Connect with us

News

Biden administration looking at setting up a US sovereign wealth fund

Published

on

Biden administration looking at setting up a US sovereign wealth fund

Unlock the US Election Countdown newsletter for free

The White House is developing plans to set up a US sovereign wealth fund able to make big investments in strategic sectors, in a break from Washington’s economic orthodoxy as it tries to compete with deep-pocketed geopolitical rivals.

A White House official said on Friday that senior members of the Biden administration, including Jake Sullivan, the national security adviser, and Daleep Singh, the top aide on international economics, had been working on the plans “quietly” in recent months.

The White House official said “the fund’s structure, funding model and investment strategy are still under active discussion”. However, the push was “serious enough” that other government agencies were involved and they planned to “engage Congress and key stakeholders in the private sector on next steps”.

Advertisement

The Treasury department, which would likely have a voice in the talks, declined to comment.

For years, Washington has looked warily at sovereign wealth funds — pools of money held and invested by the government — being set up in countries around the world, arguing that they distort global trade and investment and represent unfair economic competition.

But the plans under way under Joe Biden’s presidency are the latest sign of the way America’s approach to the global economy has changed as competition escalates with China and Russia, and tensions rise in the Middle East.

The White House official said the “premise” of the effort was the US “lacks a pool of patient and flexible capital that could be deployed at home and abroad to advance strategic interests . . . at the pace and scale needed for the US to prevail in a contested geopolitical environment”.

The official said the investments could be deployed to shore up the resilience of supply chains and finance “illiquid but solvent companies that need greater scale to compete against [People’s Republic of China] rivals”.

Advertisement

In addition, a US wealth fund could inject equity into sectors where there are high barriers to entry, such as specialised shipbuilding and nuclear fusion. Another use could involve funding the creation of “synthetic reserves of critical minerals”, the official said.

The White House talks, which were first reported by Bloomberg News, have been going on internally for months. But the idea of creating a US sovereign wealth fund burst on to the political stage this week when former president Donald Trump, who is running for a second term, backed it during a speech at the Economic Club of New York.

“We’ll be able to invest in state-of-the-art manufacturing hubs, advanced defence capabilities, cutting-edge medical research and help save billions of dollars in preventing disease in the first place,” Trump told the audience.

The idea was supported by John Paulson, the hedge fund manager and one of Trump’s biggest allies on Wall Street.

“It would be great to see America join this party and instead of having debt, have savings,” he said.

Advertisement

The campaign of Kamala Harris, the US vice-president who is running against Trump for the presidency, did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the creation of a US sovereign wealth fund.

News

A dangerous nuclear moment : Consider This from NPR

Published

on

A dangerous nuclear moment : Consider This from NPR

Damocles, the Greek courtier of the 4th century BC, who sat through a feast with a sword suspended over him by a single horse hair, circa 350 BC.

Hulton Archive/Getty Images


hide caption

toggle caption

Advertisement

Hulton Archive/Getty Images

In 1963, President John F. Kennedy kicked off a decades-long effort to reduce the risk of nuclear war, when he signed the Limited Test Ban Treaty. Subsequent presidents forged new agreements, but now that global order to safeguard and reduce nuclear arms is deteriorating.

This month the last bilateral nuclear treaty between Russia and the United States expired. Meanwhile, President Trump is pushing the international order to a breaking point, and European leaders are speculating about a new path forward for their collective nuclear defense. 

NPR’s Mary Louise Kelly talks with Christine Wormuth, former Secretary of the Army and now President and C.E.O. of The Nuclear Threat Initiative, about the possibility of a new nuclear arms race.

Advertisement

For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.  Email us at considerthis@npr.org.

This episode was produced by Karen Zamora and Connor Donevan, with audio engineering by Ted Mebane. It was edited by Christopher Intagliata, Brett Neely and Courtney Dorning. Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.

Continue Reading

News

Video: Pride Flag Returns to Stonewall, Defying Federal Order

Published

on

Video: Pride Flag Returns to Stonewall, Defying Federal Order

new video loaded: Pride Flag Returns to Stonewall, Defying Federal Order

transcript

transcript

Pride Flag Returns to Stonewall, Defying Federal Order

Hundreds gathered near the historic Stonewall Inn to watch the Pride flag being hoisted at a monument honoring the L.G.B.T.Q. rights movement. The flag had been taken down after the Trump administration issued a new directive for national parks.

