.K. has the right team in place for the job.

    Key Whitehall personnel who had been involved in project have now changed, the executive cited earlier said, and few of those writing the strategy “have much of a background in the industry, or much first-hand experience.”

    Progress was also sidetracked last year by lengthy deliberations over whether the U.K. should block the sale of Newport Wafer Fab, Britain’s biggest semiconductor plant, to Chinese-owned Nexperia on national security grounds, according to two people directly involved in the strategy. The government eventually announced it would block the sale in November.

    And while a draft of the plan existed last year, it never progressed to the all-important ministerial “write-around” process — which gives departments across Whitehall the chance to scrutinize and comment upon proposals.

    Waiting for budget day

    Two people familiar with current discussions about the strategy said ministers are now aiming to make their plan public in the run-up to, or around, Chancellor Jeremy Hunt’s March 15 budget statement, although they stressed that timing could still change.

    Leaked details of the strategy indicate the government will set aside £1 billion to support chip makers. Further leaks indicate this will be used as seed money for startups, and for boosting existing firms and delivering new incentives for investors.

    U.K. Chancellor Jeremy Hunt | Leon Neal/Getty Images

    There is wrangling with the Treasury and other departments over the size of these subsidies. Experts also say it is unlikely to be ‘new’ money but diverted from other departments’ budgets.

    “We’ll just have to wait for something more substantial,” said a spokesperson from one semiconductor firm commenting on the pre-strategy leaks.

    But as the U.K. procrastinates, key British-linked firms are already being hit by the United States’ own fast-evolving semiconductor strategy. U.S. rules brought in last October — and beefed up in recent days by an agreement with the Netherlands — are preventing some firms from selling the most advanced chip designs and manufacturing equipment to China.

    British-headquartered, Japanese-owned firm ARM — the crown jewel of Britain’s semiconductor industry, which sells some designs to smartphone manufacturers in China — is already seeing limits on what it can export. Other British firms like Graphcore, which develops chips for AI and machine learning, are feeling the pinch too.

    “The U.K. needs to — at pace — understand what it wants its role to be in the industries that will define the future economy,” said Andy Burwell, director for international trade at business lobbying group the CBI.

    Where do we go from here?

    There are serious doubts both inside and outside government about whether Britain’s long-awaited plan can really get to the heart of what is a complex global challenge — and opinion is divided on whether aping the U.S. and EU’s subsidy packages is either possible or even desirable for the U.K.

    A former senior government figure who worked on semiconductor policy said that while the U.K. definitely needs a “more coherent worked-out plan,” publishing a formal strategy may actually just reveal how “complicated, messy and beyond our control” the issue really is.

    “It’s not that it is problematic that we don’t have a strategy,” they said. “It’s problematic that whatever strategy we have is not going to be revolutionary.” They described the idea of a “boosterish” multi-billion-pound investment in Britain’s own fabricator industry as “pie in the sky.”

    The former Downing Street official said Britain should instead be seeking to work “in collaboration” with EU and U.S. partners, and must be “careful to avoid” a subsidy war with allies.

    The opposition Labour Party, hot favorites to form the next government after an expected 2024 election, takes a similar view. “It’s not the case that the U.K. can do this on its own,” Shadow Foreign Secretary David Lammy said recently, urging ministers to team up with the EU to secure its supply of semiconductors.

    One area where some experts believe the U.K. may be able to carve out a competitive advantage, however, is in the design of advanced semiconductors.

    “The U.K. would probably be best placed to pursue support for start-up semiconductor design firms such as Graphcore,” said ASG’s Triolo, “and provide support for expansion of capacity at the existing small number of companies manufacturing at more mature nodes” such as Nexperia’s Newport Wafer Fab.

    Ministers launched a research project in December aimed at tapping into the U.K. semiconductor sector’s existing strength in design. The government has so far poured £800 million into compound semiconductor research through universities, according to a recent report by the House of Commons business committee.

