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Slovakia to send 13 MiG-29 fighter jets to Ukraine

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Slovakia to send 13 MiG-29 fighter jets to Ukraine

A secret plan drawn up by Russia’s safety service, the FSB, lays out detailed choices to destabilize Moldova — together with supporting pro-Russian teams, using the Orthodox Church and threatening to chop off provides of pure gasoline.

The doc seems to have been drawn as much as thwart Moldova’s tilt to the West, which incorporates nearer relations with NATO and an software to hitch the European Union. It repeatedly refers back to the significance of stopping Moldova from becoming a member of NATO.

It was obtained and first disclosed by a consortium of media, together with VSquare and Frontstory, RISE Moldova, Expressen in Sweden, the File Centre for Investigative Journalism and different retailers.

CNN has seen the total doc, which seems to have been written in 2021 by the FSB’s Directorate for Cross-Border Cooperation. Its title is “Strategic aims of the Russian Federation within the Republic of Moldova.”

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The doc units out a 10-year technique for bringing Moldova, a former Soviet republic sandwiched between Ukraine and Romania, inside Russia’s sphere of affect.

The plan consists of making Moldova depending on imports of Russian gasoline and stirring up social battle, in addition to attempting to dam Moldova’s efforts to realize affect within the pro-Russian breakaway area of Transnistria, the place some 1,500 Russian troopers are stationed.

Ukraine border: Russia has accused Ukraine of planning to invade and take over Transnistria, which borders southwestern Ukraine. The Russian protection ministry mentioned final month that the Ukrainians had been gathering armor in a number of border villages. Moldova and Ukraine have each dismissed the declare.

Russia’s response: Requested concerning the doc Thursday, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov mentioned: “We all know nothing of the existence of such a plan. I don’t rule out that that is one other faux. Russia has all the time been and stays open to constructing good-neighborly, mutually useful relations, together with with Moldova.”

Peskov added: “We’re very sorry that the present management of Moldova is experiencing utterly unjustified and unfounded prejudices towards Moscow.”

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US foreign policy is too volatile to lead the world

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US foreign policy is too volatile to lead the world

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The old line about New England weather — if you don’t like it, wait a little — describes US foreign policy just as well nowadays. Other countries are exploiting this fickleness.

Joe Biden doesn’t rule out that Benjamin Netanyahu is delaying a truce in the Middle East until the possible return of Donald Trump, under whom the Israeli premier might have a freer hand. Nor does it take a paranoid cast of mind to suspect that Vladimir Putin has been holding out for Trump’s re-election for two years or more.

Deplore the cynicism of these foreign leaders all you want. Their behaviour is only possible because a gap between Democratic and Republican policies exists in the first place. The impotence of the Biden administration of late stems from that domestic US split, not his old age or the guile of leaders of much weaker countries. It is structural, not personal. As such, it is liable to afflict his successors.

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The biggest drag on American power, besides the nation’s reduced share of world output, is its ever-changing mind. A volatile foreign policy undermines the US twice over. First, it incentivises unscrupulous leaders to wait out the president of the day until a more amenable one comes along. Second, compared to China, its superpower rival, the US is difficult for third countries to plan around.

If Netanyahu is an example of the first problem, America’s waning stature in south-east Asia, which is borne out in surveys of elites there, might be proof of the second. The US has been attentive to that crucial region, then disengaged; an enthusiast for transpacific trade, then stingy about access to its domestic market; gnomic about Taiwan under Trump, then strident under Biden. Something as basic as whether a country would be better-received in Washington if it democratised (Asean regimes often hover on the democratic-autocratic cusp) varies from White House to White House.

And this isn’t the most extreme case of American unreliability. Consider the US line on climate change. Bill Clinton signed the Kyoto protocol in 1998. George W Bush withdrew from it in 2001. Barack Obama signed the much broader Paris agreement in 2015. Trump withdrew from it in 2017. Biden recommitted to Paris as one of his first acts as president in 2021. If Trump withdraws again, as reports over the summer suggested he might, that would be five reversals of US policy on a subject of world importance within a generation.

Someone observing all this from Beijing or Moscow might tut and say, “Well, if you will allow multi-party elections”. But sudden twists in policy are not inevitable in a democracy. The US used to change government every few years while keeping up an amazing philosophical unity. All the presidents between 1945 and 2016 supported Nato, European integration, the Bretton Woods institutions (if not dollar-gold convertibility) and a global web of garrisons. Even the Vietnam war was a bipartisan debacle. Don’t believe the credulous and almost mystical trope that “eastern” autocracies think in hundred-year cycles that free societies are too skittish to match. If that were true, why have so few survived?