“I think it’s a beautiful thing and it should always fly here.” “When I heard about it, I just got so sad and then so mad. Not in my town. This is history. It’s a memorial.” “This is the one monument that’s stood up and stood for the queer community, and we need to keep it going.” ”They’re probably going to take it down again, maybe, but it’ll just go back up.” “I think community events like these help show that people aren’t alone and we have each other. We have a community to lean on.”

Advertisement
Hundreds gathered near the historic Stonewall Inn to watch the Pride flag being hoisted at a monument honoring the L.G.B.T.Q. rights movement. The flag had been taken down after the Trump administration issued a new directive for national parks.

By Shawn Paik, Christina Kelso and Jorge Mitssunaga

February 13, 2026

Continue Reading

News

Second US aircraft carrier is being sent to the Middle East, AP source says, as Iran tensions high

Published

on

Second US aircraft carrier is being sent to the Middle East, AP source says, as Iran tensions high

WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States will send the world’s largest aircraft carrier to the Middle East to back up another already there, a person familiar with the plans said Friday, putting more American firepower behind President Donald Trump’s efforts to coerce Iran into a deal over its nuclear program.

The USS Gerald R. Ford’s planned deployment to the Mideast comes after Trump only days earlier suggested another round of talks with the Iranians was at hand. Those negotiations didn’t materialize as one of Tehran’s top security officials visited Oman and Qatar this week and exchanged messages with the U.S. intermediaries.

Already, Gulf Arab nations have warned any attack could spiral into another regional conflict in a Mideast still reeling from the Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip. Meanwhile, Iranians are beginning to hold 40-day mourning ceremonies for the thousands killed in Tehran’s bloody crackdown on nationwide protests last month, adding to the internal pressure faced by the sanctions-battered Islamic Republic.

The Ford’s deployment, first reported by The New York Times, will put two carriers and their accompanying warships in the region. Already, the USS Abraham Lincoln and its accompanying guided-missile destroyers are in the Arabian Sea.

The person who spoke to The Associated Press on the deployment did so on condition of anonymity to discuss military movements.

Advertisement

Ford had been part of Venezuela strike force

It marks a quick turnaround for the Ford, which Trump sent from the Mediterranean Sea to the Caribbean last October as the administration build up a huge military presence in the lead-up to the surprise raid last month that captured then-Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.

It also appears to be at odds with Trump’s national security strategy, which put an emphasis on the Western Hemisphere over other parts of the world.

Trump on Thursday warned Iran that failure to reach a deal with his administration would be “very traumatic.” Iran and the United States held indirect talks in Oman last week.

“I guess over the next month, something like that,” Trump said in response to a question about his timeline for striking a deal with Iran on its nuclear program. “It should happen quickly. They should agree very quickly.”

Trump told Axios earlier this week that he was considering sending a second carrier strike group to the Middle East.

Advertisement

Trump held lengthy talks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday and said he insisted to Israel’s leader that negotiations with Iran needed to continue. Netanyahu is urging the administration to press Tehran to scale back its ballistic missile program and end its support for militant groups such as Hamas and Hezbollah as part of any deal.

The USS Ford set out on deployment in late June 2025, which means the crew will have been deployed for eight months in two weeks time. While it is unclear how long the ship will remain in the Middle East, the move sets the crew up for an usually long deployment.

The White House didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Ford’s deployment comes as Iran mourns

Iran at home faces still-simmering anger over its wide-ranging suppression of all dissent in the Islamic Republic. That rage may intensify in the coming days as families of the dead begin marking the traditional 40-day mourning for the loved ones. Already, online videos have shown mourners gathering in different parts of the country, holding portraits of their dead.

One video purported to show mourners at a graveyard in Iran’s Razavi Khorasan province, home to Mashhad, on Thursday. There, with a large portable speaker, people sang the patriotic song “Ey Iran,” which dates to 1940s Iran under the rule of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. While initially banned after the 1979 Islamic Revolution, Iran’s theocratic government has played it to drum up support.

Advertisement

“Oh Iran, a land of full of jewels, your soil is full of art,” they sang. “May evil wishes be far from you. May you live eternal. Oh enemy, if you are a piece of granite, I am iron.”

___

Gambrell reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Associated Press writer Aamer Madhani contributed to this report.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending