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Your Thursday Briefing

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Your Thursday Briefing

The dying, destruction and deprivation of battle are mounting in Ukraine, from which an estimated two million folks have fled looking for refuge. Within the southern metropolis of Mariupol, Russian commanders look like resorting to ways utilized in Chechnya and Syria: flattening settlements with overwhelming and indiscriminate firepower.

An obvious Russian strike on a maternity hospital in Mariupol destroyed buildings and wounded sufferers and employees members. Throughout town, a whole lot of casualties have been reported. All escape routes have been blocked for days, and persons are slicing down bushes to construct fires for warmth and cooking. See maps of the invasion.

Efforts to barter a cease-fire to present civilians an opportunity to flee have failed repeatedly. For the previous three days, the prospect that aid might attain town although a “humanitarian hall” fell aside in a hail of mortar and artillery fireplace.

Victims: “My complete household died in what you name a particular operation and we name a battle. You are able to do what you need with me. I’ve nothing left to lose.” The story of a household ripped aside by the violence.

In different information from the battle:

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A day after President Biden prohibited power imports from Russia to the U.S., Dmitri Peskov, the Kremlin spokesman, accused Washington of declaring “an financial battle” by way of its sanctions, that are enacting a viselike grip on the Russian economic system and have despatched the ruble tumbling to its lowest ranges in historical past.

U.S. and European monetary penalties and restrictions are throttling banks and different companies in Russia and in Belarus, its ally, limiting the Russian authorities’s capacity to make use of its monumental international foreign money reserves and impeding thousands and thousands of Russians from utilizing their bank cards, gaining access to their financial institution deposits or touring overseas.

International property of rich people and companies allied with the Kremlin have been frozen, and the E.U. expanded the record of individuals and organizations immediately affected by sanctions to almost 1,000. Score businesses have sharply downgraded the Russian authorities’s credit score, signaling that it might be unable to pay collectors.

Exodus: A whole bunch of Western companies have suspended operations in Russia, probably inflicting mass unemployment. Russian lawmakers are contemplating nationalizing the property of international firms that depart in response to the battle.

United Arab Emirates: Sanctions on Russian oligarchs and different allies of President Vladimir Putin could also be undermined by the Gulf state, which has not condemned the invasion and which continues to welcome the Russian figures.

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Austria has suspended its headline-making coronavirus vaccine mandate, which was imposed earlier than the extremely contagious Omicron variant grew to become widespread. Karoline Edtstadler, the minister chargeable for Austria’s constitutional affairs, mentioned the legislation was “not proportionate” given the comparatively gentle signs skilled by most individuals with the variant.

The measure, which might have hit adults who refused to be inoculated with fines of as much as 3,600 euros (about $4,000), took impact early final month, however enforcement was not scheduled to start till subsequent Tuesday. At the very least 74 p.c of the Austrian inhabitants has acquired two or extra doses of a vaccine.

Regardless of excessive caseloads, Austria lately dropped most of its social distancing guidelines in a transfer that echoed different European nations that had been contemplating making an attempt to “dwell with the virus.” Germany and France are additionally scheduled to drop most restrictions by the tip of the month.

Backstop: The authorized framework shall be stored in place in case one other, extra harmful variant turns into dominant sooner or later, Edtstadler mentioned. “Simply because the virus may be very agile, we should be versatile and adaptable,” she informed reporters at a information convention in Vienna.

Listed below are the newest updates and maps of the pandemic.

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In different pandemic developments:

Thirty-five years after Thomas Sankara, the president of Burkina Faso, was assassinated, his supporters hope for justice. However the full fact in regards to the homicide, together with any international position, is elusive.

The tv sequence “Atlanta,” which returns for its third season this month, is without doubt one of the few authentic sequence within the flood of docudramatic reimaginations of real-life occasions which have overtaken streaming platforms of late, Melissa Kirsch writes in The Morning, a sister publication to this briefing.

Final month introduced “Inventing Anna,” in regards to the fake heiress Anna Delvey, and “Pam and Tommy,” in regards to the actress Pamela Anderson and the musician Tommy Lee. This month brings exhibits in regards to the failed start-up Theranos; Renée Zellweger in “The Factor About Pam,” a few homicide in Missouri; and “The Woman From Plainville,” with Elle Fanning taking part in a teen who was convicted of involuntary manslaughter for encouraging her boyfriend by way of textual content message to kill himself.

