Wednesday, May 25th, 2022
Gas prices continue to rise, hit $4.71 per gallon The average price of a gallon of regular-grade gasoline reached $4.71 nationwide, up 33 cents in the past two weeks, industry analyst Trilby Lundberg of the Lundberg Survey said Sunday. She said the increase was due to rising crude oil prices and limited gasoline supplies. The fuel market has been roiled by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which has disrupted distribution networks and prompted a U.S. embargo on Russian oil. The current U.S. price is up $1.61 from the same time last year. The average price of diesel jumped 9 cents in the last two weeks to $5.66 per gallon. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NATO calls Russia’s Ukraine invasion a ‘big strategic mistake’ NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg told participants at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Tuesday that Russian President Vladimir Putin had “made a big strategic mistake” by ordering his military to invade Ukraine. Tuesday marked three months of fighting, with no immediate hope for peace. Russia has suffered huge losses and abandoned an attempt to seize the capital, Kyiv. It is now focusing on expanding areas in eastern Ukraine that pro-Russian separatists controlled before the war. Russia intensified its offensive in the Donbas region, and tried to surround Ukrainian fighters in Severodonetsk, Lysychansk, and Rubizhne. Russian forces are bombarding Severodonetsk mercilessly, local commanders report. If Russia captures the city, it will control the Luhansk region, Britain’s Foreign Ministry said. THE WASHINGTON POST
Former President of Moldova Igor Dodon is arrested for charges including corruption and treason. (Euronews)
The Ukrainian city of Pokrovsk is hit by Russian missiles, wounding several people. (AP)
A Russian cruise missile strike destroys a shopping centre and several homes in the city of Zaporizhzhia, killing one person and wounding three others. At least 62 homes were damaged, according to local officials. (Ukrinform)
Marks & Spencer announces that it is permanently closing all of its 48 stores in Russia, which employ 1,200 people, saying it is a “values-led business”. (Sky News)
Russian Ground Forces seize control of Svitlodarsk in Donetsk Oblast, according to regional governor Pavlo Kyrylenko. (Reuters)
Russia’s State Duma approves a bill removing the upper age limit for contractual service in the Russian Armed Forces. The bill will now head to President Vladimir Putin to sign into law. (Reuters)
The United States Department of Treasury announces that it will not renew the sanctions exemption which permits Russia to service its sovereign debt to American investors. Allowing the exemption to expire increases the likelihood that Russia will default on that debt this summer. (The Wall Street Journal)
Woody Harrelson ‘doesn’t believe in the germ theory’ Not since his Reddit Ask Me Anything has a Woody Harrelson interview gone so off the rails. In a conversation with Vanity Fair, the actor bemoaned “absurd” COVID-19 protocols on film sets, calling them “not very conducive to good work” and proclaiming he finds them ridiculous “as one who doesn’t believe in the germ theory.” Harrelson went on to argue that during the pandemic, states that “didn’t do the protocols fared better by far than the states that did,” and he slammed “idiocy” that came from “top medical officials in the U.S., like Fauci.” The Zombieland star can assure us he’s an expert in this field, though, because “it’s been seven and a half years since I got sick” due to his immune system being strong. “I’m internally clean,” he said. Who needs medical advice from Dr. Fauci when you can get it from the cast of Venom: Let There Be Carnage? VANITY FAIR
Florence Pugh slams rumors she’s dating Will Poulter The death of Florence Pugh and Zach Braff’s relationship has been greatly exaggerated. Pugh has shut down rumors she’s dating Will Poulter, her co-star in Midsommar, after fans raised eyebrows over photos of them at the beach. The 26-year-old Little Women star said she and Poulter were there with their friends, who “are always about a half a metre away from us in every picture” but were “cleverly cut out” of the ones that went viral to make it seem like there’s something romantic going on. “I understand that the nature of this job is that you sometimes get your privacy completely bulldozed by paparazzi,” she wrote, “but to fabricate this stuff actually does more damage than good.” Pugh, who’s been dating Braff for a few years, thanked everyone for “saying we look sexy” but stressed that this “doesn’t mean we’re doing the sexy.” Sometimes celebrity gossip can be a beach. PAGE SIX
M23 fighters besiege a military base in Rumangabo, Democratic Republic of the Congo. (Reuters)
