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Trump shooting plays into Russia, China plans to divide US ahead of elections

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Trump shooting plays into Russia, China plans to divide US ahead of elections

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The assassination attempt on presidential hopeful Donald Trump over the weekend grabbed global attention as leaders, diplomats and dignitaries alike expressed their shock over what many said was an attack on democracy. 

Questions have mounted regarding the Secret Service’s security failures and conspiracy theories have already begun to circulate across social media platforms – chaos that security officials agree plays right into the hands of the U.S.’s chief adversaries.

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“They always look for opportunities to exploit our vulnerabilities,” Dan Hoffman, former CIA Moscow station chief told Fox News Digital. “It’s our greatest strength, our democracy, but to them it’s also a vulnerability because it plays out for all of us to see.

“They’ll weaponize this against us,” he added in reference to the Saturday shooting that took place during a Trump rally in Pennsylvania.

Secret Service agents surround former President Trump onstage at a rally on July 13, 2024, in Butler, Pennsylvania. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

TRUMP LEADS BIDEN IN BLUE STATE FOLLOWING ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT: POLL

Nations like Russia and China have long been known to employ soft-war tactics against the U.S. through disinformation campaigns, malware attacks and election interference – all of which are intended to deepen divisions and break down societal trust in Western institutions.

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Hoffman said Russia will likely stoke distrust among agencies like Homeland Security, the Secret Service and the FBI by pushing conspiracy theories and playing in to people’s anger.

“They want to divide this country and make Democrats and Republicans hate each other,” he added. “They want us not to trust our democratic institutions.”

Rebekah Koffler, a former Defense Intelligence Agency intel officer specializing in Russian doctrine, echoed Hoffman’s warnings and explained that roughly a decade ago Moscow assessed the societal vulnerabilities mounting in the U.S. and has continued to act on it since.

Russian President Vladimir Putin, former President Donald Trump, President Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping (Getty Images)

“They saw signs of a society fracturing along various lines,” she said, pointing to political, religious and ethnic divisions persistent in the U.S. 

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Koffler explained that just as Washington has deemed Moscow a chief security concern, Russia has also declared the U.S. and the NATO alliance its “number one” security threat. 

“The Russians decided to ‘help’ fracture our society and drive it to that point of social unrest and civil war,” she added. “And that’s what we saw, election interference and things of that nature.”

“The assassination attempt just confirmed to them that that is an achievable goal,” Koffler added. 

Like Moscow, Beijing is also keeping an eye on the U.S. election and any potential unrest that may play into the Chinese Communist Party’s [CCP] narrative of countering democratic values. 

Heino Klinck, former deputy assistant secretary of defense for East Asia and military attaché to China, pointed to the CCP’s immediate portrayal of the assassination attempt among its state-controlled media.

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Trump supporters are seen covered with blood in the stands after shots were fired during the campaign event in Butler, Pennsylvania, July 13, 2024. (Rebecca Droke/AFP via Getty Images)

“They’re spinning this, and they are spinning it from the perspective of American democracy is chaotic,” he told Fox News Digital. “It is unsafe, it is violent, it is unstable – with the implication being for the Chinese populace, our system is much better.”

While Russia may look to utilize the apparent instability in the U.S. to further weaken American faith in democracy, China will attempt to use it for its geopolitical aims.

“The Chinese government will utilize this both for foreign audiences, as well as for the Chinese domestic consumption,” Klinck said. “The Chinese government tries to juxtapose itself as a partner for other countries… particularly in the global south.”

“I think what they are going to do is say that Beijing is a much more reliable, a more stable [partner] than the United States.”

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NATO’S STOLTENBERG SIDESTEPS BIDEN, TRUMP SPAT, CHAMPIONS NATIONS HITTING SPENDING TARGETS

Klinck said the CCP’s messaging could be effective when employed against nations with authoritarian leanings.

The China expert said it is not just U.S. democracy that is under threat from attack and pointed to the 2022 assassination of former Japanese Prime Minster Shinzō Abe, who was shot while speaking at a political event, as well as the May shooting of Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico following a government meeting.

Former President Trump is rushed offstage on July 13, 2024, in Butler, Pennsylvania. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

Recent reporting following the assassination attempt on Trump has suggested that there is growing concern that instability in the U.S. could lead to instability among other Western nations. 

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“The assassination attempt has been met with revulsion across the world and as an attack on American democracy. I do think there is tremendous concern about what has happened and a sense of real shock,” Nile Gardiner, director of the Heritage Foundation’s Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom, told Fox News Digital.

But Gardiner also said he believes Trump’s reaction immediately following the shooting “is a demonstration that democracy in America will not be destroyed by the forces of terror.”

“Trump’s response will actually reassure America’s allies that democracy in the United States will not be defeated. It remains strong,” he added. 

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Head of Ukraine’s security service Maliuk to be replaced, Zelenskiy says

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Head of Ukraine’s security service Maliuk to be replaced, Zelenskiy says

KYIV, Jan 5 (Reuters) – Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on Monday that he planned to replace the head of the country’s SBU security service, Vasyl Maliuk, as part of a wider reshuffle that has also seen a new presidential chief of staff.

Maliuk was appointed SBU chief in February 2023, having already served as acting head for months before.

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During his tenure, the service has carried out a number of high-profile operations, including an audacious drone attack on dozens of Russian strategic bombers stationed thousands of kilometers from Ukraine.

The SBU said he also oversaw a strike on a Russian submarine and three attacks on the bridge connecting Russia to the occupied Crimean peninsula, a crucial logistical node for Moscow.

