NATO Is Papering Over the Cracks After Zelenskiy Loses His Cool There was friction this week between Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy and NATO leaders over their reluctance to give his country a clear timeline on becoming a member of the alliance. Milda Seputyte, Jennifer Jacobs and Natalia Drozdiak spoke to more than a dozen diplomats and officials to discover how it all played out. Europe Can’t Supply Ukraine With Weapons Fast Enough Europe’s defense contractors face a dilemma almost 18 months into the war in Ukraine. Do they gamble on expanding production, assuming the war and tensions with Russia will last indefinitely? Or do they hold back until they get long-term commitments from governments that have spent decades cutting their defense budgets? - Wagner mercenaries have emerged in Belarus as military instructors, the first official sign of the group’s presence in the country since the mutiny in Russia.
China Warplanes Make Biggest Taiwan Incursion in 3 Months China sent the most warplanes into sensitive areas around Taiwan since large-scale military exercises in April, a move that follows visits to the democratically run island by US and Canadian lawmakers. Cindy Wang and Kari Lindberg explain that Beijing argues nations with which it has official ties having contact with Taiwan’s leaders amounts to interference in its internal affairs. - America’s largest semiconductor companies are sending senior executives to Washington in a last-ditch effort to head off new curbs on their sales to China.
Biden Maneuvers Around Another China Spy Row to Improve Ties The Biden administration is maintaining its China-engagement strategy, even after the State Department reported anomalous activity to Microsoft that the tech firm later blamed on China-based hackers. Iain Marlow reports that the hacking episode underlines the growing risks of restarting crucial diplomatic engagement between the world’s two largest economies.
Trump’s New York, Miami Indictments Sparked Extremist Threats Former US President Donald Trump’s criminal indictments in New York and Miami sparked a barrage of threats from extremist supporters and alleged Russian hackers, including bomb warnings, protest plans and other forms of violence. Jason Leopold delved into 85 pages of documents to provide a behind-the-scenes look at how federal agents responded. |
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