ReportWire

Tag: Political/General News

  • Next Question for Gaza Peace Plan: Who Wants to Police It?

    A fresh obstacle to President Trump’s Gaza peace plan is taking shape: how to bring in an international security force to police the enclave without either Hamas or Israel abandoning the process.

    Then there is the question of whether any country would really be willing to commit any troops to the plan if it involved facing down the militants as they attempt to consolidate their power in Gaza.

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    Summer Said

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  • China Is Filling Up Its Oil Reserves Fast

    China has spent months building up its oil reserves. That might come in handy in the wake of the new sanctions the U.S. recently imposed on Russian crude.

    During the first nine months of the year, the world’s second-largest economy imported on average more than 11 million barrels of oil a day, an amount above the daily production of Saudi Arabia, according to official customs data. Analysts estimate 1 million to 1.2 million of those barrels were stashed in reserves each day.

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    Rebecca Feng

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  • Canadian PM Carney Says He Apologized to Trump Over Antitariff Ad

    Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said he apologized to President Trump over an antitariff television ad that had angered Trump and sent the two countries’ trade talks into a tailspin.

    Carney made the apology earlier this week during a dinner in South Korea for Asia-Pacific leaders, he told reporters Saturday at a news conference. Trump had been offended by the advertisement, Carney said, which was sponsored by the Ontario government and included audio of former President Ronald Reagan criticizing tariffs.

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    [ad_2] Yoko Kubota
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  • Essay | The Trade War Couldn’t Change China’s Economy

    President Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping have walked back from the ledge—again. But even as the world’s two superpowers deescalate a trade fight that had threatened to destabilize the global economy, a new reality is setting in—that Washington may finally have to give up on its long-standing aim of pushing Beijing to restructure its economy.

    For years and through successive U.S. administrations, senior officials in Washington had hoped that bringing China into the global trading system would open up the country’s political system. In the decades since China’s accession to the World Trade Organization in 2001, those hopes of political liberalization have largely been dashed. The sense of disappointment has only grown as Chinese leader Xi Jinping, who took power in late 2012, has tightened his control over the domestic political system and civil society more broadly.

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    Jonathan Cheng

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  • Trump Says He’s Not Planning Venezuela Strike

    President Trump on Friday said he isn’t considering ordering military attacks in Venezuela, two weeks after suggesting ground strikes were possible.

    Asked by reporters on Air Force One about reports that he is weighing airstrikes against Venezuela, Trump responded: “No, it’s not true.”

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    [ad_2] Lara Seligman
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  • Israel’s Top Military Lawyer Steps Down Amid Leak Controversy

    The official resigned after an investigation was launched into her alleged role in authorizing the release of footage that appeared to show soldiers assaulting a Palestinian detainee.

    Feliz Solomon

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  • Argentina Has the World’s Weirdest Tax. Can Milei Scrap it?

    Argentina’s export tax hurts its critical agricultural industry. President Javier Milei has yet to follow through on a promise to end it.

    Greg Ip

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  • Key Moments in the Downfall of Prince Andrew

    After years of damaging headlines over his friendship with Jeffrey Epstein and allegations of sexually abusing a teenager, Andrew has been stripped of all his titles and his Windsor mansion residence.

    His public disgrace is unprecedented in modern British royal history. Here is a recap of his downfall:

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    Natasha Dangoor

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  • Why Buckingham Palace Decided to Get Rid of Andrew

    LONDON—In recent days, King Charles III moved decisively to shut down a slow-burning scandal that threatened to tarnish not only his reign but that of his son Prince William.

    For over a decade, the former friendship between Charles’s younger brother Andrew and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein generated negative headlines, embarrassing the royal family. Andrew had long denied he abused an American teenage girl introduced to him by Epstein decades ago, but a drumbeat of fresh disclosures in recent weeks brought the scandal back to Britain’s front pages, sparking fresh public disapproval and complaints from lawmakers about the man 8th in line to the throne. 

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    Max Colchester

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  • Inside the Low-Tech Heist That Penetrated the Louvre

    PARIS—The thieves had prepared a jerry can of gasoline to quickly set fire to the truck-mounted lift and other equipment they had just used to penetrate the Louvre Museum and steal France’s crown jewels.

    A blaze might have destroyed evidence linking them to the crime. But the clock was ticking. Security forces were closing in. So the thieves made a critical decision: They left the truck intact and jumped on their scooters to make a getaway along the Seine River.

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    Stacy Meichtry

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  • Sudan Militia, Armed With Drones, Hunts Down Black Population of Darfur

    Sudan’s civil war is taking a jarring turn in Darfur, where an Arab-led militia is now using state-of-the-art drones and execution squads to dominate the region’s Black population.

    Humanitarian groups say the violence has been escalating since the militia seized control of El Fasher, the largest city in the region. Videos shared online by the Sudan Doctors Network and other local rights groups appear to show militia members shooting unarmed civilians at point-blank range in the city on the fringes of the Sahara. In the streets, dead bodies are scattered alongside burned-out vehicles. At the only functioning hospital, the World Health Organization reported that the rebels killed all 460 people inside the main ward, including patients, caregivers and health workers.

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    Nicholas Bariyo

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  • The Long Road to a U.S.-China Trade Pact

    In March, Sen. Steve Daines traveled to Beijing with a group of American chief executives in hopes of calming a tense trade relationship between the world’s two largest economies.

    Weeks earlier, President Trump had added an additional 20% in tariffs on China over what he said was its role in the fentanyl trade. The Montana senator and close Trump ally, who lived in China and Hong Kong for six years in the 1990s as an executive for Procter & Gamble, saw an opening to smooth things over.

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    Gavin Bade

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  • Hezbollah Is Rearming, Putting Cease-Fire at Risk

    The Lebanese militant group is rebuilding its battered ranks and armaments, defying the terms of the cease-fire and raising the possibility of renewed conflict with Israel.

    Omar Abdel-Baqui

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  • Trump Pivots Second Term Toward Foreign Policy

    BUSAN, South Korea—President Trump wrapped up his six-day swing through Asia by touting trade deals and new investments in the U.S. But as he arrives back in Washington, the gold-plated receptions abroad are giving way to a shuttered government and deepening voter anxiety about the economy.

    The split screen sheds light on why Trump has turned much of his second-term attention to foreign policy.

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    Alexander Ward

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  • U.S. Eyes Striking Venezuelan Military Targets Used for Drug Trafficking

    The Trump administration has identified targets in Venezuela that include military facilities used to smuggle drugs, according to U.S. officials familiar with the matter. If President Trump decides to move forward with airstrikes, they said, the targets would send a clear message to Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro that it is time to step down.

    While the president hasn’t made a final decision on ordering land strikes, the officials said a potential air campaign would focus on targets that sit at the nexus of the drug gangs and the Maduro regime. Trump and his senior aides have been particularly focused on unsettling Maduro as the U.S. military has attacked boats allegedly carrying drugs in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific Ocean.

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    [ad_2] Shelby Holliday
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  • Prince Andrew Stripped of Royal Title by King Charles

    Andrew’s friendship with Jeffrey Epstein and new revelations about longstanding abuse allegations forced the king’s hand.

    Max Colchester

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  • Opinion | Hamas, Free Speech and Arizona University

    The anti-Israel encampments on the quad are mostly gone, but we’re starting to learn what happened behind the scenes when universities let antisemitism run rampant on campus. Records recently obtained from the University of Arizona show the school’s faculty threw in with pro-Palestinian protesters in the months after Oct. 7, 2023.

    Arizona-based researcher Brian Anderson issued the Freedom of Information Act request in May 2024 for university communications on such keywords as “Israel,” “Palestine,” “Gaza,” “Hamas,” “Anti-Semitism” and “Jewish.” Mr. Anderson says the school refused the request until his lawyer sent a demand letter. It later produced nearly 1,000 documents with many names redacted. The university didn’t respond to our request for comment.

    The emails reveal that on Oct. 11, 2023, then-Arizona President Robert Robbins issued an unequivocal statement addressing “the horrendous acts of terrorism by Hamas in Israel.” Mr. Robbins called the massacre “antisemitic hatred, murder, and a complete atrocity” and called out Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) for “endorsing the actions of Hamas.”

    For that moment of principled clarity, Mr. Robbins was criticized by the faculty. On Oct. 12, faculty chair Leila Hudson received an email from a professor (name redacted) who expressed “concern” that “President Robbins email and others’ smears are chilling SJP dissent.” (Mr. Robbins had noted that while SJP didn’t speak for the university, the group has “the constitutional right to hold their views and to express them in a safe environment.”)

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    The Editorial Board

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  • What to Know About Trump’s Trade Deal With China’s Xi

    Tariffs, soybean purchases and a crackdown on fentanyl were among the issues discussed by the two leaders.

    Joshua Jamerson

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  • What to Know About Trump’s Latest Tariffs

    President Trump’s tariff policies have taken numerous twists and turns this year.

    He and President Xi Jinping reached a trade agreement that will see the U.S. lowering tariffs on Chinese imports imposed this year to 20%. When added to tariffs imposed on Chinese imports during Trump’s first term, overall U.S. duties on Chinese imports will total around 47%.

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    Chao Deng

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  • See the Secret Networks Smuggling Drugs to the U.S. From Latin America

    Demand in America for illegal drugs such as fentanyl and cocaine fuels sophisticated systems for smuggling them in. Traffickers deploy everything from fast-moving fiberglass boats to stealthy “narco-subs” to cargo ships to get their products to users without losing shipments to seizures or couriers to arrest. With decades of experience, according to U.S. counternarcotics officials, the traffickers are usually a step ahead of America and its allies in Latin American and Caribbean waters.

    The flow of fentanyl

    Arguably the most dangerous illegal drug consumed by Americans, fentanyl is usually smuggled through ports of entry by U.S. citizens hired as “mules,” moving small amounts of the synthetic opioid for criminal groups such as the Sinaloa cartel, according to U.S. and Mexican officials. Nogales, Ariz., is one of the busiest fentanyl corridors in the U.S., with the drug transported in passenger cars, trucks and other methods.

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    Daniel Kiss

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