Fighting breaks out between Arab and Tama gold miners in the Kouri Bougoudi district of Northern Chad. The rebel Front for Change and Concord in Chad group says that over 200 people have been killed. (Reuters)
Governor of Oklahoma Kevin Stitt signs HB 4327 into law, making Oklahoma the first state in the United States to completely ban abortion. (ABC News)
At least five people are killed when a bomb explodes at a Shia mosque in Kabul, Afghanistan. (Reuters)
Nine passengers are killed when improvised explosive devices hidden inside a group of minivans detonate in Mazar-i-Sharif, Balkh Province. (AP)
Colombian and Venezuelan intelligence officials confirm the death of Miguel Botache Santillana, alias Gentil Duarte, top leader of the FARC dissidents. (Caracol Radio)
Kashmiri separatist leader Yasin Malik is sentenced to life in prison by a special Indian court. (Reuters)
A series of bomb threats were made via email to schools and government institutions in Sarajevo Canton, Bosnia and Herzegovina, prompting evacuations. No bombs have been found. (N1)
Gunman kills 19 students, 2 adults at Texas elementary school A gunman killed at least 19 students and two adults at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, on Tuesday, in the deadliest elementary-school shooting in Texas history. Police identified the attacker, who was killed in a shootout with law enforcement officers, as Salvador Ramos, 18. Investigators said Ramos shot and wounded his grandmother and fled in a car that crashed outside the school. Armed with two rifles, he allegedly entered the school of about 600 2nd- to 4th-graders and opened fire. Ambulances rushed several wounded people to hospitals. President Biden offered assistance to Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, and renewed a call for gun reform. “Why are we willing to live with this carnage?” Biden asked. SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWSTHE TEXAS TRIBUNE
University of California to pay record settlement in sexual abuse case The University of California system agreed Tuesday to pay another $374.4 million to settle lawsuits filed by hundreds of women who accused a former UCLA gynecologist of sexual assault. The agreement covers 312 former patients who say the doctor, James Heaps, abused them during what were supposed to be medical examinations between 1983 and 2018. The latest settlement brings the total payouts in cases involving Heaps to nearly $700 million, the most ever paid by a public university to settle sexual abuse allegations. Heaps specialized in cancer treatment. Some of the plaintiffs were cancer patients. A few had late-stage, terminal cancers. One died before a Los Angeles Superior Court judge approved the settlement. LOS ANGELES TIMES
Biden expected to sign police reform executive order President Biden on Wednesday is expected to sign an executive order to reform federal policing, two years after the death of George Floyd. Floyd was killed by a Minneapolis police officer who pinned him to the ground for nine minutes, restricting his breathing. Biden will direct federal agencies to revise their use-of-force policies and create a database of officers fired for misconduct. He will also restrict the transfer of most military equipment to police agencies, The New York Times reported. The White House started working on the order last year when police reform failed in the Senate. A leaked draft reportedly drew an angry reaction from policing groups, but the White House made the final version more centrist. CBS NEWS
NOAA predicts 7th straight unusually active hurricane season The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration warned Tuesday that the looming Atlantic hurricane season will likely be unusually active. The agency’s annual hurricane season outlook predicted 14 to 21 named storms, with six to 10 reaching hurricane strength. Three to six could become major hurricanes, Category 3 or greater. This would be the seventh straight year of above-average activity. The last two seasons used up the list of 21 storm names, an unprecedented burst of activity. The 2020 season was the most active Atlantic hurricane season on record. This year’s forecast is based on increasing Atlantic and Caribbean temperatures, plus a La Niña event bringing cooler waters to the tropical Pacific. AXIOS
