Unusual burial of man, thought to have been a potter, in sealed vessel may have helped DNA survive past four millennia
A man whose bones were shaped by a lifetime of hard labour more than 4,500 years ago has become the first ancient Egyptian to have his entire genetic code read and analysed by scientists.
The skeleton of the man, who lived at the dawn of the Age of the Pyramids, was recovered in 1902 from a sealed pottery vessel in a rock-cut tomb in Nuwayrat, 165 miles south of Cairo, and has been held in a museum since.
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Lesotho activist arrested after video on unemployment rates angers prime minister
Tšolo Thakeli had long campaigned on youth joblessness, but a post questioning Sam Maketane’s promises on work creation landed him in prison
It took a single video complaining about Lesotho’s unemployment rate to turn Tšolo Thakeli into the prime minister’s enemy. Within a day of posting there were armed police at his door.
It was Father’s Day, and the 31-year-old father of two was in his pyjamas when they arrived. He had no idea his post would land him in trouble; after all, he had campaigned for a long time, under different governments, for action on jobs for young people.
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‘We won’t let them get away with this’: activists to sue Tanzania’s government over ‘sexual torture’
Boniface Mwangi and Agather Atuhaire vow to hold authorities accountable as repression intensifies before October elections
Two east African activists say they plan to sue Tanzania’s government for illegal detention and torture during a visit in support of an opposition politician in May.
Boniface Mwangi, from Kenya, and Agather Atuhaire, a Ugandan, sent shock waves around the region earlier this month when they gave an emotional press conference in which they alleged they had been sexually assaulted and, in Atuhaire’s case, smeared in excrement after their detention in Dar es Salaam. “[The authorities] take you through sexual torture,” Mwangi said at the time.
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Trump eyes mineral wealth as Rwanda and DRC sign controversial peace deal in US
Agreement aims to end decades-old conflict rooted in the 1994 Rwandan genocide but critics have described it as vague and opaque
Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo have signed a peace deal in Washington to end fighting in eastern DRC, although questions remain over what the agreement means and who stands to benefit – with Donald Trump using the occasion to boast that the US had secured lucrative mineral rights.
At a ceremony with US secretary of state Marco Rubio in Washington, the two African countries’ foreign ministers signed the agreement pledging to implement a 2024 deal that would see Rwandan troops withdraw from eastern Congo within 90 days.
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Rising poverty in conflict zones ‘causes a billion people to go hungry’
In first assessment since pandemic in 2020, World Bank urges other countries to step up support
Extreme poverty is accelerating in 39 countries affected by war and conflict, leaving more than a billion people to go hungry, according to the World Bank.
Civil wars and confrontations between nations, mostly in Africa, have set back economic growth and reduced the incomes of more than a billion people, “driving up extreme poverty faster than anywhere else”, the Washington-based body said.
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Kilmar Ábrego García was tortured in Salvadorian prison, court filing alleges
New court documents allege physical and psychological torture at Cecot in one of first looks at conditions in prison
Kilmar Ábrego García, the Maryland man who was wrongfully deported to El Salvador and detained in one of that country’s most notorious prisons, was physically and psychologically tortured during the three months he spent in Salvadorian custody, according to new court documents filed Wednesday.
While being held at the so-called Terrorism Confinement Center (Cecot) in El Salvador, Ábrego García and 20 other men “were forced to kneel from approximately 9:00 PM to 6:00 AM”, according to the court papers filed by his lawyers in the federal district court in Maryland.
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‘A win for humanity’: Trump’s asylum ban at US-Mexico border ruled unlawful
President exceeded his authority and his proclamation of an ‘invasion’ at southern border is unlawful, court rules
A federal court has ruled that Donald Trump’s proclamation of an “invasion” at the US-Mexico border is unlawful, saying that the president had exceeded his authority in suspending the right to apply for asylum at the southern border.
As part of his crackdown on immigration, Trump abruptly closed the southern border to tens of thousands of people who had been waiting to cross into the US legally and apply for asylum, signing a proclamation on the day of his inauguration that directed officials to take action to “repel, repatriate, or remove any alien engaged in the invasion across the southern border of the United States”.
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US to breed billions of flies and dump them out of aircraft in bid to fight flesh-eating maggot
Program mirrors earlier successful mission to fight new world screwworm fly, whose larvae can infest living tissue
The US government is preparing to breed billions of flies and dump them out of airplanes over Mexico and southern Texas to fight a flesh-eating maggot.
That sounds like the plot of a horror movie, but it is part of the government’s plans for protecting the US from a bug that could devastate its beef industry, decimate wildlife and even kill household pets. This weird science has worked well before.
Continue reading...Video shared on social media shows drone attacks, which some say have helped pacify gangs inflicting violence on Port-au-Prince
Warning: this story contains footage that readers might find distressing
The earth beneath Jimmy Antoine’s apartment shuddered and for a split second he feared another natural disaster had struck, like the 2010 cataclysm that brought Port-au-Prince to its knees.
“The ground shook like it does during an earthquake. You tremble like everything might collapse,” said the 23-year-old trainee mechanic, recalling how he and his panicked neighbours raced out on to the street.
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Judge blocks Kristi Noem from ending temporary protected status for Haitians
Homeland security secretary attempting to end legal status for approximately 521,000 Haitian immigrants
A federal judge has blocked the Trump administration’s attempt to end temporary deportation protections and work permits for approximately 521,000 Haitian immigrants before the program’s scheduled expiration date.
Earlier this year, the Department of Homeland Security rescinded Joe Biden’s extension of temporary protected status (TPS) for Haitians through 3 February. It called for the program to end on 3 August, and last week pushed back that date to 2 September.
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Bali ferry sinking leaves at least four dead, dozens missing
Twenty-three people who were on the ferry travelling from Java have so far been rescued, Indonesia police say
At least four people have died and dozens are missing after a ferry carrying 65 people sank on its way to the Indonesian resort island of Bali, according to local police.
The vessel sank before midnight on Wednesday in the Bali Strait as it sailed to a port in the north of the famous holiday island, departing from Banyuwangi, a town on Indonesia’s main island of Java, the local search and rescue agency in Surabaya said in a statement.
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Japan’s Tokara islands hit by 900 earthquakes in two weeks
No major damage has been reported in the Tokara island chain, Japan’s meteorological agency says
More than 900 earthquakes have shaken a remote island chain in southern Japan in the past two weeks, according to the country’s weather agency, leaving residents unable to sleep and fearful of what might come next.
Although no major damage has been reported, the Japan Meteorological Agency has acknowledged that it does not know when the quakes would end.
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Former UK civil service chief calls Xi Jinping a ‘dictator’ over Taiwan threats
Comments from Simon Case come as UK defence review highlights Chinese military exercises around Taiwan as driver of global instability
The former head of the UK’s civil service has described the Chinese leader Xi Jinping as a “dictator” and said Donald Trump had put “helpful pressure” on Europe to increase defence spending.
Simon Case, who served as the cabinet secretary until December, when he stepped down on health grounds, said China had sent a clear message to “prepare for serious conflict” in Taiwan.
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Dalai Lama defies China to say successor will be chosen by Tibetan tradition
Spiritual leader challenges Beijing in video statement released in run-up to 90th birthday celebrations
The Dalai Lama has declared in a direct challenge to China that the centuries-old spiritual institution bearing his name will continue after his death and that only his inner circle, not Beijing, will have the authority to identify his successor.
In a video message played on Wednesday during prayer celebrations ahead of his 90th birthday this weekend, the 14th Dalai Lama said the Gaden Phodrang Trust, which manages his affairs, would oversee the search for his reincarnation.
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China hosts first fully autonomous AI robot football match
Footage of three-a-side game shows humanoids struggling to kick the ball or stay upright
They think it’s all over … for human footballers at least.
The pitch wasn’t the only artificial element on display at a football match in China on Saturday. Four teams of humanoid robots took on each other in Beijing, in games of three-a-side powered by artificial intelligence.
Continue reading...Wesley Enoch tells ABC RN the artist’s work was not about glorification of terrorism and says Sabsabi is ‘incredibly peace-loving’
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The acting chair of Creative Australia has apologised to Khaled Sabsabi and his curator Michael Dagostino for the “hurt and pain” caused by the decision to rescind their Venice Biennale commission, and said their artworks had been “mischaracterised”.
Wesley Enoch, who took over from a retiring Robert Morgan three months after the then chair told a Senate estimates hearing he would not be resigning over the controversy, apologised to Sabsabi and Dagostino live on air on Thursday, telling ABC RN the artist’s work was not about the glorification of terrorism, as suggested in parliament in February.
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Power continues to be restored in NSW
About 5,800 customers remained without power at 7am Thursday, according to network operators Ausgrid, Endeavour Energy and Essential Energy.
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Flood threat ongoing for parts of NSW and Victoria as east coast weather system subsides
Heavy conditions expected to continue along parts of the east coast on Thursday
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Authorities remain on alert to flood risk across New South Wales and eastern Victoria after a complex low-pressure system swept the nation’s east coast this week, drenchingcatchments.
Severe weather warnings for damaging winds and hazardous surf also remained in place on Thursday morning, with the system still “lurking over the Tasman Sea”, said Helen Reid, meteorologist at the Bureau of Meteorology.