Why are there so many? “Boomlets in a particular kind of content material usually occur in Hollywood as a result of one thing flavors the artistic water,” mentioned Brooks Barnes, who reviews on Hollywood for The Occasions. This boomlet started, he says, in response to the large success of “The Folks v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story” in 2016.

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Hollywood likes tales which have already discovered audiences in different codecs as a result of they create consciousness amongst potential viewers, he mentioned, including, “Tv executives can reboot previous exhibits, draft off of films (the Marvel sequence, as an illustration) or take a look at real-life occasions.”

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Biden seems to take credit for Assad's downfall amid fears of Islamic State revival

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Biden seems to take credit for Assad's downfall amid fears of Islamic State revival

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JERUSALEM — The rapid-fire collapse of the Syrian dictatorship of Bashar Assad has engulfed the Biden administration in a new wave of criticism about its efforts to claim a win for the end of one of the most brutal regimes in the Middle East.

Questions abound about whether Biden’s foreign policy team had a significant blind spot in Syria, where roughly 900 U.S. troops and American military contractors operate in the northeastern part of the war-ravaged country.

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Speaking from the White House on Sunday, President Biden seemed to claim a much-needed victory for his administration’s foreign policy, “Our approach has shifted the balance of power in the Middle East.”

This is a direct result of the blows that Ukraine, Israel have delivered upon their own self-defense with unflagging support of the United States,” he said.

John Hannah, a senior fellow at the Jewish Institute for National Security of America’s Gemunder Center for Defense and Strategy and who served as Vice President Dick Cheney’s national security adviser, told Fox News Digital, “President Biden’s efforts to take credit for the fatal weakening of Iran and Hezbollah is, frankly speaking, unseemly.”

SYRIAN DICTATOR BASHAR ASSAD FLEES INTO EXILE AS ISLAMIST REBELS CONQUER COUNTRY 

TOPSHOT – A picture taken at the entrance of the Kweyris military airfield in the eastern part of Aleppo province on December 3, 2024 shows a portrait of  Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad and a national flag in the garbage dumpster following the take over of the area by rebel groups. A war monitor on December 1 said Ankara-backed groups seized control of the towns of Safireh and Khanasser southeast of Aleppo from government forces, and also took the Kweyris military airport. (Photo by RAMI AL SAYED/AFP via Getty Images)

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“The harsh reality is that if Israel had succumbed to the Biden administration’s pressures and followed its advice over the past 14 months of war, Iran and Hezbollah would have been far stronger and Israel far weaker than they are today,” said Hannah, who also served in the Clinton administration.

“There’s no doubt that President Biden deserves a lot of credit for his unflagging support of Israel’s ability to defend itself against the multifront war that Iran and its proxies launched on Oct. 7, 2023,” he continued. “But what he refused to do was provide that same unflagging support of Israel’s ability to actually win that war by inflicting a comprehensive defeat on its enemies, particularly Iran and Hezbollah, precisely the element that was required to make last week’s historic events in Syria possible.”

President Biden delivers remarks on the latest developments in Syria at the White House on Dec. 8, 2024. (Pete Marovich/Getty Images)

President Biden delivers remarks on the latest developments in Syria at the White House on Dec. 8, 2024. (Pete Marovich/Getty Images)

“The collapse of the Syrian regime is a direct result of the severe blows we inflicted on Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told reporters at a press conference on Monday. “I would like to clarify: challenges are still expected in the campaign, and our hand is outstretched.”

He also expressed appreciation to President-elect Donald Trump for recognizing Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights in 2019.

“The Golan will forever be an inseparable part of Israel,” he said, per Israeli news agency TPS-IL.