U.S. births edge higher after pandemic plummet U.S. births increased by 1 percent last year compared with 2020, although there were still fewer births than in 2019, before the coronavirus pandemic hit, according to a government report released Tuesday. There were nearly 3.7 million births reported in the U.S. last year, up from 3.6 million the year before but 86,000 fewer than in 2019. U.S. births were falling for more than a decade before the coronavirus crisis started. Officials speculated that last year’s rise was partly due to couples who had delayed trying to get pregnant early in the pandemic. Deliveries were extremely low in January but picked up later in the year, said Brady Hamilton of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Airbnb halts rentals in China Airbnb will stop offering homes and experiences inside China and instead focus on helping Chinese tourists find accommodations in other countries, an Airbnb official said Tuesday. The announcement also confirmed a Monday report by CNBC that Airbnb would maintain an office in Beijing with hundreds of employees. San Francisco-based Airbnb launched operations in China in 2016 but has faced increasing domestic competition. The company also saw a sharp drop in bookings due to China’s strict COVID-19 lockdowns, which are still affecting many cities. Other foreign internet companies such as Yahoo and eBay previously withdrew from China due to the dual challenges of local rivals and government regulations. CNBC
MSNBC hires Jen Psaki Former White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki has joined MSNBC, where she will appear on cable and streaming programs and host her own show, the network said Tuesday. Psaki’s program, scheduled to launch in early 2023, will “bring together her unique perspective from behind the podium and her deep experience in the highest levels of government and presidential politics,” MSNBC said. “Breaking down the facts and getting to the bottom of what’s driving the issues that matter most to people in this country has never been more important,” Psaki tweeted. Psaki, who served in the White House for President Biden’s first 16 months in office, is also expected to participate in NBC and MSNBC coverage of the midterms and the 2024 presidential election. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Pfizer to offer 23 drugs, vaccines at low cost in poorer countries Pfizer said Wednesday it will sell 23 products, including its COVID-19 vaccine, at not-for-profit prices to some of the world’s poorest countries. The drugmaker said it will charge only enough to cover manufacturing and “minimal” distribution costs for the drugs, which will also include its COVID treatment Paxlovid. Pfizer — which announced the program at the World Economic Forum’s annual gathering in Davos, Switzerland — said the other drugs would include medicines and vaccines to treat infectious diseases, cancers, and other conditions. The initiative is part of an effort to increase health equity in 45 countries, mostly in Africa but also including Haiti, Syria, Cambodia, and North Korea. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
FTC examines industry role in baby formula shortage The Federal Trade Commission announced Tuesday that it is investigating industry’s role in the shortage of baby formula in the United States. “The FTC is launching a public inquiry to identify the factors that contributed to the shortage or hampered our ability to respond to it,” FTC chairwoman Lina M. Khan said in a statement. “Learning from this experience can help determine how we can minimize the risk of similar shortages in the markets for other life-sustaining products.” The agency said it would examine how industry consolidation affected supply, and whether online resellers had taken advantage of the crisis to unfairly profit at the expense of families desperately searching for enough formula to feed their infants. THE NEW YORK TIMES
Glencore to pay $1.5 billion to resolve bribery cases Commodities firm Glencore said Tuesday it will pay $1.5 billion in penalties to resolve corruption allegations in the U.S., Britain, and Brazil. The company said $700 million would go to settling a bribery inquiry in the U.S. Another $486 million will resolve market manipulation allegations, and $166 million in fines are earmarked for an investigation by the British Serious Fraud Office. Glencore has indicated it will plead guilty to U.K. bribery charges next month. The Anglo-Swiss company also agreed to pay $40 million in a Brazil bribery case. The U.S. Justice Department said its case against Glencore involved a “decade-long scheme” to “make and conceal corrupt payments and bribes” in Africa and Latin America. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Ricky Gervais sparks backlash for jokes about trans people Netflix is facing yet another trans jokes controversy, and this time, Dave Chappelle isn’t even involved. In his new special that debuted Tuesday on Netflix, comedian Ricky Gervais makes numerous graphic jokes about transgender people. Mere minutes in, he jokes about ” old fashioned women,” the “ones with wombs,” which he contrasts with “the new women,” the “ones with beards and c–ks.” As part of a tirade against cancel culture, Gervais also complains that saying “women don’t have penises” can get you “canceled on Twitter.” Later, he assures viewers that “in real life, of course I support trans rights,” though this just leads to another graphic punchline: “But meet me halfway, ladies: Lose the c–k.” The special quickly sparked significant backlash online, with the LGBTQ website PinkNews labeling it “an anti-trans garbage fire” and Variety‘s Daniel D’Addario saying it proves that Netflix is “not on anyone’s side but its own.” And with that, Netflix’s rocky year just got even rockier. VARIETY