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NSW weather: storm brings 13-metre high waves and wild winds as BoM warns of ‘second surge’
Vigorous coastal low forecast to keep sending severe weather across eastern New South Wales for much of Wednesday, before gradually easing on Thursday
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Thousands remain without power across New South Wales after severe winds and heavy rain battered the state, with wind gusts up to 130km/h, 13-metre high waves, and several places receiving more than 200mm rain.
The Bureau of Meteorology expected a “second surge” on Wednesday night would bring a further burst of rain and wind to the south coast of NSW and eastern parts of Victoria, with peak gusts of around 90km/h possible along exposed parts of the coast.
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Continue reading...Guardian analysis found no major bank has adopted ACCC recommendations in full – but NAB, CommBank, Westpac and ANZ say they offer in-app alerts
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Australia’s big banks have not implemented several recommendations designed to help customers qualify for bonus interest rates on savings products, more than 18 months after the regulatory advice was issued.
Two in three customers of bonus accounts miss out on the headline interest rate and instead receive a far smaller base rate, an Australian Competition and Consumer Commission inquiry found in late 2023.
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‘Preaching water, drinking wine’: Austrians mock far-right MPs for lucrative side jobs
Legislators from the Freedom party, which presents itself as the voice of ordinary people, top the parliamentary rich list
Austrians have poured scorn on far-right MPs for topping the list of highest earners in the country’s parliament, accusing the purported champions of the working class of hypocrisy over their lucrative side hustles.
A report based on mandatory income declarations for 2024 revealed this week that MPs from the anti-immigration Freedom party (FPÖ), which came in first in the September general election, to be cashing in most with supplementary earnings.
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Pentagon reviews arms exports to allies as munition stockpiles reportedly drop
Spokesperson Sean Parnell confirms defence department reviewing shipments may not affect only Ukraine
The Pentagon has said that it is reviewing weapons deliveries to allies around the world as reports grow of concerns over dwindling stockpiles of crucial munitions including anti-air missiles.
The announcement came after the White House confirmed that it was limiting deliveries of weapons to Ukraine to “put America’s interests first following a Department of Defense review of our nation’s military support and assistance to other countries around the globe”.
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US halts weapons shipments to Ukraine over fears its stockpiles are too low
Some shipments have been stopped ‘to put America’s interests first’, White House says
The Pentagon has halted shipments of US Patriot air defence systems and other precision weapons to Ukraine after concern that US stockpiles were running too low, prompting alarm in Kyiv.
A decision was quietly taken last month by the Pentagon’s policy chief, Elbridge Colby. Kyiv said halting weapons shipments would only encourage Russian aggression, but the White House said it had been done “to put America’s interests first following a DoD [Department of Defense] review”.
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Lobster bisque and onion soup on ISS menu for French astronaut
Chef with 10 Michelin stars has designed meals for Sophie Adenot’s trip to International Space Station next year
When the French astronaut Sophie Adenot travels to the International Space Station (ISS) next year, she will be heading for the stars – not quite in celestial but certainly in gastronomic terms.
Adenot will dine on not just freeze-dried space food staples but also French classics such as lobster bisque, foie gras and onion soup prepared specially for her by a chef with 10 Michelin stars, the European Space Agency (Esa) announced on Wednesday.
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French PM François Bayrou failed to act on abuse at Catholic boarding school, report says
Damning report by MPs comes after inquiry into allegations of decades of physical abuse, rape and sexual assault at Notre-Dame de Bétharram school
The French prime minister, François Bayrou, failed to act to prevent physical and sexual abuse at a private Catholic school in south-west France when he served as education minister between 1993 and 1997, a parliamentary report has said.
The damning report issued by French lawmakers on Wednesday comes after a long parliamentary inquiry into allegations of decades of physical abuse, rape and sexual assault at the Notre-Dame de Bétharram boarding school near Pau in south-west France.
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The truth about Iran’s nuclear programme – podcast
After 12 days of bombing by Israel and the US last month, opinions vary about the extent of the damage caused to Iran’s nuclear facilities. Patrick Wintour and Rouzbeh Parsi explain why and what could happen next
When the 12-day war against Iran was launched, Israel said it was because the Islamic Republic was on the verge of developing a nuclear bomb. US intelligence reports from earlier in the year told a different story. Now the war is over and confusion remains – has Iran’s nuclear programme been destroyed?
The Guardian’s diplomatic editor, Patrick Wintour, tells Michael Safi what we know – and why we don’t know more – about what the conflict actually achieved. While Rouzbeh Parsi, a historian who studies Iran’s nuclear programme explains why the ambiguity around Iran’s intentions are partly a deliberate strategy. Yet, he says, it is one that has been a dangerous gamble for the country – and one which seems to have cost them dearly. What will the Iranian regime do next? Could it abandon its programme or will it decide to race towards making a bomb?
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Israeli military used 500lb bomb in strike on Gaza cafe, fragments reveal
Exclusive: Experts say use of heavy munition in Monday’s strike that killed dozens may constitute a war crime
The Israeli military used a 500lb (230kg) bomb – a powerful and indiscriminate weapon that generates a massive blast wave and scatters shrapnel over a wide area – when it attacked a target in a crowded beachfront cafe in Gaza on Monday, evidence seen by the Guardian has revealed.
Experts in international law said the use of such a munition despite the known presence of many unprotected civilians, including children, women and elderly people, was almost certainly unlawful and may constitute a war crime.
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Trump claims Israel ready for Gaza peace deal as he seeks ceasefire
Hamas says it is reviewing US truce proposal, but it is unclear what terms Israel has agreed to
Donald Trump has claimed that Israel is ready to agree to a peace deal with Hamas as he seeks to broker a ceasefire in the Gaza war that has claimed almost 60,000 lives, but it is unclear what conditions specifically Israel has agreed to.
In a post on Truth Social on Tuesday night, the US president wrote: “Israel has agreed to the necessary conditions to finalize the 60 Day CEASEFIRE, during which time we will work with all parties to end the War.”
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‘Shock and grief’ as senior doctor killed in Israeli airstrike in Gaza
Marwan al-Sultan, a renowned cardiologist and director of the Indonesian hospital, is the 70th healthcare worker to be killed by Israeli attacks in the past 50 days, says Palestinian medical organisation
An Israeli airstrike has killed one of Gaza’s most senior doctors in a “catastrophic” loss to the already decimated healthcare system. A number of family members were reported to have been killed alongside him.
Dr Marwan al-Sultan, a renowned and highly experienced cardiologist and director of the Indonesian hospital in the Gaza Strip, is the 70th healthcare worker to be killed by Israeli attacks in the last 50 days, according to Healthcare Workers Watch (HWW), a Palestinian medical organisation.
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More than 400 media figures urge BBC board to remove Robbie Gibb over Gaza
Miriam Margolyes, Alexei Sayle and Mike Leigh among signatories to letter criticising Jewish Chronicle ties
More than 400 stars and media figures including Miriam Margolyes, Alexei Sayle, Juliet Stevenson and Mike Leigh have signed a letter to BBC management calling for the removal of a board member, Robbie Gibb, over claims of conflict of interest regarding the Middle East.
The signatories also include 111 BBC journalists and Zawe Ashton, Khalid Abdalla, Shola Mos-Shogbamimu and the historian William Dalrymple, who express “concerns over opaque editorial decisions and censorship at the BBC on the reporting of Israel/Palestine”.
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Prada accused of cashing in on Indian culture with Kolhapuri-inspired sandals
Fashion house acknowledges work of traditional artisans after accusations of cultural appropriation
Prada has acknowledged that its new leather sandal design was inspired by India’s famous Kolhapuri “chappals” – handcrafted shoes known for their toe-loop design – after facing criticism over its failure to credit the footwear’s origins.
“We acknowledge the sandals … are inspired by traditional Indian handcrafted footwear, with a centuries-old heritage,” Lorenzo Bertelli, the corporate social responsibility chief at the Italian fashion house, said in a letter to the Maharashtra chamber of commerce.
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At least 32 people killed as flash floods hit northern Pakistan
Family dies in Swat River, with witnesses saying they waited to be rescued for more than an hour
At least 32 people have been killed in Pakistan in recent flash flooding caused by heavy rains, including a family of tourists who died after being swept away by flood waters while apparently awaiting rescue.
Videos of the family stranded on a small piece of land as the raging Swat River in northern Pakistan swept them away were shared widely on social media, prompting anger towards the provincial government as witnesses said the family waited helplessly for more than an hour.
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Pakistan debates Trump Nobel peace prize nomination after US strikes on Iran
Pakistani government had credited US president with ‘pivotal leadership’ in its ceasefire negotiations with India
Donald Trump’s intervention into the Iran-Israel war, and brokering then announcing a ceasefire, has drawn a heated debate in Pakistan – where the government had formally nominated the US president for the Nobel peace prize as the US military was making its final preparations for a strike that threatened all-out war in the Middle East.
A statement in the early hours of Saturday local time – shortly before US B-2 bombers left the Whiteman air force base in Missouri and headed to Iran – had credited Trump for a “legacy of pragmatic diplomacy” and “pivotal leadership” for ensuring Pakistan’s ceasefire with India in a conflict that had begun with the killing of tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir in April.
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Pakistan to nominate Donald Trump for Nobel peace prize
Islamabad says US president helped resolve India conflict but critic says ‘Israel’s sugar daddy in Gaza’ not candidate for any prize
Pakistan has said it will recommend Donald Trump for the Nobel peace prize for his work in helping to resolve the recent conflict between India and Pakistan.