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Netanyahu and Biden

WASHINGTON, DC – JULY 25: U.S. President Joe Biden meets with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the Oval Office at the White House on July 25, 2024 in Washington, DC. Netanyahu’s visit occurs as the Israel-Hamas war reaches nearly ten months. (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

FALL OF SYRIA’S BASHAR ASSAD IS STRATEGIC BLOW TO IRAN AND RUSSIA, EXPERTS SAY

Fox News Digital has reported that since Hamas terrorists from Gaza slaughtered nearly 1,200 people, including more than 40 Americans, on Oct. 7, 2023, in southern Israel, the Biden administration sought to curtail Israel’s efforts to root out Hamas, as well as Hezbollah terrorists in Lebanon, and not launch counterstrikes against Iran’s regime.

Rebels in northwest Syria seized military vehicles belonging to the regime along the route toward Kweris Airport on Dec. 2, 2024.

Rebels in northwest Syria seized military vehicles belonging to the regime along the route toward Kweris Airport on Dec. 2, 2024. (Rami Alsayed/NurPhoto via APRami Alsayed/NurPhoto via AP)

After Biden’s speech, a senior administration official seemed to echo the president’s bravado, “I think U.S. policy is a direct contributor to this for the reasons I laid out, and the president laid out, is significant, is important, has completely changed the equation in the Middle East, and you saw that play out here over the last week.”

Behnam Ben Taleblu, an Iran expert and senior fellow with the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, offered a different take, saying, “Respectfully, it’s a bit odd to have an administration, which pulled punches against the Assad regime in Syria as well as its patron, the Islamic Republic of Iran, try to take credit for the fall of the Assad regime.”

Syrian President Bashar Assad, left, and Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei

Syrian President Bashar Assad, left, and Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei (Office of the Iranian Supreme Leader via AP/File)

“Less, not more, has defined Biden’s risk-averse approach to the region,” he continued. “Over the past year, the administration has watched Israel box in the Iran-backed threat network in the region, and in so doing break taboos that have long hindered Washington’s regional policy.”

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Obama-Biden failures

Democrat politicians like former Secretary of State John Kerry and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi courted Assad before his use of chemical weapons on his population after the outbreak of the Syrian civil war in 2011. Former National Security Council spokesperson Gordon Johndroe said about Pelosi’s 2007 visit with Assad, “On the contrary, these visits have convinced the Assad regime that its actions in support of terrorists have no consequences.”

Deeply misjudging Middle East dictators and radical Islamist movements has plagued the Biden and Obama administrations, according to experts. 

Plane in Afghanistan

Afghans climb atop a plane at Kabul’s airport on Aug. 16, 2021, to escape the country before the Taliban return to seize power after the U.S. military withdrawal. (Getty Images)

The Biden-Harris administration faced congressional criticism for the reportedly premature and botched withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021 that resulted in the radical Islamist Taliban movement absorbing the country and U.S. weapons.

TRUMP URGES US TO STAY OUT OF SYRIAN CIVIL WAR, BLAMING OBAMA FOR FAILURE AS ISLAMISTS CLOSE IN ON CAPITAL

Islamic State threats

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., wrote on X, “As to U.S. interests in Syria, there are over 50,000 ISIS prisoners primarily being held by the Kurdish forces who helped President Trump destroy the caliphate. These ISIS fighters planned and executed plots against the American homeland and our allies. A breakout and reestablishment of ISIS is a major threat to the U.S. and our friends. Obama and Biden got this wrong big time, requiring President Trump to clean up their mess.”

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On Sunday it was announced that U.S. Central Command launched dozens of key strikes against ISIS in a move said to stop the terror group from taking advantage of the fluid situation in Syria.

Displaced Kurds leave a refugee camp in the north of Aleppo, Syria, Dec. 4, 2024.

Displaced Kurds leave a refugee camp in the north of Aleppo, Syria, Dec. 4, 2024. (Ugur Yildirim/DIA Images/Abaca/Sipa USA via AP Images)

The Syrian Kurds have faced slashing attacks from Turkey and pro-Turkey Syrian Sunni jihadi organizations, including the Islamic State, over the years.

Sinam Sherkany Mohamad, the representative of the Syrian Democratic Council mission in the United States, told Fox News Digital, “Defeating Assad was the goal of all Syrians, to build a pluralistic democratic system that guarantees the rights of all ethnic and religious components and diversity in Syria.”
 