Seth Green’s NFT show hits a snag after his Bored Ape is ‘literally kidnapped’ It would appear there might be some issues with building entire shows around NFTs other than nobody wanting to watch them. Seth Green has been developing a show called White Horse Tavern, which is based on characters in his NFT collection. But Green has run into a problem: a scammer has stolen four of his NFTs, meaning “he lost the commercial rights to his show’s cartoon protagonist, a scruffy Bored Ape named Fred Simian, whose likeness and usage rights now belong to someone else,” BuzzFeed News reports. Green says he bought the ape last year and spent the “last several months developing and exploiting the IP to make it into the star of this show.” But “days before he’s set to make his world debut,” Green said, “he’s literally kidnapped.” Hey, if getting his beloved Fred back doesn’t work out, at least Green may have just stumbled upon a great plot for Taken 4. BUZZFEED NEWS
Tuesday, May 24th, 2022
Ukrainian authorities say that about 200 dead people are found in the rubble of an apartment building in Mariupol, Donetsk Oblast. (AP)
Hungary declares a state of emergency over the war in Ukraine and problems in the Hungarian economy caused in part by the conflict. (Reuters)
Eleven people are killed during a mass shooting at a hotel in Celaya, Guanajuato, Mexico. (Reuters)
Twenty-one people are killed in a shootout between Brazilian police and the Comando Vermelho gang in a favela in Rio de Janeiro. (Reuters)
The National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers votes to go on a national strike in the United Kingdom for the first time since 1994 after demanding a “decent pay rise, job security and no compulsory redundancies”. (BBC News)
German Health Minister Karl Lauterbach announces that Germany has ordered 40,000 doses of the smallpox vaccine as a precaution, after the country reported its first case of monkeypox. (Axios)
Nineteen children and two teachers are killed in a mass shooting at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, United States. The perpetrator, a local 18-year-old high school student, is killed by police. The gunman had also shot and critically wounded his grandmother earlier in the day. (ABC News)
The Russian State Duma passes a bill that will allow state prosecutors to close Russian bureaus of media outlets from countries that Russia deems “unfriendly”. The bill will now need to be passed by the upper house and receive President Putin’s signature. (Reuters)
Anglo-Swiss commodity trading company Glencore pleads guilty to fraud charges related to bribery and price manipulation when pursuing preferential access to oil contracts. The company expects to pay total fines of $1.5 billion. (Swissinfo)
The Premier League approves the sale of Chelsea F.C. to a U.S. consortium led by Los Angeles Dodgers co-owner Todd Boehly. Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich decided to sell the club after he was sanctioned over his connections to the Russian government. (BBC Sport)
theweek.com/speed-reads/1013808/russia-is-seeing-localized-successes-in-eastern-ukraine-growing-criticism-at
Three people are killed when a drone is shot down in Sanaa. (AP)
Eleven people are killed in a mass shooting in Celaya, Guanajuato. (Reuters)
Eleven people are killed in a shootout between Brazilian police and the Comando Vermelho crime gang in a Rio de Janeiro favela. (Reuters)
Ukrainian authorities say that about 200 dead bodies were found in the rubble of an apartment building in Mariupol, Donetsk Oblast. (AP)
Sri Lanka increases fuel prices to help public finances and combat a debilitating economic crisis. Acting Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe warns that “there is a possibility that inflation will increase further”. (CNA)
The Korean Central News Agency reports that North Korea has a total of 3 million cases of COVID-19. (Korea Herald)
The Czech Republic confirms its first case of monkeypox. (Reuters)
England detects 14 more cases of monkeypox, bringing the case toll to 70 in the country. (Reuters)
Hungary announces a state of emergency over the war in Ukraine and problems in the Hungarian economy caused in part by the conflict. (Reuters)
The Russian State Duma passes a bill that allows state prosecutors to close Russian bureaus of media outlets from countries Russia deems “unfriendly”. The bill awaits passage through the upper house and President Putin’s signature. (Reuters)
Zelensky calls for ‘maximum’ Russia sanctions in Davos address Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Monday delivered a virtual speech to world leaders attending the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, urging them to impose “maximum” sanctions on Russia for invading his country. Zelensky said more nations should embargo Russian oil and block its banks, and foreign companies should pull out of Russia. He added that Ukraine needs at least $5 billion per month in aid. “We need to rebuild entire cities and industries,” Zelensky said. He added that if other nations had provided all the weapons and other aid Ukraine needed in February, when Russia invaded, “the result would be tens of thousands of lives saved.” THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Biden tells Indo-Pacific leaders Ukraine war is a shared challenge President Biden on Tuesday told fellow Indo-Pacific leaders in Tokyo that they are all “navigating a dark hour in our shared history” as they respond to Russia’s “brutal and unprovoked” invasion of Ukraine. “This is more than just a European issue. It’s a global issue,” Biden said at a summit of the “Quad” countries — the United States, Japan, Australia, and India. Biden’s remarks “appeared to be pointed, at least in part, at Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi,” leader of the only Quad country that “has not imposed sanctions or even condemned Russia, its biggest supplier of military hardware,” The Associated Press reports. In his comments, Modi mentioned several trade programs but didn’t bring up the war in Ukraine. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
DOJ revises use-of-force policy The Justice Department has revised its policy on the use of force by requiring federal law-enforcement agents to intervene if they see someone using excessive violence. Attorney General Merrick Garland detailed the change in a memo circulated on Friday and posted on the department’s website Monday, two days before the second anniversary of George Floyd’s death. Floyd, an unarmed Black man, died when a Minneapolis police officer pressed his knee onto his neck for nine minutes as other officers helped or looked on without intervening. The case fueled protests over police killings. “It is the policy of the Department of Justice to value and preserve human life,” Garland wrote. State and local police are not required to follow the federal standard. THE NEW YORK TIMES
Russian diplomat resigns over Ukraine war Russian diplomat Boris Bondarev resigned Monday from his post in the United Nations office in Geneva to protest the Kremlin’s invasion of Ukraine. “Never have I been so ashamed of my country as on Feb. 24 of this year,” Bondarev wrote in his resignation message, which was also posted on LinkedIn. He called Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “aggressive war” a crime against both the Ukrainian and the Russian people. Bondarev’s “scathing letter is one of the most high-profile critiques of the war” from within the Russian government, The Washington Post reports. The Kremlin didn’t immediately comment, but Putin previously dismissed people expressing dissent as “scum and traitors.” THE WASHINGTON POST
Pfizer says COVID booster effective in kids under 5 A booster dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine produces a strong immune response in children under 5, Pfizer said Monday. The company said a trial examining a third dose of its vaccine in young kids found its efficacy to be 80.3 percent in children between six months and under 5 years old. Children in the trial received a third shot, a smaller dose than adults receive, two months after the second dose. Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said the company hopes to soon ask regulators to approve the booster for young children. BioNTech founder Ugur Sahin said the booster appears to provide “high level of protection against the recent COVID-19 strains.” CNN
Anaheim mayor resigns under federal corruption investigation Anaheim, California, Mayor Harry Sidhu resigned Monday amid a federal public corruption investigation connected to the $320 million sale of Angel Stadium. Six City Council members had called on him to step down. Sidhu’s attorney, Paul Meyer, said the mayor denied wrongdoing and was stepping aside to let the city “move forward without distraction.” In an affidavit filed earlier this month, the FBI said Sidhu gave the Angels confidential information at least twice during the city’s talks with the team on selling the stadium. He allegedly hoped the team would make a million-dollar donation to his campaign. The affidavit also accused Sidhu of obstructing an Orange County grand jury investigation. He hasn’t been charged. LOS ANGELES TIMES