The move, announced on Saturday, came as the US president mulls joining Israel in striking Iran’s nuclear facilities.
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Thawing of relations between Pakistan and US raises eyebrows in India
Army chief’s effusive welcome in Washington hints at strategic recalibration amid Middle East turmoil
After years in the diplomatic deep freeze, US-Pakistan ties appear to be quickly thawing, with Donald Trump’s effusive welcome for Pakistan’s army chief, Field Marshal Asim Munir, signalling a possible major reset.
Once snubbed so badly that former prime minister Imran Khan had to board an ordinary airport shuttle after arriving in the US rather than being whisked off in a limousine, Pakistan is now enjoying top-level access in Washington, including a White House lunch for Munir on Wednesday and meetings with top national security officials.
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Starmer outlines plan to shift NHS care from hospitals to new health centres
Prime minister unveils 10-year health plan to ‘put care on people’s doorsteps’ and prevent illness in first place
The NHS will shift a huge amount of care from hospitals into new community health centres to bring treatment closer to people’s homes and cut waiting times, Keir Starmer will pledge on Thursday.
The prime minister will outline radical plans to give patients in England much easier access to GPs, scans and mental health support in facilities that are open 12 hours a day, six days a week.
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No 10 defends chancellor after day of bitter recriminations over welfare bill fiasco
PM says Rachel Reeves will be chancellor ‘for very long time to come’ amid speculation about her job in wake of tearful Commons appearance
Keir Starmer has been forced to defend his chancellor after a day in which the bitter recriminations over Labour’s welfare bill fiasco appeared to leave Rachel Reeves in tears and the markets in turmoil.
Ministers said there would be long-lasting implications for the government’s spending priorities after it was forced to abandon the central plank of its welfare changes to prevent a damaging defeat by rebel MPs.
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Will Labour’s 10-year health plan usher in a ‘new era’ for the NHS in England?
Major health service reforms have had mixed results, and more emphasis on tech, community-based care and prevention has been tried before
Keir Starmer and Wes Streeting say the 10-year health plan will usher in a “new era for the NHS” in England. Their promised transformation will ensure it works in a more patient-friendly way and offers faster care, with health professionals providing a greater range of services in the same place and spotting illness earlier.
The “three big shifts” in the way the health service operates will involve it becoming more tech-based, moving significant amounts of care into community settings and giving greater priority to preventing illness rather than treating it.
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BBC boss offers to meet Jewish staff over Bob Vylan performance
Tim Davie tells staff that comments during Glastonbury show streamed live by BBC were ‘deeply offensive and totally unacceptable’
The BBC’s director general, Tim Davie, has offered to meet Jewish staff to discuss their concerns after telling them he was appalled by “deeply offensive” comments made during Bob Vylan’s performance at Glastonbury festival.
In the first comments from Davie since the BBC said it regretted not pulling the live stream of the punk duo’s set, he said it must have been “challenging the last few days” for Jewish colleagues at the corporation.
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Former head of Royal Navy sacked over affair with subordinate officer
Ministry of Defence says Ben Key’s conduct fell far short of standards expected after investigation
The former head of the Royal Navy, Ben Key, has been fired and stripped of his commission after it was discovered that the married admiral had been having an affair with a female subordinate.
The Ministry of Defence said Key’s behaviour had been found to have fallen far short of the standards expected, after an investigation triggered when the woman’s husband made a complaint.
Continue reading...Procedural vote would open final debate but measure has already been voted against by enough Republicans to have it fail
Donald Trump on Tuesday toured “Alligator Alcatraz”, a controversial new migrant detention jail in the remote Florida Everglades, and celebrated the harsh conditions that people sent there would experience.
The president was chaperoned by Florida’s hard-right governor, Ron DeSantis, who hailed the tented camp on mosquito-infested land 50 miles west of Miami as an example for other states that supported Trump’s mass deportation agenda.
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House vote on Trump’s big bill hangs in balance as Johnson vows to ‘get it over the line’
Speaker struggles to muster enough Republican votes as lawmakers object to provisions and cost
Donald Trump’s signature tax-and-spending bill is hanging in the balance as Republicans struggle to muster sufficient votes in the US House of Representatives.
House speaker Mike Johnson is determined to pass the bill as soon as possible, but has been frustrated by lawmakers who object to its provisions and overall cost. They have blocked House Republicans from approving a rule, which is necessary to begin debate on the measure and set the stage for its passage.
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Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs found guilty on two of five counts as lawyers call verdict ‘great victory’
Jury finds music mogul not guilty on most serious charges but judge denies request for bail
A New York Jury has found Sean “Diddy” Combs guilty of two counts and not guilty on three counts, following a closely watched seven-week federal trial marked by emotional and graphic testimony.
The mixed verdict saw Combs being found not guilty of the biggest charge, racketeering conspiracy, not guilty of the sex trafficking of Casandra Ventura or the sex trafficking of “Jane”, and guilty of both the transportation to engage in prostitution related to Casandra Ventura and the transportation to engage in prostitution related to “Jane”.
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Pentagon says US strikes set back Iran nuclear program ‘one to two years’
Sean Parnell repeats Trump claim that key sites were destroyed, based on ‘assessments inside the department’
The Pentagon has collected intelligence material that suggests Iran’s nuclear program was set back roughly one to two years as a result of the US strikes on three key facilities last month, the chief spokesperson at the defense department said at a news conference on Wednesday.
The spokesperson, Sean Parnell, repeated Donald Trump’s claim that Iran’s key nuclear sites had been completely destroyed, although he did not offer further details on the origin of the assessments beyond saying it came from inside the defense department.
Continue reading...This blog is now closed. You can find our full report and reactions from outside the court here:
The foreperson will now read the verdict.
The jury is in the courtroom and the foreperson has given the verdict form to the court deputy.
Continue reading...SDP kasvattaa kärjessä eroa toisena olevaan kokoomukseen, jonka kannatus laskee lähes prosenttiyksiköllä.
Analyysi: Perussuomalaisten kannatusluisu pysähtyi, mutta ilman duunareita puolue on pulassa
Perussuomalaiset haastaa kokoomusta työmarkkinatoimista tarkoituksella, kirjoittaa politiikan toimittaja Anne Orjala.
Komissaari Virkkusen tontille kuuluva alaikäisten suojelu sosiaalisessa mediassa puhuttaa EU:ssa ja Virkkusen vaitonaisuus saa osakseen ryöpytystä. Näin hän vastaa arvosteluun.
Vaikka merikaapeli katkeaisi sabotaasiin, pienet punaiset mökit pitävät bitit liikkeellä
Pohjoismaissa on noin 150 tarkoituksella huomaamattoman näköistä rakennusta, joiden tekniikka pitää merikaapelien dataliikenteen nopeana.
Matkustajalautta upposi lähellä Balin lomasaarta – ainakin neljä ihmistä on kuollut
Alus upposi myöhään keskiviikkoiltana paikallista aikaa, kun se oli matkalla Jaavalta Balille.
Kesämyräkkä huitaisee halki Suomen
Suomen yli liikkuu torstain ja perjantain aikana voimakas matalapaine, joka tuo maan etelä- ja keskiosaan runsaita vesisateita, myrskytuulia ja ukkosia.
Matkailun vaikeuttaman asuntopulan pelätään uhkaavan Rovaniemen vetovoimaa opiskelijakaupunkina. Lapin ammattikorkeakoulu on jo joutunut siirtämään lähiopetusta pois sesongilta.
Haaveiletko lupiineilla tienaamisesta? Lue tämä juttu, niin pääset alkuun perusasioista
Tänä kesänä vieraslajien torjuntaan varatut rahat ovat kuluneet aiempia vuosia nopeammin. Ahkerimmat ovat tienanneet vieraslajien torjunnalla jopa nelinumeroisia summia.
Ensimmäiset veronpalautukset kilahtavat tänään tilille
Verohallinto varoittaa, että huijaukset saattavat lisääntyä palautusaikaan.
Emma-Kaisa Kuusisto valitsi elämän Pitkäniemen sairaalassa
Emma-Kaisa Kuusisto löysi elämänhalunsa psykiatrisella osastolla. Nyt hän uhkaa jäädä ilman hoitoa lääkäripulan ja ruuhkan takia.
Sean ”Diddy” Combs ei pääse vapaaksi takuita vastaan
Hiphopmoguli tuomittiin kahdesta prostituutioon liittyvästä rikoksesta, mutta hänet vapautettiin vakavemmista syytteistä.
Pelifirmat voivat tehdä jo ostetuista peleistä toimimattomia – nyt pelaajat kutsuvat EU:ta hätiin
Stop Killing Games -kampanjan tavoitteena on velvoittaa peliyhtiöt tarjoamaan mahdollisuus pitää poistettavat pelit hengissä. Suomalaiset ovat osallistuneet kampanjaan innokkaasti.
Dollarin arvo laskee rytisten, ja se tuntuu myös Suomessa – tässä voittajat ja häviäjät
Kuluttajalle dollarin nopea arvonlasku voi tarjota mahdollisuuden edullisiin hankintoihin. Teollisuudelle se tuo vain lisää epävarmuutta.
Satiirilehden työntekijöitä pidätetty Turkissa – syynä kohu ”Muhammed-pilakuvasta”
Miehet otettiin kiinni epäiltynä uskonnollisten arvojen tahallisesta halventamisesta, mikä on rikos.