Islamic State militant holds ISIS flag in a desert setting

An Islamic State terrorist (History/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

“ISIS is still present in the Syrian desert and has sleeper cells in northern and eastern Syria in addition to the prisons of ISIS fighters and the Al-Holl camp, all of which threaten our people, while warning the current situation could whet ISIS’s appetite to become active again,” Mohamad said.

Incoming freshman Rep. Abraham Hamadeh, R-Ariz., told Fox News Digital, “We cannot ignore the impact of President Biden’s weak leadership, which has eroded deterrence and encouraged our allies to hedge their bets. President Trump understood that arming the Kurds and working with them to dismantle ISIS was a critical success. The reward for standing with America should never be betrayal or abandonment.”

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Hamadeh, whose parents are Syrian immigrants, added, “We must ensure Syrian Kurdish civilians are not caught in the crossfire and that they are integral to any peace process.”

Max Abrahms, a leading expert on counterterrorism and a tenured professor of political science at Northeastern University, told Fox News Digital, “It is also expected that ISIS will manifest as a non-trivial issue in the new Syria. It is on this issue where the Kurds and America have the most strategic overlap, as both regard ISIS as a serious threat. The more ISIS presents as a problem, the stronger the logic of maintaining American forces to work with the Syrian Democratic Forces.”

The U.S.-backed, Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces has been a key player in stopping the spread of ISIS in Syria.

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The real work on Mercosur deal starts now, says French liberal MEP

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The real work on Mercosur deal starts now, says French liberal MEP

Last week, European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen signed the EU-Mercosur deal, despite opposition from France.

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With French opposition remaining to the EU-Mercosur deal struck last week by the EU, the real work on the deal starts now, French liberal MEP Marie-Pierre Vedrenne tells the Radio Schuman podcast today.

Last week, the EU finalised the contentious Mercosur agreement with some South Amercan countries, a deal that follows on-and-off negotiations that began in 1999.

However, France—one of the largest EU member states—along with several other countries with sizeable dairy and beef industries, opposes the agreement. They argue it could expose local farmers to unfair competition and heighten environmental risks.

To block the deal, France is attempting to form a coalition of like-minded member states. Under EU rules, it would need the support of at least three other countries representing 35% of the bloc’s population. Additionally, the agreement must gain approval from the European Parliament.

In the second segment of the podcast, we look at EU ministers discussions with the Commission on the economic plans for their countries. Are they performing well?

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On the last part of the show, Radio Schuman reveals which airlines are using more sustainable form of fuel.

Radio Schuman is hosted and produced by Maïa de la Baume, with journalist and production assistant Eleonora Vasques, audio editing by  David Brodheim and Georgios Leivaditis. Music by Alexandre Jas.

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Boeing lays off hundreds in Washington and California as part of cuts announced previously

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Boeing lays off hundreds in Washington and California as part of cuts announced previously

SEATTLE (AP) — Boeing has laid off hundreds of additional employees in Washington state and California as part of planned cuts that will eventually reduce the company’s workforce by about 17,000.

Nearly 400 Boeing employees were laid off in Washington state and more than 500 in California, news outlets reported Monday.

The aerospace giant announced previously it would reduce its workforce by 10% in the coming months as it tries to recover from financial and regulatory troubles and a strike by its machinists that lasted almost two months.

CEO Kelly Ortberg has said the strike did not cause the layoffs, which he said was the result of overstaffing.

In November, the company started notifying workers who would be laid off. Notices filed with state employment agencies showed the first round of cuts impacted about 3,500 people around the country, The Seattle Times reported.

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Those cuts touched people in roles from engineers to recruiters to analysts and impacted Boeing’s commercial, defense and global services divisions.

Boeing has said most laid-off employees remain on payroll for about two months and will receive severance pay, career transition services and subsidized health insurance benefits for up to three months.

“As announced in early October, we are adjusting our workforce levels to align with our financial reality and a more focused set of priorities,” Boeing spokespeople have said about the layoffs.

Boeing, based in Arlington, Virginia, has been in financial trouble since two crashes of its 737 Max jetliner killed 346 people in 2018 and 2019. The company’s fortunes and reputation took an additional hit when a panel blew off the fuselage of an Alaska Airlines plane in January.

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