The problem isn’t democracy per se. It is the rise of partisan feeling within America. Even on trade, towards which there has been a general cooling in Washington, the difference between the parties is sharp: Democrats want a “small yard with a high fence”, while Trump talks up a 20 per cent tariff on all imports. How does a mid-sized, non-western nation chart a course here? It is not as if there is no alternative superpower orbit to join.

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If US diplomats were all career civil servants, there might at least be some smoothing of the differences between administrations. In fact, plum postings are often “political”. They can reinforce rather than counteract the partisan discontinuities.

The sheer plasticity of US policy is nowhere clearer than in Ukraine. The ultimate answer to the war, I keep hearing in polite company, is to freeze the battle lines, then secure non-occupied Ukraine with Nato membership or something like it. All very rational and 20th century. But a security guarantee is only as good as the will of a future US president to honour it. Would Trump or a Trumpist do that? Don’t rule it out: his foreign record is subtler than the “isolationist” tag allows. (Isolationists don’t fire missiles at Syria.) Even Republicans might see that reneging on such a commitment would end US credibility worldwide. But the fact that we ask the question admits doubt. The US at its peak had more going for it than overwhelming strength. It had a certain amount of predictability. Without either, its purchase on events can’t be the same.

The miracle of 21st-century America is how inexpensive its political divisions have been economically. The US has surged ahead of Europe despite failing to achieve so much as a peaceful transfer of power at the last election. The country has almost no material incentive to fix its domestic rifts. But the geopolitical cost of them, the effect on America’s external steadiness, and therefore its leadership claims: that’s a different matter. It has always been obvious, unlike in Europe, who one calls to speak to America. But it has come to matter far too much who answers the phone each time.

janan.ganesh@ft.com

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Weather To Deteriorate In Florida Ahead Of Milton – Videos from The Weather Channel

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Weather To Deteriorate In Florida Ahead Of Milton – Videos from The Weather Channel
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X returns to Brazil after Elon Musk complies with court orders

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X returns to Brazil after Elon Musk complies with court orders

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Brazil’s supreme court on Tuesday authorised the restoration of public access to Elon Musk’s X following a month-long ban, after the billionaire backed down in his feud with the top tribunal and agreed to remove extremist content from the social media platform.

The climbdown represents an about-face for Musk, who for months had taunted the court, accusing Justice Alexandre de Moraes of being a “dictator” for demanding that X remove accounts linked to far-right groups in Brazil.

“This quarrel with X demonstrated that no individual, no corporation and no platform is above the law,” said Luca Belli, a professor at the Getulio Vargas Foundation law school in Rio de Janeiro.

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“Although many people have tried to frame this as a freedom of speech issue, at the end it really boils down to sovereignty, to the capacity of a country to regulate services and technologies according to laws,” Belli added.

Access to X in Brazil was suspended by Moraes at the end of August after the company ignored a court deadline to appoint a legal representative for its Brazilian operation — a requirement under the country’s civil code.

Musk had weeks earlier shuttered X’s office in São Paulo and dismissed its legal representative, alleging that she had been threatened with fines and arrest over the company’s refusal to remove content.

For much of this year, Musk publicly goaded Moraes on social media, demanding his impeachment and posting mocked-up photos of the justice in prison.

The actions made the billionaire a hero among many on the Brazilian right, who believe a long-running crusade against online disinformation and extremism by the judge had gone too far.

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One month into its suspension, however, X changed course, agreeing to appoint a legal representative in Brazil and pay millions of dollars in fines, including fees imposed on the platform after it briefly skirted the ban last month using a technical manoeuvre.

X also agreed to remove the accounts that provoked the feud between the judge and the billionaire in the first place.

Ahead of lifting the ban, Moraes unfroze bank accounts and assets linked to both X and Musk’s satellite internet provider Starlink.

The latter had been frozen because Moraes deemed Starlink to be part of a “de facto economic unit” with X.

Starlink is a wholly owned subsidiary of SpaceX, in which Musk owns about 40 per cent of the stock, but commands 79 per cent of voting rights.

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Before the ban, X had roughly 20mn users in Brazil, making it the ninth most popular social media platform, far behind Instagram and TikTok.

After the suspension, millions of Brazilians flocked to Bluesky, a similar microblogging site, which claims to have 10mn users worldwide.

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