Starbucks announces it’s leaving Russia Starbucks announced Monday that it is leaving Russia after operating in the country for 15 years. The coffee giant joins a rising number of companies from the United States and other countries that have decided to exit the Russian market over Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine. McDonald’s, Exxon Mobil, and British American Tobacco have already announced they are ending operations in Russia. Starbucks said it would pay its nearly 2,000 Russian employees for another six months and help them find other jobs. Starbucks had already suspended its Russia business activities on March 8, closing cafes and halting shipments of Starbucks products. CNBC
Snap shares drop after it warns it will miss estimates Snap shares plunged by more than 30 percent in after-hours trading after the Snapchat parent warned Monday that its second-quarter revenue would probably come in below its earlier guidance because the economy has “deteriorated further and faster than anticipated.” The company said in late April it expected revenue to grow between 20 percent and 25 percent compared to a year earlier, but it now expects something short of the low end of that range. The company said in a memo reported late Monday by The Wall Street Journal that it would slow hiring and seek other cost savings for the rest of 2022, saying this remains “a significant investment year” as it follows through with plans to add 500 employees by the start of 2023. MARKETWATCH
28 Activision Blizzard workers to join union Workers in Activision Blizzard’s Raven Software subsidiary voted Monday to join the Communication Workers of America union in the video game industry’s most high-profile successful labor organizing win. Under the 19-to-3 vote, 28 quality assurance testers who work on the company’s popular Call of Duty game series will be forming a union they’ll call the Game Workers Alliance. “Our biggest hope is that our union serves as inspiration for the growing movement of workers organizing at video game studios to create better games and build workplaces that reflect our values and empower all of us,” alliance members said in a statement. Activision Blizzard spokesperson Kelvin Liu said the company respects “the right of all employees to decide whether or not to support or vote for a union.” NPR
Monday, May 23rd, 2022
Russian diplomat Boris Bondarev says that he has resigned in protest following the invasion of Ukraine. (Reuters)
Eleven people are killed and dozens are injured when a building collapses in Abadan, Iran. (BBC)
Telangana reports its first case of the Omicron BA.5 variant in an 80-year old person with no history of travel. (The Indian Express)
Beijing extends its stay-at-home order for workers and students and also orders mass COVID-19 testing amid an increase in the number of COVID-19 cases in the city. (ABC News)
Pfizer and BioNTech say that their COVID-19 vaccine is 80% effective in young children. (The Washington Post)
England reports 36 more monkeypox cases, thereby bringing the total number of cases in the country to 56. (Reuters)
The U.S. CDC says that American health officials are in the process of releasing Jynneos vaccines to combat monkeypox cases. (Axios)
Pakistan launches a new anti-polio drive after a third case of the disease is reported in the country. (The Register Citizen)
President of the United States Joe Biden states that American troops would defend Taiwan militarily in the event of a Chinese invasion, a departure from a traditional policy of strategic ambiguity. (The New York Times)
Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan threatens to launch a new military incursion into northern Syria, targeting US-backed Kurdish Syrian Democratic Forces and expanding its occupation zone along Syria’s northern border with Turkey. (Al-Monitor)
In the first trial for war crimes during the Russian invasion of Ukraine, 21-year-old Vadim Shishimarin, a Russian soldier, is sentenced to life in prison for fatally shooting a 62-year-old civilian. (CNN)
A security guard is killed at the Qatari embassy in Paris, France. (Reuters)
Russian soldier sentenced to life in 1st Ukraine war crimes trial A Ukrainian court on Monday sentenced a 21-year-old Russian soldier to life in prison for killing a Ukrainian civilian, in the first war crimes trial since Russia invaded Feb. 24. Sgt. Vadim Shishimarin pleaded guilty to fatally shooting the civilian, 62-year-old Oleksandr Shelipov, as he was pushing his bicycle in a northeastern Ukraine village near the Russian border early in the invasion. Shishimarin testified that an officer ordered him to fire, saying the civilian might have been using his cellphone to tell Ukrainian forces where the Russians were. Shelipov “died on the spot,” yards from his home, said Ukraine’s prosecutor general, Iryna Venediktova. During the trial, Shishimarin asked the victim’s widow to forgive him. THE WASHINGTON POST