    But the same group of MPs wants more action to support advanced chip design. Burwell at the CBI business group said the U.K. government must start “working alongside industry, rather than the government basically developing a strategy and then coming to industry afterwards.”

    Right now the government is “out there a bit struggling to see what levers they have to pull,” said the senior semiconductor executive quoted earlier.

    Under World Trade Organization rules, governments are allowed to subsidize their semiconductor manufacturing capabilities, the executive pointed out. “The U.S. is doing it. Europe’s doing it. Taiwan does it. We should do it too.”

    This story has been updated. Cristina Gallardo contributed reporting.

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  • 5 K-pop groups you need to check out NOW: NewJeans, PENTAGON and more

    5 K-pop groups you need to check out NOW: NewJeans, PENTAGON and more

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    K-pop actually means Korean Popular music. It is a mix and match of many genres that includes, but is not limited to, pop, rock, hip-hop, R&B, etc. What makes K-pop so unique is that the artists are not limited to one genre. K-pop is really experimental. K-pop groups usually have at least one rapper in them, be it BLACKPINK or BTS. Also, the K-pop language is not strictly limited to Korean. Many languages are mixed and matched in songs, such as in the case of groups like MAMAMOO or SEVENTEEN where English phrases are increasingly being used. This got them brownie points in the global market further increasing their chances of going global. 

    Global K-pop-ularity

    According to Korea JoongAng Daily, when it comes to the sudden global K-pop fever, timing is the main key. They trace it back to Spotify’s decision to launch the K-pop Hub, but that played a minor role compared to social media and algorithms. And while they report it as mainly a timing thing, the K-pop industry had been laying the bricks of the foundation for its rise for a long time. They always wanted to enter the foreign market. From concerts and events abroad to including more and more English hooks in their songs, the rise can be best described as a domino effect.

    As a result, Indonesia, Japan, and the Philippines surpassed South Korea in K-pop related tweets as revealed by Twitter last year.  

    So, now that we have our basics right, let’s look at the top 10 new K-pop groups that you need to check out, like, right NOW. 

    1. NewJeans

    This K-pop girl group formed by ADOR, a sub-company of Hybe Corporation,  are ADOR-able and awe-inspiring with their talents at the same time. Minji, Hanni, Danielle, Haerin and Hyein are the five creatives and they are killing it at the moment with multiple award nominations and wins in their bag. They are hardly six months old, so a baby K-pop group, yet they are leaving footprints on history with their songs including the success of the new single OMG. 

    2. (G)I-DLE

    Any true K-pop stan has surely heard this name by now. With many looking up to them as a possible future face of K-pop, it consists of 5 members Miyeon, Minnie, Soyeon, Yuqi and Shuhua formed under CUBE Entertainment. The group debuted in 2018 and never looked back. Not only did they release a number-one Billboard single, but they’ve been constantly rising like a phoenix. Considering their overall time in the scene, it’s a tremendous achievement. 

    3. Stray Kids

    Stray Kids is what you need working on weekdays because it’s basically store-bought adrenaline. With high-spirited music and rapping, along with fabulous dance performances, they refuse to let you feel sad while you are listening to them. They are yet another promising group coming out of JYP Entertainment and they came through a reality show of the same name. The eight horsemen of the group are Bang Chan, Lee Know, Changbin, Hyunjin, Han, Felix, Seungmin, and I.N. They have managed to achieve great success in the past year thanks to their successful releases.

    4. TOMORROW X TOGETHER

    Popularly known as TXT, they are reigning Twitter texts like crazy, sharing the same parent company as BTS- BIGHIT MUSIC. Debuting in 2019,Soobin, Yeonjun, Beomgyu, Taehyun and HueningKai are the 5 hot talents in this group. They are coming up with their fifth mini album ‘Chapter: TEMPTATION’, to be released soon and the excitement level is off the charts. Their releases have ranked on music charts across the world, making it known that they are here to stay. 

    5. PENTAGON

    If you want to bop like there is no tomorrow, you need to listen to their music. Another banger under CUBE Entertainment, they are quite an interesting bunch. Comprised of Jinho, Hui, Hongseok, Shinwon, Yeo One, Yan An, Yuto, Kino and Wooseok, they are a bit older in the scene than rest of the groups here as they debuted in 2016. Their signature mix of electronic and pop is sure to leave an impression in your mind. 

    Special mention:

    ITZY

    In a true ‘You go girl’ spirit, this girl group is all on the rise. Yeji, Lia, Ryujin, Chaeryeong, and Yuna are trained and formed under JYP Entertainment. They have the beauty and the talent to back it up. After debuting in 2019 they have won multiple awards making them a frontrunner. Their debut track, ‘DALLA DALLA’, broke YouTube records for the most views in a 24-hour period for a debut song and made history. ITZY is here to eat and leave no crumbs and the audience is supporting them like crazy it seems.

     

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  • Europe accuses US of profiting from war

    Europe accuses US of profiting from war

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    Voiced by artificial intelligence.

    Nine months after invading Ukraine, Vladimir Putin is beginning to fracture the West. 

    Top European officials are furious with Joe Biden’s administration and now accuse the Americans of making a fortune from the war, while EU countries suffer. 

    “The fact is, if you look at it soberly, the country that is most profiting from this war is the U.S. because they are selling more gas and at higher prices, and because they are selling more weapons,” one senior official told POLITICO. 

    The explosive comments — backed in public and private by officials, diplomats and ministers elsewhere — follow mounting anger in Europe over American subsidies that threaten to wreck European industry. The Kremlin is likely to welcome the poisoning of the atmosphere among Western allies. 

    “We are really at a historic juncture,” the senior EU official said, arguing that the double hit of trade disruption from U.S. subsidies and high energy prices risks turning public opinion against both the war effort and the transatlantic alliance. “America needs to realize that public opinion is shifting in many EU countries.”

    The EU’s chief diplomat Josep Borrell called on Washington to respond to European concerns. “Americans — our friends — take decisions which have an economic impact on us,” he said in an interview with POLITICO.

    The biggest point of tension in recent weeks has been Biden’s green subsidies and taxes that Brussels says unfairly tilt trade away from the EU and threaten to destroy European industries. Despite formal objections from Europe, Washington has so far shown no sign of backing down. 

    At the same time, the disruption caused by Putin’s invasion of Ukraine is tipping European economies into recession, with inflation rocketing and a devastating squeeze on energy supplies threatening blackouts and rationing this winter. 

    As they attempt to reduce their reliance on Russian energy, EU countries are turning to gas from the U.S. instead — but the price Europeans pay is almost four times as high as the same fuel costs in America. Then there’s the likely surge in orders for American-made military kit as European armies run short after sending weapons to Ukraine. 

    It’s all got too much for top officials in Brussels and other EU capitals. French President Emmanuel Macron said high U.S. gas prices were not “friendly” and Germany’s economy minister has called on Washington to show more “solidarity” and help reduce energy costs. 

    Ministers and diplomats based elsewhere in the bloc voiced frustration at the way Biden’s government simply ignores the impact of its domestic economic policies on European allies. 

    When EU leaders tackled Biden over high U.S. gas prices at the G20 meeting in Bali last week, the American president simply seemed unaware of the issue, according to the senior official quoted above. Other EU officials and diplomats agreed that American ignorance about the consequences for Europe was a major problem. 

    “The Europeans are discernibly frustrated about the lack of prior information and consultation,” said David Kleimann of the Bruegel think tank.

    Officials on both sides of the Atlantic recognize the risks that the increasingly toxic atmosphere will have for the Western alliance. The bickering is exactly what Putin would wish for, EU and U.S. diplomats agreed. 

    The growing dispute over Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) — a huge tax, climate and health care package — has put fears over a transatlantic trade war high on the political agenda again. EU trade ministers are due to discuss their response on Friday as officials in Brussels draw up plans for an emergency war chest of subsidies to save European industries from collapse. 