Maliuk has been praised by analysts for improving the SBU’s effectiveness, after his predecessor Ivan Bakanov was dismissed by Zelenskiy in July 2022 for failing to root out Russian spies.

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Zelenskiy said on X that he had asked Maliuk instead to focus more on combat operations, adding: “There must be more Ukrainian asymmetric operations against the occupier and the Russian state, and more solid results in eliminating the enemy.”

The move comes days after Zelenskiy announced military intelligence chief Kyrylo Budanov would become his new chief of staff, and that he would seek to appoint new defence and energy ministers.

Reporting by Yuliia Dysa and Max Hunder
Editing by Gareth Jones and Toby Chopra

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles., opens new tab

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Mexican president rejects US sending troops to her country: ‘I don’t believe in an invasion’

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Mexican president rejects US sending troops to her country: ‘I don’t believe in an invasion’

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Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum on Monday condemned what she described as U.S. intervention in Venezuela and rejected the idea of American troops entering Mexico, reaffirming her government’s commitment to national sovereignty.

“We categorically reject intervention in the internal affairs of other countries,” Sheinbaum said at a press conference in Mexico City, according to an official transcript of the speech released by her office.

“The history of Latin America is clear and forceful, the intervention has never brought democracy, it has never generated well-being or lasting stability. Only people can build their own future, decide their path, exercise sovereignty over their natural resources and freely define their form of government,” she said.

The U.S. military on Saturday carried out an operation in Caracas, extracting former Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, from their compound.

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Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum answers questions during her morning press conference at Palacio Nacional in Mexico City on Jan. 5, 2026. (Raquel Cunha/Reuters)

Maduro and Flores were boarded onto USS Iwo Jima and flown to New York to face federal charges, with their arraignment taking place on Monday in Manhattan.

Maduro is charged with four counts: narco-terrorism conspiracy, cocaine importation conspiracy, possession of machine-guns and destructive devices, and conspiracy to possess machine-guns and destructive devices.

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His wife is charged with three counts: cocaine importation conspiracy, possession of machine-guns and destructive devices, and conspiracy to possess machine-guns and destructive devices.

Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores are seen in handcuffs after landing at a Manhattan helipad, escorted by heavily armed Federal agents as they make their way into an armored car en route to a Federal courthouse in Manhattan on Jan. 5, 2026. (TheImageDirect.com)

Sheinbaum said that following the capture of Venezuela’s leader and his wife, and amid warnings from President Donald Trump that Mexico must “get their act together,” Mexican sovereignty and self-determination remain non-negotiable.

Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One that he thinks Sheinbaum is a “terrific person,” but the cartels are “running Mexico.”

“We’re going to have to do something. We’d love Mexico to do it, they’re capable of doing it, but unfortunately the cartels are very strong in Mexico,” Trump said.

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Sheinbaum said her country is cooperating with the United States to help fight against drug trafficking, organized crime and the flow of fentanyl.

President Donald Trump speaks at his Mar-a-Lago club, Saturday, Jan. 3, 2026, in Palm Beach, Fla, as Secretary of State Marco Rubio and War Secretary Pete Hegseth listen. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

“I don’t believe in an invasion. I don’t even think it’s something they’re taking very seriously,” Sheinbaum told reporters in Spanish when asked about a potential U.S. intervention, according to Reuters’ translation of her remarks.

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She said Trump has repeatedly insisted during their phone conversations that the U.S. Army be allowed to enter Mexico.

“We have said no very firmly — first because we defend our sovereignty, and second because it is not necessary,” Sheinbaum told reporters.

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Free civic space in France, Italy and Germany under threat, study says

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Free civic space in France, Italy and Germany under threat, study says

France, Germany and Italy are the three European Union countries experiencing a worsening environment for civil society, according to a report by CIVICUS, the global alliance of civil society organisations and activists.

All three member states were downgraded from “narrowed” to “obstructed” — the third-lowest of five possible categories.

The annual report tracks the state of freedom of association, peaceful assembly and expression in 198 countries and territories, rating them as open, narrowed, obstructed, repressed or closed.

Across Europe, the most frequently reported violations include the detention of protesters, disruption of demonstrations, attacks on journalists, use of excessive force and public vilification.

“Far fewer people in Europe can exercise fundamental freedoms without significant barriers, largely due to intensifying crackdowns on protests and human rights defenders in some of Europe’s largest democracies,” Tara Petrović, Europe and Central Asia researcher for the CIVICUS Monitor, said.

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“European leaders, particularly within the EU, must push back on these trends so that the continent remains at the forefront of protecting rights and civic space.”

France’s downgrade reflects an accumulation of growing restrictions on peaceful protests and freedom of expression, alongside the misuse of laws to dissolve NGOs and intimidate activists in recent years.

Meanwhile, Germany’s civic space deterioration has occurred “at an alarming rate”, according to the report.

The drop is due to repression of those demonstrating for climate justice, migrant rights and against austerity measures.

“German authorities have paired political pressure with heavy-handed policing to suppress free expression, from storming a relocated event with UN Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese to monitoring students who livestreamed it,” the report noted.

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The situation for civil society in Italy has worsened following new laws passed in 2025 that introduced dozens of new criminal offences, including harsher penalties for peaceful protests.

In Europe, Georgia and Serbia moved to the “repressed” category, the second-worst civic space rating, while Switzerland changed to “narrowed”.

This shift is largely due to intensifying crackdowns on human rights defenders and protests in some of Europe’s largest democracies.

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