Biden says U.S. would defend Taiwan against China President Biden said Monday the U.S. would defend Taiwan militarily if China ever invaded. “That’s the commitment we made,” Biden said. The statement veered from the traditional U.S. “strategic ambiguity” on how far the U.S. would go to protect Taiwan, which China considers a renegade province. “We agreed with the One China policy, we signed on to it,” Biden said, “but the idea that [Taiwan] can be taken by force is just not appropriate.” He said the need to stand up for Taiwan was “even stronger” following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The 1979 Taiwan Relations Act calls for the U.S. to make sure Taiwan has the means to defend itself, but doesn’t require U.S. intervention. A White House official insisted Biden was merely reemphasizing the 1979 pledge to help Taiwan defend itself. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Polish leader visits Kyiv as Ukraine rules out ceding land to Russia Polish President Andrzej Duda on Sunday made his second visit to the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv since April. Duda said Ukraine does not have to make concessions to Russian President Vladimir Putin to stop Russia’s invasion. Ukrainian officials ruled out ceding territory in any ceasefire deal, and Duda expressed support, saying, “Only Ukraine has the right to decide about its future.” Duda’s visit came as Russia pushed to expand the territory Russia-backed separatists have held in the Donbas region since 2014. Russia has declared full control over the strategically important port city of Mariupol, where the last Ukrainian defenders surrendered at a steel plant last week. CNBC
Biden unveils Asia-Pacific trade deal President Biden on Monday announced a trade deal with 12 Asia-Pacific nations to counter China and boost economic engagement in the region, five years after then-President Donald Trump withdrew from the sweeping Trans-Pacific Partnership. Biden, making his first trip to Asia as president, announced the new Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity in Tokyo after meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida. “Biden hopes IPEF will blunt criticism that he had not included a trade component in his security-heavy Indo-Pacific strategy,” the Financial Times reports. The agreement includes India, Japan, South Korea, Australia, Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, New Zealand, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam. FINANCIAL TIMES
Military jet brings 1st baby formula shipment from Europe U.S. military aircraft flew from Germany to Indianapolis with 78,000 pounds of baby formula on Sunday. The 132 pallets of hypoallergenic, prescription Nestlé Health Science formula will go to babies who are intolerant of protein in cow milk in parts of the country facing the most severe shortages of infant formula, a Biden administration told CNN. The shipment, which was trucked from Switzerland to Germany before being loaded onto the U.S. C-17 cargo jet, will feed 9,000 babies and 18,000 toddlers for a week. “It is a large shipment of very specific and specialized formula,” said Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, who was present for the delivery in Indianapolis. CNN
Australia swears in Anthony Albanese as prime minister Australian Governor-General David Hurley swore in Labor leader Anthony Albanese as Australia’s 31st prime minister on Monday, after Australians voted Saturday to replace the center-right Liberal Party with the center-left Labor Party after nine years. Albanese took over as votes were still being counted to determine whether his party, which so far has 72 seats in the 151-seat House of Representatives, will have a majority or need to cobble together a coalition government. Albanese will travel to Tokyo with new Foreign Minister Penny Wong, the first foreign-born Australian foreign minister, to meet with President Biden, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi — the leaders of the so-called Quad nations. BBC NEWS
Florida health officials investigating nation’s 3rd possible monkeypox case Health officials in Florida announced Sunday they were investigating a “presumptive” monkeypox case, the third possible U.S. case of the rare virus. The Florida Department of Health in Broward County said this case appears to be related to international travel. The first case was reported in a Massachusetts man who tested positive for monkeypox after visiting Canada. Monkeypox spreads via close contact with an infected individual. Early symptoms usually include fever, chills, exhaustion, headache, and muscle weakness, followed by swollen lymph nodes. President Biden told reporters on Sunday that the cases are something “to be concerned about.” National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters the U.S. has a supply of vaccines that can be deployed to treat monkeypox. ABC NEWS
The End