Oikeustieteilijä: UM voi joutua jopa rikosvastuuseen Portugalin-lähettilään tapauksesta
Työoikeuden asiantuntijan mukaan rikosriski voi täyttyä, koska ulkoministeriö reagoi Titta Maja-Luodon käytökseen liian hitaasti.
Still haven't filed your taxes? Here's what you need to know
So far this tax season, the IRS has received more than 90 million income tax returns for 2022.
Retail spending fell in March as consumers pull back
Spending at US retailers fell in March as consumers pulled back amid recessionary fears fueled by the banking crisis.
Analysis: Fox News is about to enter the true No Spin Zone
This is it.
Silicon Valley Bank collapse renews calls to address disparities impacting entrepreneurs of color
When customers at Silicon Valley Bank rushed to withdraw billions of dollars last month, venture capitalist Arlan Hamilton stepped in to help some of the founders of color who panicked about losing access to payroll funds.
Lake Powell, the second-largest human-made reservoir in the US, has lost nearly 7% of its potential storage capacity since 1963, when Glen Canyon Dam was built, a new report shows.
These were the best and worst places for air quality in 2021, new report shows
Air pollution spiked to unhealthy levels around the world in 2021, according to a new report.
As the US attempts to wean itself off its heavy reliance on fossil fuels and shift to cleaner energy sources, many experts are eyeing a promising solution: your neighborhood big-box stores and shopping malls.
Look of the Week: Blackpink headline Coachella in Korean hanboks
Bringing the second day of this year's Coachella to a close, K-Pop girl group Blackpink made history Saturday night when they became the first Asian act to ever headline the festival. To a crowd of, reportedly, over 125,000 people, Jennie, Jisoo, Lisa and Rosé used the ground-breaking moment to pay homage to Korean heritage by arriving onstage in hanboks: a traditional type of dress.
Scientists identify secret ingredient in Leonardo da Vinci paintings
"Old Masters" such as Leonardo da Vinci, Sandro Botticelli and Rembrandt may have used proteins, especially egg yolk, in their oil paintings, according to a new study.
How Playboy cut ties with Hugh Hefner to create a post-MeToo brand
Hugh Hefner launched Playboy Magazine 70 years ago this year. The first issue included a nude photograph of Marilyn Monroe, which he had purchased and published without her knowledge or consent.
'A definitive backslide.' Inside fashion's worrying runway trend
Now that the Fall-Winter 2023 catwalks have been disassembled, it's clear one trend was more pervasive than any collective penchant for ruffles, pleated skirts or tailored coats.
Michael Jordan's 1998 NBA Finals sneakers sell for a record $2.2 million
In 1998, Michael Jordan laced up a pair of his iconic black and red Air Jordan 13s to bring home a Bulls victory during Game 2 of his final NBA championship — and now they are the most expensive sneakers ever to sell at auction. The game-winning sneakers sold for $2.2 million at Sotheby's in New York on Tuesday, smashing the sneaker auction record of $1.47 million, set in 2021 by a pair of Nike Air Ships that Jordan wore earlier in his career.
The surreal facades of America's strip clubs
Some people travel the world in search of adventure, while others seek out natural wonders, cultural landmarks or culinary experiences. But French photographer François Prost was looking for something altogether different during his recent road trip across America: strip clubs.
Here's the real reason to turn on airplane mode when you fly
We all know the routine by heart: "Please ensure your seats are in the upright position, tray tables stowed, window shades are up, laptops are stored in the overhead bins and electronic devices are set to flight mode."
'I was up to my waist down a hippo's throat.' He survived, and here's his advice
Paul Templer was living his best life.
They bought an abandoned 'ghost house' in the Japanese countryside
He'd spent years backpacking around the world, and Japanese traveler Daisuke Kajiyama was finally ready to return home to pursue his long-held dream of opening up a guesthouse.
Relaxed entry rules make it easier than ever to visit this stunning Asian nation
Due to its remoteness and short summer season, Mongolia has long been a destination overlooked by travelers.
The most beautiful sections of China's Great Wall
Having lived in Beijing for almost 12 years, I've had plenty of time to travel widely in China.
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Nelly Cheboi, who creates computer labs for Kenyan schoolchildren, is CNN's Hero of the Year
Celebrities and musicians are coming together tonight to honor everyday people making the world a better place.
CNN Heroes: Sharing the Spotlight
Donate now to a Top 10 CNN Hero
Anderson Cooper explains how you can easily donate to any of the 2021 Top 10 CNN Heroes.
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”Siihen voi mennä vuosi tai sitten viisikymmentä”, Peter Piot arvioi uuden pandemian tuloa HS:n haastattelussa.
Suomen talous | Hypo: Talouskasvu jää odotettua heikommaksi
Suomen Hypoteekkiyhdistyksen mukaan pitkäaikaistyöttömien määrä on nousemassa 1990-luvun lamavuosia korkeammalle tasolle.
Kannatusmittaukset | Perussuomalaisten kannatus virkosi Ylen kyselyssä
Edellisessä mittauksessa perussuomalaisten kannatus oli koko hallituskauden alhaisin.
Kolumni | Netflix täyttyy canceloinnista, ja se on ilo katsojalle
Tulevaisuudessa cancelointia käsittelevät teokset saattavat olla entistä ajankohtaisempia, kirjoittaa kulttuuritoimittaja Jussi Lehmusvesi.
Indonesia | Lautta upposi lähellä Balia: Neljä ihmistä kuollut, kymmeniä kateissa
Lautta upposi Balinsalmella Indonesiassa keskiviikkoiltana, neljä ihmistä on kuollut ja arviolta 60 ihmistä on kateissa.
Rikokset | Mies vangittiin maahantulokiellon rikkomisesta
Toistuvaan maahantulokiellon rikkomiseen perustuvia vangitsemisia on Itä-Uudenmaan poliisin alueella noin muutama vuodessa.
Sää | Kesän sade-ennätys voi rikkoutua, kun matalapaine tuo vuorokaudeksi sateita
Päivän aikana voi sataa yli 50 millimetriä, varoittaa Ilmatieteen laitos. Voimassa on myös tulvavaroitus.
Oikeudenkäynnit | Hiphopmoguli Sean "Diddy" Combs ei pääse vapaaksi takuita vastaan
Combs todettiin keskiviikkona seksuaalirikosoikeudenkäynnissä syylliseksi kahdesta prostituutioon liittyvästä rikoksesta. Tuomionluvun ajankohtaa käsitellään ensi viikolla.
Osakemarkkinat | Wall Streetillä osa indekseistä taas ennätyskorkeuksiin
Mielialaa arvopaperimarkkinoilla kohensi Yhdysvaltain ja Vietnamin kauppasopimus.
Diplomaattilähteiden mukaan on todennäköistä, että joitakin tulleja jää voimaan.
Ensimmäisinä veronpalautuksia saavat toiminimiyrittäjät, maataloudenharjoittajat ja heidän puolisonsa.
Veikkaus Arena | Tapahtumajätin johtaja: Neuvotteluja käytiin useiden kumppaniehdokkaiden kanssa
Live Nation Finlandin johtaja Sivi Purmonen myöntää yhtiöllä olleen useita kumppanuusehdokkaita Pasilan areenalle.
Lukijan mielipide | Työelämä ei ole rikki
Väitän, että suomalainen työelämä on paremmassa kunnossa kuin koskaan ennen.
Pääkirjoitus | Nyt on väärä hetki löysätä asuntolainojen sääntelyä
Rahapolitiikka ei ole Suomen omissa käsissä. Siksi taloudessa pitää olla toisenlaisia säätönuppeja, eikä niitä pidä sorkkia joka suhdannekäänteessä.
HS 50 vuotta sitten 3.7.1975 | Kilpailuolot pakottavat kauppiaat alemyynteihin
Kilpailuolot pakottavat kauppiaat alemyynteihin
Muistokirjoitus | Tilojen ja tilaisuuksien rakentaja
Pia Ilonen 1957–2025
Lomailu | Ulkomaalaiset turistit ihmettelevät hotelleissa bideesuihkuja ja karjalanpiirakoita
Ulkomaalaiset matkailijat päivittelevät hotelleissa muun muassa kesäyön valoisuutta ja bideesuihkuja, helsinkiläishotelleista kerrotaan HS:lle.
Muistokirjoitus | Pitkä ura Maikkarilla
Juhani Aalste 1957–2025
Saksalaisprofessori Carlo Masala haluaa Euroopan pysähtyvän miettimään skenaariota, jossa Venäjä voittaa – ei vain Ukrainassa vaan myös tavoitteessa hajottaa Nato.
Risteilyt | KGB valvoi ”baaridaamien” työtä Tallinnan-laivoilla
Taimi Tober ja Mari Mikk pääsivät rautaesiripun takaa laivalle töihin, kun olivat ensin tutustuneet kapitalistien palvelukulttuuriin.
Ukraina-seuranta | Euroopan Nato-maat harkitsevat amerikkalaisten aseiden ostamista Ukrainalle
HS seuraa Venäjän hyökkäyssotaa ja sen seurauksia hetki hetkeltä.
Julkisuudessa on ollut eri näkemyksiä siitä, missä määrin Yhdysvaltojen iskut tuhosivat Iranin kykyä tehdä ydinase.