    “The Inflation Reduction Act is very worrying,” said Dutch Trade Minister Liesje Schreinemacher. “The potential impact on the European economy is very big.”

    “The U.S. is following a domestic agenda, which is regrettably protectionist and discriminates against U.S. allies,” said Tonino Picula, the European Parliament’s lead person on the transatlantic relationship.

    An American official stressed the price setting for European buyers of gas reflects private market decisions and is not the result of any U.S. government policy or action. “U.S. companies have been transparent and reliable suppliers of natural gas to Europe,” the official said. Exporting capacity has also been limited by an accident in June that forced a key facility to shut down.

    In most cases, the official added, the difference between the export and import prices doesn’t go to U.S. LNG exporters, but to companies reselling the gas within the EU. The largest European holder of long-term U.S. gas contracts is France’s TotalEnergies for example

    It’s not a new argument from the American side but it doesn’t seem to be convincing the Europeans. “The United States sells us its gas with a multiplier effect of four when it crosses the Atlantic,” European Commissioner for the Internal Market Thierry Breton said on French TV on Wednesday. “Of course the Americans are our allies … but when something goes wrong it is necessary also between allies to say it.”

    Cheaper energy has quickly become a huge competitive advantage for American companies, too. Businesses are planning new investments in the U.S. or even relocating their existing businesses away from Europe to American factories. Just this week, chemical multinational Solvay announced it is choosing the U.S. over Europe for new investments, in the latest of a series of similar announcements from key EU industrial giants. 

    Allies or not?

    Despite the energy disagreements, it wasn’t until Washington announced a $369 billion industrial subsidy scheme to support green industries under the Inflation Reduction Act that Brussels went into full-blown panic mode.

    “The Inflation Reduction Act has changed everything,” one EU diplomat said. “Is Washington still our ally or not?”

    For Biden, the legislation is a historic climate achievement. “This is not a zero-sum game,” the U.S. official said. “The IRA will grow the pie for clean energy investments, not split it.” 

    But the EU sees that differently. An official from France’s foreign affairs ministry said the diagnosis is clear: These are “discriminatory subsidies that will distort competition.” French Economy Minister Bruno Le Maire this week even accused the U.S. of going down China’s path of economic isolationism, urging Brussels to replicate such an approach. “Europe must not be the last of the Mohicans,” he said.

    The EU is preparing its responses, such as a big subsidy push to prevent European industry from being wiped out by American rivals. “We are experiencing a creeping crisis of trust on trade issues in this relationship,” said German MEP Reinhard Bütikofer. 

    “At some point, you have to assert yourself,” said French MEP Marie-Pierre Vedrenne. “We are in a world of power struggles. When you arm-wrestle, if you are not muscular, if you are not prepared both physically and mentally, you lose.”

    Behind the scenes, there is also growing irritation about the money flowing into the American defense sector.

    The U.S. has by far been the largest provider of military aid to Ukraine, supplying more than $15.2 billion in weapons and equipment since the start of the war. The EU has so far provided about €8 billion of military equipment to Ukraine, according to Borrell.

    According to one senior official from a European capital, restocking of some sophisticated weapons may take “years” because of problems in the supply chain and the production of chips. This has fueled fears that the U.S. defense industry can profit even more from the war. 

    The Pentagon is already developing a roadmap to speed up arms sales, as the pressure from allies to respond to greater demands for weapons and equipment grows.  

    Another EU diplomat argued that “the money they are making on weapons” could help Americans understand that making “all this cash on gas” might be “a bit too much.” 

    The diplomat argued that a discount on gas prices could help us to “keep united our public opinions” and to negotiate with third countries on gas supplies. “It’s not good, in terms of optics, to give the impression that your best ally is actually making huge profits out of your troubles,” the diplomat said.

    Giorgio Leali, Stuart Lau, Camille Gijs, Sarah Anne Aarup and Gloria Gonzalez contributed reporting.

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    Barbara Moens, Jakob Hanke Vela and Jacopo Barigazzi

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