US intelligence official indicates Russia prefers Trump as election victor

In this file photo taken on November 11, 2017 US President Donald Trump (L) chats with Russia's President Vladimir Putin as they attend the APEC Economic Leaders' Meeting, part of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) leaders' summit in the central Vietnamese city of Danang. (AFP)
In this file photo taken on November 11, 2017 US President Donald Trump (L) chats with Russia's President Vladimir Putin as they attend the APEC Economic Leaders' Meeting, part of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) leaders' summit in the central Vietnamese city of Danang. (AFP)
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Updated 10 July 2024
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US intelligence official indicates Russia prefers Trump as election victor

US intelligence official indicates Russia prefers Trump as election victor
  • Trump frequently has criticized the scale of US military support for Ukraine — some $60 billion since Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022 — and called Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky “the greatest salesman ever”

WASHINGTON: The US has not seen Russia shift on its preference from previous US presidential elections on who it prefers to win this year, a US intelligence official said on Tuesday, indicating Moscow again favors Republican Donald Trump.
The official, briefing reporters on US election security, did not name the former president and presumptive Republican nominee when asked who Moscow wants as the next US president.
But, he indicated that Russia favored Trump, saying the US intelligence community had not changed its assessments from previous elections.
Those assessments found Moscow tried through influence campaigns to help Trump win in 2016 against Hillary Clinton and in 2020 against President Joe Biden.
“We have not observed a shift in Russia’s preferences for the presidential race from past elections, given the role the US is playing with regard to Ukraine and broader policy toward Russia,” said the official from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI).
The Trump campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Trump frequently has criticized the scale of US military support for Ukraine — some $60 billion since Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022 — and called Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky “the greatest salesman ever.”
Two of his national security advisers have presented Trump with a plan to end US military aid to Ukraine unless it opened talks with Russia to end the conflict.
On policy toward NATO, Trump has said he would “encourage” Russia to do “whatever the hell they want” to any alliance member that did not spend enough on defense and he would not defend them.
The NATO charter obliges members to come to the defense of those who are attacked.
The ODNI official conducted the briefing on condition of anonymity with ODNI colleagues and officials from the FBI and the National Coordinator for Critical Infrastructure Security and Resilience, an agency that conducts cyber defense for the government and works with private industry.
He defined election influence as efforts to shape the outcome of polls or undermine democratic processes, while interference constitutes efforts to disrupt the ability of the US to hold a free and fair vote.
The US has not monitored plans by any country to “degrade or disrupt” the country’s ability to hold the November elections, he said.
But Russia, he continued, has begun through social media and other means trying to influence specific groups of US voters in battleground states, “promote divisive narratives and denigrate specific politicians” who he did not identify.
“Russia is undertaking a whole of government approach to influence the election, including the presidential, Congress, and public opinion,” he said.
Moscow “determines which candidates they’re willing to support or oppose largely based on their stance toward further US aid to Ukraine and related issues,” said the official. “It’s all the tactics we’ve seen before, primarily through social media efforts” and “using US voices to amplify their narratives.”
Russia recently has been seeking to influence US audiences through “encrypted direct messaging channels,” said the official. He did not elaborate.
China is assessed as currently not planning “to influence the outcome of the presidential race,” the official said.
The US views China as its leading geostrategic rival. Beijing and Washington have been working to ease strains. The Chinese embassy did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Beijing is trying to expand its ability to collect and monitor data from social media platforms “probably to better understand and eventually manipulate public opinion,” the official said.
The official called generative artificial intelligence a “malign influence accelerant” being increasingly used to “more convincingly tailor” video and other content ahead of the November vote.

 


Pope Francis, 87, takes climate message to Southeast Asia on 12-day trip

Pope Francis, 87, takes climate message to Southeast Asia on 12-day trip
Updated 2 sec ago
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Pope Francis, 87, takes climate message to Southeast Asia on 12-day trip

Pope Francis, 87, takes climate message to Southeast Asia on 12-day trip
  • Pope Francis sets off on Monday for four-country Asia visit
  • Climate change and Catholic-Muslim dialogue high on agenda
VATICAN CITY: Pope Francis leaves on Monday for a visit to four island nations across southeast Asia, an ambitious trip to urge global action on climate change that may test the strength of the 87-year-old head of the global Catholic Church. Over 12 days from Sept. 2-13, Francis will travel nearly 33,000 km (20,500 miles) to visit Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, East Timor and Singapore. It is the longest trip yet by the pontiff, who now regularly uses a wheelchair due to knee and back pain. Francis pushed hard for the 2015 Paris climate agreement and aides say he wants to continue his appeals to confront the dangers of a rapidly warming world, and especially to support the most vulnerable. In the countries on his tour, these dangers include rising sea levels and increasingly severe and unpredictable heat waves and typhoons. Jakarta, the Indonesian capital where the trip begins, has experienced disastrous flooding in recent years and is slowly sinking, prompting the government to build a new $32-billion capital on Borneo. Francis is scheduled to headline more than 40 events during the voyage and some observers say that, beyond his specific itinerary, he wants to show he is still capable of leading the 1.4-billion-member Church, despite his age and bouts of ill health.
“It is a show of strength for Pope Francis,” said Massimo Faggioli, an Italian academic who has followed the papacy closely.
What does the pope hope to achieve?
Faggioli, a professor at Villanova University in Philadelphia, noted that no pope had toured abroad at such an age. Benedict XVI, Francis’ immediate predecessor, resigned at 85. John Paul II, suffering from Parkinson’s disease, made his last visit abroad at 84. The tour will be Francis’ 45th foreign trip since his election in March 2013. He speaks often about reaching out to people or groups on the margins of society, and has prioritized trips to places never before visited by a pope, or where Catholics are a small minority.
“Francis has almost drawn a new map of the Church,” said Faggioli. “It’s global Catholicism now, a Church that it is not just more globally extensive, but truly globalized.” Also on the agenda is a renewed push for Catholic-Muslim dialogue, long a priority for Francis who, in 2019, became the first pope to visit the Arabian peninsula.
Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim-majority nation, has about 280 million inhabitants, only about 3 percent of them Catholic. Francis will take part in an interfaith meeting at Jakarta’s Istiqlal Mosque, the largest in Southeast Asia.
Jeremy Menchik, a political scientist professor at Boston University who has written extensively on Indonesia’s politics, said it was in a “golden age” of interfaith dialogue, noting that the mosque sits opposite Jakarta’s Catholic cathedral.
“This is a moment where you have pluralism rather than polemics,” he said. Francis lands in Jakarta at about midday on Tuesday, and departs for Papua New Guinea three days later. To allow him to rest after a night-flight of more than 13 hours, he will have no public activities on Tuesday, apart from a brief official welcome at the airport.

Why has the Pope chosen Asia?
In each of the four countries, the pope will hold official meetings with political authorities, diplomats, and local Catholics. He will also lead outdoor celebrations of the Catholic Mass in all four countries.
Catholic officials broadly see Asia as fertile ground to expand the faith, which has experienced decline in Western countries.
Shihoko Goto, director of the Indo-Pacific Program at the Wilson Center, a Washington think-tank, said Francis’ visit, despite his health concerns, “speaks volumes about the strategic importance of Asia for the Church.”
Papua New Guinea, with an official population of about 9 million, has some 2.5 million Catholics, the Vatican says. East Timor, with a population of 1.3 million, is nearly 96 percent Catholic, while Singapore counts about 210,000 Catholics among its 5.92 million people, according to the Vatican.

Monsoon floods in India’s Gujarat kill at least 28 people

Monsoon floods in India’s Gujarat kill at least 28 people
Updated 18 min 10 sec ago
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Monsoon floods in India’s Gujarat kill at least 28 people

Monsoon floods in India’s Gujarat kill at least 28 people
  • The weather department warned more heavy rain is expected on Thursday in the western coastal state
  • Rivers have burst their banks and more than 30,000 people fled their homes
AHMEDABAD, India: Intense monsoon rains and floods in India’s Gujarat state killed at least 28 people in the past three days, some drowning and others hit by falling trees, government officials said.
The weather department warned more heavy rain is expected on Thursday in the western coastal state.
Rivers have burst their banks and more than 30,000 people fled their homes.
The state government said late Wednesday that 13 people had died from drowning and the rest from houses or trees collapsing on them.
The Indian Express newspaper said 35 people had died so far across the state.
Some 1,856 people were rescued by disaster and army officials deployed for relief operations.
Vadodara was among the worst affected cities, the press release said.
Electricity connections were badly affected, with some 1,000 villages grappling without power.
Images and video released by disaster officials showed them using inflatable boats and tires to rescue people stranded by surging waters.
Rains cause widespread destruction every year, but experts say climate change is shifting weather patterns and increasing the number of extreme weather events.
The northeastern Indian state of Tripura was hit by floods and landslides last week, with more than 20 people killed.
In neighboring Bangladesh, downriver from India, floods killed at least 40 people over the same period, with nearly 300,000 residents taking refuge in emergency shelters.

Biden aide Sullivan raises Taiwan, South China Sea concerns with Beijing military

Biden aide Sullivan raises Taiwan, South China Sea concerns with Beijing military
Updated 24 min 7 sec ago
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Biden aide Sullivan raises Taiwan, South China Sea concerns with Beijing military

Biden aide Sullivan raises Taiwan, South China Sea concerns with Beijing military
  • Jake Sullivan raises the importance of ‘stability’ in the Taiwan Strait and ‘freedom of navigation’ in the South China Sea
  • Chinese state media reported that Foreign Minister Wang Yi issued his own warning to Washington

BEIJING: Top White House aide Jake Sullivan raised the importance of stability in the Taiwan Strait and South China Sea while planning more direct military talks in a rare one-on-one with a senior Chinese army official Thursday, Washington said.
Sullivan arrived in Beijing on Tuesday, the first US national security adviser to visit China since 2016, for three days of talks with Foreign Minister Wang Yi and other high-ranking officials.
The visit came as China became embroiled in security rows with US allies Japan and the Philippines.
On Thursday morning, Sullivan met with senior Chinese army chief Zhang Youxia at the Beijing headquarters of the Central Military Commission.
“It’s rare that we have the opportunity to have this kind of exchange,” Sullivan told Zhang in opening remarks.
“Given the state of the world and the need for us to responsibly manage the US-China relationship, I think this is a very important meeting.”
Zhang, in turn, thanked Sullivan for his visit and said the meeting “demonstrates the value the US government puts on military security.”
The two officials also agreed to hold a call between the two sides’ theater commanders “in the near future,” a readout from the White House added.
Sullivan raised the importance of “stability” in the Taiwan Strait and “freedom of navigation” in the South China Sea, where Beijing and Manila have clashed in recent months.
He expressed “concerns about (Chinese) support for Russia’s defense industrial base” — echoing longstanding US claims that Beijing has rejected, the readout added.
He also raised “the need to avoid miscalculation and escalation in cyberspace, and ongoing efforts to reach a ceasefire and hostage deal in Gaza,” the White House said.
On Wednesday, Sullivan and Wang discussed plans for their leaders to talk in the coming weeks — and clashed over China’s increasingly assertive approach in disputed maritime regions.
Sullivan “reaffirmed the United States’ commitment to defending its Indo-Pacific allies,” the White House said.
He also “expressed concern about (China’s) destabilizing actions against lawful Philippine maritime operations” in the disputed South China Sea, it said.
Chinese state media reported that Wang issued his own warning to Washington.
“The United States must not use bilateral treaties as an excuse to undermine China’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, nor should it support or condone the Philippines’ actions of infringement,” Wang told Sullivan, according to state broadcaster CCTV.
Wang and Sullivan previously met five times over the past year and a half — in Washington, Vienna, Malta and Bangkok, as well as alongside Biden and Xi in Woodside, California in November 2023.
During their latest encounter, they also discussed the tense issue of Taiwan, the self-governing democracy that China claims.
China has kept up its saber-rattling since the inauguration this year of President Lai Ching-te, whose party emphasizes Taiwan’s separate identity.
Wang stressed that Taiwan belonged to Beijing and that China would “certainly be unified,” adding that the United States should stop arming Taiwan, according to CCTV.
The White House said Sullivan “underscored the importance of maintaining peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait.”
The US and Chinese officials also discussed issues including Ukraine, the Middle East and the Korean Peninsula, both sides said.


Philippines seeks offers in procurement of 40 multi-role fighter jets

Philippines seeks offers in procurement of 40 multi-role fighter jets
Updated 32 min 8 sec ago
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Philippines seeks offers in procurement of 40 multi-role fighter jets

Philippines seeks offers in procurement of 40 multi-role fighter jets
  • Bidders must submit a proposed financing package where payment can be spread out – defense chief
  • The Philippines is seeking to modernize and beef up its military inventory

MANILA: The Philippines has started soliciting offers as it plans to procure 40 new multi-role fighter aircraft to boost its territorial defense, the defense minister said on Thursday.
Bidders must submit a proposed financing package where payment can be spread out, Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro told a congressional budget hearing.
He did not specify which models the Philippines was seeking to procure, or potential bidders. It was not immediately clear the timeframe for the planned procurement.
The Philippines, a defense ally of former colonial power the United States, is seeking to modernize and beef up its military inventory and its air force currently has few fighter jets.
The military chief has said the country needed “faster and more lethal” multi-role jet fighters on top of its South Korean FA-50s.
The government is looking at reasonable financing schemes to fund its modernization program, including tapping syndicated loans from private lenders, Teodoro said.
President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. has approved “Re-Horizon 3,” an acquisition plan for new military weaponry and equipment worth 1.89 trillion pesos ($33.64 billion) to boost defenses.


Bangladesh revokes ban imposed on main Islamic party by ex-PM Hasina

Bangladesh revokes ban imposed on main Islamic party by ex-PM Hasina
Updated 33 min 38 sec ago
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Bangladesh revokes ban imposed on main Islamic party by ex-PM Hasina

Bangladesh revokes ban imposed on main Islamic party by ex-PM Hasina
  • Hasina’s government banned the Jamaat-e-Islami party under an anti-terrorism law, blaming it for stoking deadly violence during student-led protests
  • A gazette notification on Wednesday by the caretaker government said there was no specific evidence of the party’s involvement ‘in terrorist activities’

DHAKA: Bangladesh’s caretaker government revoked a ban on the country’s main Islamic party and its affiliated groups on Wednesday, saying it has not found evidence of their involvement in “terrorist activities.”
Former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s government had banned the Jamaat-e-Islami party under an anti-terrorism law, blaming it for stoking deadly violence during student-led protests that turned into an uprising against Hasina, forcing her to resign and flee to India on Aug. 5.
A gazette notification on Wednesday by the caretaker government that replaced Hasina’s administration said there was “no specific evidence of involvement of Jamaat” and its affiliates “in terrorist activities.”
The party has denied allegations that it stoked violence and had condemned the ban as “illegal, extrajudicial and unconstitutional.”
Jamaat has not been able to contest elections in Bangladesh after a court said in 2013 its registration as a political party conflicted with Bangladesh’s secular constitution.
Shishir Monir, a lawyer for the party, said it will file a petition early next week at the Supreme Court to seek restoration of its registration.