Lähi-itä | Iran keskeyttää yhteistyön kansainvälisen atomienergiajärjestön IAEA:n kanssa
Iranin presidentti on hyväksynyt yhteistyön keskeyttämistä koskevan lain.
Aivotutkimus | Aivomme säteilevät hennosti valohiukkasia
Valohiukkaset löytyivät umpipimeässä huoneessa toteutetussa kokeessa. Biofotonit voivat tulevaisuudessa auttaa tutkimaan aivojen terveyttä.
Jalkapallo | Katariina Kosola piti itselleen antamansa lupauksen
Katariina Kosola oli päättänyt ennen peliä tehdä maalin Islantia vastaan.
Asuminen | Saksan vuokrasääntely saa jatkoa, vaikka sen voimassaolon aikana vuokrat tuplaantuivat
Vuokrien hinnat saattavat porsaanreikien ansiosta olla sallittuun verrattuna jopa kuusinkertaisia.
Tekoäly | Kun tekniikkaa kutsuu älykkääksi, ihmiset luulevat sen olevan ”hyvä”
Amerikkalaiskirjailija Karen Hao selvitti Open AI -yhtiön taustat. Nyt hän varoittaa hyväuskoisuudesta tekoälyn suhteen.
Jalkapallo | Helmarit juhlii – ensimmäinen voitto EM-kisoissa 16 vuoteen
Suomi voitti EM-kisojen avausottelussa Islannin. HS seurasi Helmarien EM-avausta.
Gaza | Hamas ei heti hyväksynyt Trumpin ehdotusta aselevosta, Trumpin mukaan parempaa diiliä ei tule
Trumpin mukaan Israel olisi suostunut jo aseleposopimukseen tarvittaviin ehtoihin. Israel ei kuitenkaan toistaiseksi ole vahvistanut tätä.
Rudi Vikström debytoi liigassa toukokuussa, ja parissa viime ottelussa hän on tehnyt kaksi voittomaalia.
Kommentti | Suomen rohkeus palkittiin
Helmarit pelasi EM-kisojen avausottelunsa rohkeasti, mutta nöyrästi. Se toi hienon tuloksen, kirjoittaa Johanna Nordling Sveitsin Thunista.
Vanhusten hoiva | Hallitus laskee: Teknologiaa käyttämällä voidaan vähentää 662 hoitajaa
Työnantajat kritisoivat esitystä. Heidän mukaansa säästöä tulee todellisuudessa vain vähän, vaikka rahat ollaan viemässä pois.
Musiikki | Sanna Marin julkaisi kuvan hänestä kappaleen tehneen rock-bändin kanssa
Ranskalaisyhtye Indochinen viime vuonna ilmestyneellä levyllä on kappale nimeltä Sanna sur la croix.
Jääkiekko | Aleksi Saarela menetti rahakkaan työpaikan armeijan vuoksi: puolustusvoimat kommentoi
Jääkiekkoilija Aleksi Saarela joutui purkamaan rahakkaan sopimuksensa sveitsiläisen SCL Tigersin kanssa, kun asepalvelus kutsui.
Parhaat kuvat | Kansainväliset tähdet luottivat klassiseen tyyliin Wimbledonissa
HS kokosi Wimbledonin tennisturnauksen ensimmäisten päivien julkkistyylejä.
Kommentti | HJK romahti kotikentällään: toinen tappio lisää epäilyksiä valmennukseen
HJK:n johto on epäröinyt päävalmentaja Miika Nuutisen sopimuksen kanssa, sillä häneltä puuttuvat yhä riittävät näytöt, kirjoittaa urheilutoimittaja Ari Virtanen.
Helteet | Useita kuoli Espanjaa ja Ranskaa korventaneissa helteissä
Espanjassa kesäkuu oli maan mittaushistorian kuumin. Saksassa annettiin keskiviikkona hellevaroitus koko maahan.
Waldorf Astoria -ketjun historiaan kuuluu muun muassa Yhdysvaltain presidenttien majoittaminen sekä Eggs Benedict -annoksen väitetty kehittäminen.
Serbia | ”Kuoleman liukuhihna” – Venäjä syyttää liittolaistaan Ukrainan aseistamisesta
Serbian ulkopolitiikkaa ohjaa opportunistinen Venäjän ja lännen välissä tasapainottelu.
Oikeudenkäynnit | Sean ”Diddy” Combs sai tuomion, syytteet ihmiskaupasta kaatuivat
Combs pidätettiin rikosepäilyjen vuoksi New Yorkissa viime syyskuussa, ja hän on ollut vangittuna oikeudenkäynnin alkamiseen saakka.
Näyttelyvinkit | Suomalaisen Venny Soldanin muotokuva on yksi Tukholman katseenvangitsijoista
Tukholman museot tarjoavat tänä kesänä vahvan kattauksen Ruotsin taiteen tunnetuimpia nimiä.
Rahapelit | Käärijä aloitti yhteistyön virolaisen nettikasinon kanssa, somessa kritiikkiä
Tiedotteen mukaan Käärijän ja virolaisen Winz.ion yhteistyöhön kuuluu muun muassa ”elämyksellisiä livetapahtumia” sekä ”yhdessä tuotettua monimediasisältöä”.
Tennis | Heliövaara ja Patten porhalsivat jatkoon Wimbledonissa
Heliövaara ja Patten kukistivat avauskierroksella brittiparin.
Kirja-arvio | Riitelevät Oasis-veljekset saivat tarjouksen, josta ei kannattanut kieltäytyä
Kuvaus Oasiksen tällä viikolla käynnistyvän paluukiertueen kulissien takaisista puitteista on Gallagher-kirjan kiinnostavinta antia.
Kieli | Veikkaus Arenan kaksikielinen nimi ihmetyttää, professorille ilmiö on tuttu
Professori Mikko Laitisen mukaan englantia käytetään kaupallisissa nimissä, koska kielellä on symbolista arvoa.
Gelato | Esittelyssä Helsingin jäätelöbaarit, joissa gelato on todella hyvää
Ruokatoimituksen gelatobaarien suosikit ovat Helsingin keskustan ja Etelä-Haagan uutuudet sekä Teurastamon klassikko.
Presidentti Donald Trumpin suuri lakipaketti tarkoittaa, että miljoonat yhdysvaltalaiset menettävät sairausvakuutuksensa kokonaan lähivuosina.
Ulkopoliittinen instituutti | Upin hallitus kokousti Oliver Stubbin harjoittelupaikan takia
”Ehkä rekrytointiprosessit ovat yksi asia, jota pitää tarkastella”, sanoo hallituksen puheenjohtaja Klaus Korhonen.
Lukijan mielipide | Yhteisöllisen asumisen idea on pilattu
Yhteisöllistä asumista on tarjottu henkilöille, jotka eivät enää selviydy mitenkään yksin kotona fyysisen tai henkisen heikkouden vuoksi.
Pääkirjoitus | Georgia vangitsee nyt oppositiopoliitikkoja
Etelä-Kaukasiassa sijaitseva Georgia muuttuu tasaista vauhtia yhä itsevaltaisemmaksi. Venäjältä kopioitujen lakien säätämisen jälkeen valtapuolue kitkee nyt vastustajiaan.
50-vuotias | Pasi Pauni aloitti skeittivideoista, ja nyt hän kuvaa mainoksia ympäri maailmaa
Pasi Pauni aloitti elokuvaajan-uransa jo lapsena.
Pesäpallo | Pelaajat hermostuivat pesäpallojen heikkoon laatuun: ”Kohta lakkoon”
Pesäpallossa puhuttavat nyt pesäpallot.
Hotellit | Helsingin ”ultraluksusta” tarjoavasta hotellista tulee Waldorf Astoria
Helsinkiläisen hotellin tiloihin tulee kansainvälinen brändi. Samppa Lajusen kiinteistösijoitusyhtiö kertoi kesäkuussa vetäytyvänsä The Hotel Mariasta.
Jalkapallo | EM-kisoissa todella harvinainen tilanne – todennäköisyys 0,045%
Norja arvotaan kisoista toiseen samaan lohkoon järjestäjämaan kanssa, vaikka sen pitäisi olla likipitäen mahdotonta.
Ilmastotavoite | Komissio vahvistaa: EU aikoo ulkoistaa päästövähennyksiään kehittyviin maihin
EU-komissio esittää 90 prosentin päästövähennystä vuoteen 2040 mennessä verrattuna vuoteen 1990. Osan vähennyksestä saisi ostaa muualta maailmasta.
Video | Sompasaunan uusi sijainti huokuu mökkitunnelmaa
Kävimme tutustumassa vapaaehtoisvoimin pyörivän Sompasaunan uuteen sijaintiin Helsingin Mustikkamaalla.
Sanajuuri | Kokeile, pärjäätkö Sanajuuri-pelissä ilman vihjeitä
Sanajuuri on Helsingin Sanomien peli, jossa kasvatetaan sanoja lisäämällä edelliseen aina yksi uusi kirjain. Uusi peli joka päivä.
Yritykset | Microsoft irtisanoo tuhansia työntekijöitä
Microsoft kertoo aikovansa vähentää hallinnon eri tasoja ja esihenkilöiden määrää sekä yksinkertaistaa tuotteitaan.
Sähköautot | Sähköautotullien seuraus: Kiinalaismerkki Maxus tuo mielellään dieselautoja Suomeen
Kiinalainen Maxus keskittyy jatkossa hyötyajoneuvoihin. Merkki myy jo Suomessa enemmän dieselautoja kuin sähköautoja.
HS:n tiedot | Perussuomalaiset suututtanut yhdenvertaisuusvaltuutettu syrjäytetään tehtävästään
Kristina Stenman haki jatkokautta, muttei tullut valituksi. Uudeksi yhdenvertaisuusvaltuutetuksi on nousemassa nykyinen tasa-arvovaltuutettu Rainer Hiltunen.
Miniristikko | Näillä sanoilla ei ole muuta tekemistä keskenään kuin ristikkäin meno!
HS:n 5x5-miniristikko ilmestyy päivittäin vaihtuvalla aiheella. Kokeile saatko kaikki sanat omille paikoilleen.
Helsinki-Vantaa | Maksullinen turvatarkastus jakaa lentomatkustajien mielipiteet
Osa lentomatkustajista pelkää, että turvatarkastuksen ”pikakaista” saattaa hidastua, kun pääsyn sille voi ostaa lisäpalveluna.
Tuomiot | 22-vuotiaalle rikollisryhmän johtajalle yhteensä yli 10 vuotta vankeutta
Mies sai nyt 5 vuoden vankeustuomion ja toukokuussa 10 vuoden vankeustuomion.
Muoti | Speedot palasivat muotiin maailmalla, Helsingin rannoilta löysimme jo muutamat
Moni liputtaa uima-asun käytännöllisyyden puolesta, mutta halusi siitä löytyvän myös jotain hauskaa.
Musiikki | Rap-artisti Kanye Westiltä evättiin pääsy Australiaan
Kanye West, joka tunnetaan nykyään myös nimellä Ye, on viime vuosina ollut esillä rasististen ja juutalaisvastaisten tekojen ja kommenttiensa vuoksi.
Tuholaiset | Rottaongelma levisi lyhyessä ajassa tamperelaisen Talla Stenbäckin taloyhtiössä
Rottien määrä on kasvanut vuoden sisällä Tampereella selkeästi. Talla Stenbäck on taloyhtiössään aktiivinen rottien loukuttaja.
Lukijan mielipide | Olen nähnyt läheltä, miten osattomuuden tunne hiipii nuoren arkeen
Toivon, että tulevaisuudessa myös monikulttuurisesta taustasta tuleva nuori voi sanoa ääneen: ”Minä kuulun tänne. Tämä on minun kotini.”
Lissabonin-lähettiläästä tehtiin helmikuussa häirintäilmoitus. Ulkoministeri ei ota kantaa siihen, voiko Maja-Luoto jatkaa ulkoministeriössä muissa tehtävissä.
KKV:n asiantuntijan mukaan asiassa voi olla syytä arvioida, onko kyseessä ollut hintavirhe, joka ostajan olisi pitänyt havaita.
Ruotsalaismedian mukaan Ikea haastaa Bilteman oikeuteen.
Etelä-Korea | K-popjätti BTS tekee paluun
Poikabändin maailmanvalloituksen keskeytti pakollinen asepalvelus. Nyt yhtye ilmoitti uudesta albumista.
Valtionavustukset | Aivoliiton saamasta avustuksesta tutkintapyyntö poliisille
Oikeusministeriö myönsi viime vuonna Aivoliitolle talousosaamisen valtionavustusta 85 000 euroa.
Ilmastotavoite | Ministeri Multala: Suomi tukee EU-komission ehdottamaa päästövähennystavoitetta
Multalan mukaan komission ehdotus on linjassa Suomen ennakkovaikuttamisen painopisteiden kanssa.
Pääsykokeet | Aino Hyvärinen uupui yliopiston pääsykoerumbaan ja vaihtoi tradenomiopintoihin
Kun kaksi hakukertaa ei tuottanut toivottua tulosta, Hyvärinen päätti muuttaa suuntaa. Nyt hän nauttii opinnoistaan.
Kommentti | Ulkoministeri Valtonen teki ainoan oikean ratkaisun
Valtonen teki päätöksen suurlähettilään kotiuttamisesta virkajohdon tuella. Lissabonin-lähetystö ei ollut enää toimintakykyinen, HS:n toimittaja Paavo Teittinen kirjoittaa kommentissaan.
Televisioarvio | Viiden tähden Tuuri-sarja on yhtä paljon aikuisten sitcom kuin lastenanimaatio
Australialainen Tuuri on parasta koko perheen tv-viihdettä, koska se on oikeasti koko perheelle.
Hengellisyys | Dalai-lama ilmoitti instituution jatkuvan hänen kuolemansa jälkeen
Lähes 90-vuotiaan Dalai-laman ikä on kiihdyttänyt spekulaatioita hänen seuraajastaan ja instituution tulevaisuudesta. Hän on sanonut aiemmin, että seuraajaa ei valita Kiinan rajojen sisältä.
Kommentti | Veikkaus maksaa Helsingin hallin nimestä arvioiden mukaan yli miljoonan vuodessa
Veikkaus teki pitkäkestoisen ja kalliin satsauksen Helsingin halliin, kirjoittaa urheilutoimituksen päällikkö Vesa Rantanen.
Lukijan mielipide | Tehdään Hernesaaresta liikunnan ja taiteen merellinen mekka
Hernesaarta voisi suunnitella siten, että kaikenlaista taiteen ja liikunnan tarjontaa ja vapaehtoistoimintaa voisi syntyä.
Jalkapallo | Linda Sällström on ollut uskollinen nuorena luomalleen säännölle: ”Älä ole persereikä”
Linda Sällström tähtää maaleihin ja menestykseen EM-kisoissa. Hän ottaa kantaa myös niitä isompiin asioihin.
Punkit | Pihasta voi muokata sellaisen, ettei se houkuttele punkkeja
Koti- tai mökkipihaa ei kannata vältellä puutiaisten pelossa. Asiantuntija listaa toimivat tavat verenimijöiden karkottamiseen.
Sää | Suomeen saapuu kesämyräkkä, pääkaupunkiseutu välttyy pahimmalta
Matalapaine tuo sateet maan länsiosaan torstain vastaisena yönä. Pääasiassa loppuviikon myräkkä riepottelee maan keskiosia.
Sorminäppäryys | Saatko langan solmuun yhdellä kädellä? Temppu voi haastaa nykyihmisen
Jos käsillä ei ole tekemistä, ne unohtavat vanhat taitonsa. Laske älypuhelin hetkeksi alas ja etsi käsiisi naru ja palloja.
Kolumni | Pyöräilyn väheksyminen on jättimäinen virhe
Pyöräilyä pidetään toissijaisena puuhasteluna, vaikka siitä on rutkasti hyötyä ihmiselle, yhteiskunnalle ja luonnolle. Työsuhdepyörän veroetua ei pitäisi perua.
Jääkiekko | Mikael Granlundin uusi sopimus nostaa uran kokonaisansiot yli 70 miljoonaan dollariin
Granlund on suomalaisten palkkatilaston kärkipäätä.
Hallituksen toimet | Viini, siideri ja nikotiinipussit kallistuvat
Viinin hinta kallistuisi enemmän kuin siiderin ja oluen. Keskihintaisen nikotiinipussirasian hinta nousisi vajaalla eurolla.
Luonto | Patikoijat käyttävät kivenkoloa roska-astiana syvällä Käsivarren Lapissa
Metsähallituksen asiantuntija kehottaa retkeilijöitä ennakoimaan, mitä retken aikana tulevien roskien kanssa tekee ja pakkaamaan repun sen mukaan.
Kesä | Puisto Helsingin Töölönlahdella laajeni
Töölönlahdelle valmistui jo toinen kunnostettu alue kansalaisten oleskeluun ja käyskentelyyn.
Lukijan mielipide | Ulosottoviranomainen ei ollutkaan viholliseni
Vuosien mittaisen prosessin edetessä olen oppinut, että ulosotto suojelee minua kohtuuttomalta kohtelulta.
Jalkapallo | Ruotsin maajoukkueessa pelannut Oscar Linnér siirtyy Veikkausliigaan KTP:n riveihin
KTP hankki ruotsalaismaalivahdin sekä tämän pikkuveljen loppukauden mittaisilla sopimuksilla.
Heathrow | Lentoliikenteen sotkenut tulipalo johtui muuntajaan päässeestä vedestä
Vesi huomattiin jo vuonna 2018, mutta vikaan ei puututtu.
Suurlähetystö | Suurlähettiläs Maja-Luoto tehtävänsä päättymisestä: ”Ymmärrettävää”
Aiemmin keskiviikkona kerrottiin, että ulkoministeri Elina Valtonen (kok) on päättänyt esittää Maja-Luodon tehtävän päättämistä.
Lentoliikenteen työriita | Finnair peruu noin 80 lentoa perjantaina
Yhtiön mukaan peruutukset vaikuttavat noin 8 000 asiakkaan matkasuunnitelmiin.
Puistoruokailu | Puistojen vessasulku ihmetyttää Espoossa
Vessasululla kaupunki haluaa vähentää ruoka-astioiden tiskaamista puistoissa.
Vieraskynä | Seksuaalirikoksissa tulee tunnistaa uhrin haavoittuva asema
Nykyisen lain tulkinnassa keskeinen kysymys on, ottaako uusi sääntely aiempaa paremmin huomioon usean seikan yhteisvaikutuksen.
Helsinki | Helsingin areenan uusi nimi on Veikkaus Arena
Areenan uusi pääsponsori on Veikkaus.
Sääilmiöt | Värikkäät pilvet ihmetyttivät Helsingin saaristossa
Meteorologin mukaan kyseessä on harvinaisten helmiäispilvien sijaan yleisempi väripilvi.
Ruokapalvelussa siirryttiin viime vuonna kylmänä toimitettaviin aterioihin esimerkiksi hygienia- ja tehokkuussyistä. Laajempaa tyytymättömyyttä ei ole ruokapalvelupäällikön mukaan ollut.
Here are the key events on day 1,225 of Russia’s war on Ukraine.
Trump says Powell should resign ‘immediately’ in latest attack on Fed chair
The US president has repeatedly called on the top central banker to step down amid disagreement over interest rates.
Judge blocks Trump’s ban on asylum at the southern US border
The court ruled that Trump's presidential powers did not authorise him to set up an 'alternative immigration system'.
Dozens missing after ferry carrying 65 people sinks off Indonesia’s Bali
Authorities say at least four dead and 38 missing after vessel sinks off resort island.
Bryan Kohberger pleads guilty to Idaho murders to avoid death penalty
The doctoral student has admitted to breaking into the rental home and killing four University of Idaho students.
US says its strikes degraded Iran’s nuclear programme by one to two years
Pentagon says its intelligence assessments show that Iran's nuclear sites were destroyed in 'bold' US attacks.
Diddy verdict raises questions over domestic abuse, power and coercion
The jury's decision highlights the complexities of intimate partner violence and the legacy of the #MeToo movement.
As Thailand does U-turn on legal cannabis, businesses scramble to survive
Government says decriminalisation fueled social ills, but producers argue new rules will only push industry underground.
EU presses China over exports of rare earth elements and Ukraine war
Talks lay groundwork for a summit between EU and Chinese leaders in Beijing on July 24 and 25.
Trump announces deal to impose 20% tariff on trade with Vietnam
Any transshipment will face 40 percent levy, while Vietnam will accept US goods tariff-free.
Alcaraz and Sabalenka restore order at Wimbledon 2025
Men's second seed, Carlos Alcaraz, and women's top seed, Aryna Sabalenka, ease into respective third rounds.
US restaurant workers say ‘no tax on tips’ undermined by benefits cuts
Restaurant workers point out that new work requirements don't account for the unstable hours inherent in food service.
Jury clears Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs on most serious sexual offence charges
A New York jury found rapper Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs not guilty of sexual trafficking and engaging in a criminal enterprise.
Woman rescued from rubble and fire after Israeli strike in Gaza
Video shows the rescue of a woman from rubble and flames in Gaza City following an an Israeli bombing.
Israel kills Gaza hospital director and his family
An Israeli strike on a residential building in Gaza killed the director of the Indonesian Hospital.
‘Death or food’: The Palestinians killed by Israel at Gaza’s aid centres
Palestinians still flock to Gaza Humanitarian Foundation aid sites, even after hundreds are killed by Israeli forces.
What’s bringing China and the EU closer?
The two sides are marking 50 years of relations this month, holding talks and pledging deeper cooperation.
Del Monte Foods seeks bankruptcy protection as consumers turn away
Del Monte's losses have piled up as consumers choose healthier or cheaper alternatives.
UK lawmakers vote to ban Palestine Action as ‘terrorist’ group
Amnesty slams move as ‘unprecedented legal overreach’, puts protesters against Gaza war on a par with al-Qaeda, ISIL.
Fluminense vs Al Hilal: FIFA Club World Cup – teams, start time, lineups
Brazil's Fluminense face Saudi Arabia's Al Hilal in first of the quarterfinals of the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup.
Gill and India dominate England on the first day of second Test
India close on 310-5 on Day One of the second Test against England as captain Shubam Gill hits second century of series.
At least eight people die in record-breaking heatwave across Europe
Scientists say heatwaves and storms are becoming more intense due to human-driven climate change.
Can the DRC-Rwanda deal deliver peace?
The US-brokered peace agreement comes after years of conflict, displacing 7 million people.
Sailing to break the siege on Gaza
Al Jazeera Mubasher’s Omar Faiad recounts life aboard the Madleen aid ship headed to Gaza.
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs convicted on two of five counts in sex abuse trial
US jury in New York clears music mogul of more serious charges, including sex trafficking and racketeering.
The suspension includes air defense interceptors, and it will directly affect Ukraine’s ability to fend off escalating Russian air assaults.
Israel Wants to Resume Truce Talks With Hamas Soon
Gideon Saar, the Israeli foreign minister, cited “positive signs” in the long-moribund cease-fire talks to end the war in Gaza and free the hostages held there.
Dalai Lama Tightens Grip on Reins of Succession in the Face of Chinese Pressure
The aging spiritual leader is looking to prevent Beijing from taking advantage of a power vacuum. But there is pressure to preserve a core element of Tibetan Buddhism.
Pound Drops Amid Uncertainty Over UK Chancellor Rachel Reeves
Rachel Reeves, Britain’s chancellor, appeared visibly upset in Parliament as the prime minister was asked about her position. The British pound and government bonds dropped in value.
What to Know About the Heat Wave in Europe
Weather agencies have warned of a third day of high temperatures that in some places have climbed well above 100 degrees Fahrenheit, or more than 40 degrees Celsius.
Argentina’s President Javier Milei Undermines Press Freedom With Online Attacks
Journalists face an increasing number of attacks from Argentina’s highest office, raising concerns about the undermining of press freedom.
Trump Says U.S. Has Reached Trade Deal With Vietnam
The president said he had agreed to initial trade terms with Vietnam, the second country to strike a limited deal after Mr. Trump threatened steep tariffs.
Russia-Azerbaijan Tensions Soar, Threatening Moscow’s Influence
The rift, provoked by the deaths of two ethnic Azerbaijanis in Russian custody, was the latest in a series of spats that revealed a deeper diplomatic rift between the former allies.
Kim Jong-un Appears to Mourn His Troops Killed Fighting for Russia
Through an event shown on North Korean state television, Mr. Kim also highlighted the sacrifices made for Moscow and the rewards he seeks.
Dalai Lama Succession: How the Next Tibetan Spiritual Leader Will Be Chosen
The Tibetan spiritual leader said that his lineage would continue, and that China would have no say about his successor.
Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra Suspended Amid Cambodia Dispute
Paetongtarn Shinawatra is accused of ethical lapses in a conversation with the Cambodian leader Hun Sen and has faced calls to resign.
The First Income Tax in the Persian Gulf Signals a Changing Economic Reality
A plan by Oman is being closely watched by other governments in the region that are preparing for a future beyond oil.
Iran Suspends Cooperation With U.N. Nuclear Watchdog
The decision means that international inspectors will not be able to oversee sites. Experts have warned that Tehran could revive plans to build a bomb.
Heathrow Shutdown Caused by Problem Left Unfixed for Years, Report Says
The fire at an electrical substation was caused by a short circuit in a part that hadn’t been properly maintained by National Grid, an official report found.
Talks between Israel and Hamas.
Can Indonesia Afford Prabowo’s Free School Lunch Program?
Indonesia’s president promised free meals for every student in the country. But unemployment is rising, and some analysts say he’s making matters worse.
Chechnya’s Strongman Is Visibly Ailing. The Russian Region Is Bracing for Succession.
Amid rampant speculation about his health, Ramzan Kadyrov, the Kremlin-allied strongman who rules the region, has been noticeably absent from view, while grooming his teenage son for the future.
Lovebugs Swarm South Korea’s Capital, Drawing Residents’ Ire
Municipal workers in the South Korean capital region are responding to a summer infestation by spraying water, but residents wish they would break out the poison.
Swarms of the harmless insects have descended on Seoul and nearby cities, leaving many residents frustrated with the infestation.
4 Dead and 32 Missing After Ferry Sinks Near Bali
The ship was carrying 65 people when it sank on its way to the Indonesian resort island, a popular tourist destination.
How to Stay Cool While Traveling in Paris, Italy, Spain and Parts of Europe
As Europe buckles under a punishing heat wave, residents and summer travelers are struggling to find relief. Here’s how and where to look for respite.
North Korean Tech Workers Infiltrating Companies Around World, U.S. Says
Using falsified and stolen IDs, prosecutors say, North Koreans secure jobs that help finance the regime by evading sanctions. They also steal corporate secrets, some related to military technology.
Thursday Briefing: Sean Combs Acquitted of Sex Trafficking
Plus, pet crocodiles in Australia.
Dalai Lama Announces He Will Reincarnate
The Dalai Lama, the spiritual head of Tibetan Buddhists, announced that the lineage would go on despite Chinese efforts to control the institution.
This summer marks 80 years since the end of World War II when Allied forces liberated Nazi-occupied Europe, and also began to discover the horrific scale of the Holocaust.
An estimated six million Jews were systematically murdered by the Nazi regime.
With the passage of time, there are fewer and fewer survivors who can tell the stories of what they witnessed and endured.
Once fringe ideas of Holocaust denial are spreading. Multiple members of President Donald Trump's administration have expressed support for Nazi sympathizers and people who promote antisemitism.
The stories of those who lived through the Holocaust are in danger of being forgotten. And there's a race against time to record as many as possible.
In this episode, the story of a Jewish man who survived Buchenwald and an American soldier, who helped liberate the concentration camp.
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.
A Ukrainian actress saw herself in a White House video -- and created one in response
Antonina Khyzhniak, who appeared in stock footage included in a White House Instagram video for the Trump administration's tax bill, responded with a humorous video — and a serious message.
A Dangerous Quest for Food in Gaza
An NPR journalist in Gaza describes his harrowing experience seeking food from a distribution site run by private American contractors. He found himself facing Israeli military fire, crowds fighting for rations, and masked thieves.
Digital nomads from the U.S. who roam the world say their time abroad allows them to recognize — and even appreciate — aspects of American life and the privilege of American identity.
Trump announces trade deal with Vietnam
The announcement came after President Trump in April proposed a steep 46% tariff on Vietnamese imports; he later paused those tariffs while talks continued.
Greetings from Alishan, Taiwan, whose red cypress forests offer timeless beauty
Far-Flung Postcards is a weekly series in which NPR's international team shares snapshots of moments from their lives and work around the world.
Are we in the midst of another mustache renaissance?
Mustaches are having a moment. Here's what it's like living with one.
The Dalai Lama announces plans for a successor, signaling China won't have a say
The Dalai Lama said he will be reincarnated after he dies, and no one can interfere with the matter of succession. The Chinese government, however, claims authority over the his succession.
With a shaky truce between Israel and Iran holding, activists say the Iranian government is hunting for people it suspects of collaborating with Israel. Iranian state media reports hundreds have been taken into custody in the last two weeks and some are fleeing into neighboring countries, including Turkey. We hear from some.
And, during the air war with Israel, one young Iranian woman turned to Chat GPT for information and comfort.
USAID officially shuts down and merges remaining operations with State Department
When the Trump administration took over, one of its first major moves was dismantling the United States Agency for International Development. Nearly six months later, it officially shuts down Tuesday.
OPINION — Since 1984, Iran has been designated a state sponsor of terrorism. The designation is justified, given Iran’s continued support of proxies and criminal organizations that kill and terrorize innocent people. That behavior continues today, with the government of Ali Hosseini Khamenei surveilling, harassing, and detaining thousands of Iranians for allegedly aiding Israel -- and offending the morality police, who enforce Iran’s dress code for women.
The U.S. – Israel bombing of Iran’s nuclear sites in Isfahan, Natanz and Fordow was more than justified. Iran was enriching uranium at 60% purity, a few weeks away from 90% purity for nuclear weapons. And given Iran’s stated intent to destroy Israel, the bombing of these nuclear sites made imminent sense, especially given the International Atomic Energy Agency’s (IAEA) recent report that Iran was concealing information on its nuclear program, to include weaponization.
The Cipher Brief brings expert-level context to national and global security stories. It’s never been more important to understand what’s happening in the world. Upgrade your access to exclusive content by becoming a subscriber.
Terror Abroad
Iran has a long history of using terrorism as a tool of asymmetric warfare against the U.S. and its allies.
In April 1983, Iran was found guilty of supporting their proxy, Hezbollah’s Islamic Jihad Organization, a terrorist organization, for the bombing of the U.S. embassy in Beirut that killed 63 and wounded 34, to include eight CIA officers. One of those officers was the visiting Director of the Office of Near East and South Asia Analysis, Robert C. Ames.
In October 1983, the Iranian government was found responsible for the Beirut barracks bombing by the Islamic Jihad Organization, which killed 241 U.S. service members, 58 French soldiers and 6 civilians, injuring 60.
These two terrorist bombings apparently emboldened Iran into thinking that terrorism can be effective in eroding U.S. resolve. Thus, Iran continued to support their proxies – Hezbollah, Hamas and the Houthis in Yemen, and Shiite groups in Iraq and Syria – in its war with the U.S. and Israel.
In June 1996, Iran was behind the bombing of Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia, killing 19 airmen and 498 U.S. and international military and civilian members injured. A U.S. court ruled that Iran – and its proxy Hezbollah Al-Hejaz -- was responsible for the attack, providing the funding, support and direction.
This was the very overt Iran, confident in perpetrating these bold acts of terrorism.
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Terror at Home
What was less visible, however, was the government’s harsh treatment of its own people. The international community saw some of this in 2009, when the government ensured that incumbent Mahmood Ahmadinejad was reelected president, despite opposition leader, Mir -Hossein Mousavi, having widespread support from the public, promising hope and change. This “Green Movement” galvanized the Iranian people, resulting in protests, demonstrations and civil disobedience. The regime’s response was predictable: using brutal force to suppress the demonstrations and arrest the protesters.
This has always been the regime’s response to peaceful protests: suppressing and arresting the protesters. We saw this in September 2022 when Jina Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Kurdish-Iranian -- died in police custody; arrested by the so-called morality policy for improperly wearing her Hijab headscarf. Eyewitnesses reported that Amini was severely beaten and died because of police brutality.
The Iranian people were irate with the brutal death of Amini. Protests erupted throughout Iran. Iran Human Rights reported that at least 476 people were killed by security forces. Amnesty International reported that Iranian security forces fired into groups with live ammunition and killed protesters by beating them with batons.
Amini’s death gave rise to the global movement of: Woman, Life, Liberty.
The regime is now conducting a war against its own people, with widespread arrests of anyone protesting human rights abuses and corruption of the regime in power.
We would be remiss if we think the Ayatollah has given up on the use of terrorism to intimidate and deal with critics in opposition to his leadership. We would also be remiss if we think the theocracy will cease pursuing a nuclear weapons capability. The regime wants sanctions relief, and they’re prepared to eschew nuclear weapons to get this relief. Eventually, however, they will pursue their nuclear weapons program. We should be prepared.
This column by Cipher Brief Expert Ambassador Joseph DeTrani was first published in The Washington Times
Read more expert-driven national security insights, perspective and analysis in The Cipher Brief because National Security is Everyone’s Business.
The Cipher Brief's Hottest Summer Reading
CIPHER BRIEF FEATURE REPORTING -- With the 4th of July holiday fast approaching, now is a good time for our annual summer list of recommended beach reads. Since we are The Cipher Brief, our favorites include not only thrillers and realistic, fast-paced novels – but some notable works of non-fiction on matters of national security, intelligence and foreign policy. And there’s a cookbook thrown in for good measure.
We’ve carefully combed through the books that we’ve recently had reviewed by experts who have lived the spy or spy-related life - and we’ve singled out some titles we think you might enjoy at the beach or wherever you’re taking refuge from the summer heat. (And just a note: if you do click and buy using links, we might make a small commission. At least enough to pay for the paper this was printed on.)
Let’s get cooking, shall we?
Cookbook / Whiskey Category
Yep, you read that right. Leading our list of summer reads is one that has taken over the #1 spot in Amazon’s whiskey and alcoholic spirits categories, A Spy Walked Into A Bar: A Practitioner's Guide to Cocktail Tradecraft by former senior CIA Officers Rob Dannenberg and Joseph P. Mullin Jr. Think of it as a real-life guide to spies and their favorite cocktails. Based on experiences from their clandestine operations backgrounds, Rob and Joe have collected, curated and perfected the cocktails that were enjoyed while celebrating milestone events during their CIA careers. From the drinks they ordered after successfully recruiting assets, to marking the end of a major operation, this book features real life stories and homegrown photos by the authors themselves.
Novels
Appropriate for summer, is a new spy novel from Tess Gerritsen, The Summer Guests: A Thriller. This is Tess’ second spy book, after her very successful TV series a few years ago called Rizzoli and Isles. Gerritsen talked with Cipher Brief CEO & Publisher Suzanne Kelly about her journey from the popular TV series to spy author in the Cover Stories podcast – that was just after her first book, The Spy Coast was released. Veteran CIA officers Jay and Anne Gruner reviewed her latest book about four retired CIA officers living in Maine. The Gruners tell us it is a “gripping account of a complex set of murders, a possible recent kidnapping, and a secretary who was missing for 50 years.” talking about her previous spy-themed book.
Former U.S. counterterrorism officer and cybersecurity executive Neal Pollard broke the code on Ken Dekleva’s novel, The Russian Diplomat’s Wife. In his review, Neal says while the book ostensibly is a spy novel set in Vienna, it’s really a love story between two spies. Author (and frequent Cipher Brief contributor) Dekleva draws on his experience as a psychiatrist working for the State Department in many of the locales central to the book and his understanding of human motivation seems to bring his stories to life. We know because we also interviewed the author for the Cover Stories Podcast.
Speaking of Dekleva, we tapped his expertise to review several books by other authors this year. One worthy of special mention is The Poet’s Game: A Spy in Moscow by Paul Vidich. Dekleva calls the novel is a terrific read about a former CIA station chief in Moscow, now working as an investor in a private equity market in Moscow. The chief was called back to duty though to exfiltrate a former agent who claims to have explosive kompromat regarding America’s president. Navigating between two perilous worlds, those of Moscow and Washington, the storyline seems to offer proof that the cold war never really ended.
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Going back even further in time, Dekleva also reviewed Assignment in Saigon: A Cold War Thriller by former senior CIA officer Bill Rapp. In his review, Dekleva says that to truly understand the intelligence war in Vietnam, fiction may offer more to the reader and Rapp’s novel is a most worthy read.
Spy mastery is the theme of retired senior CIA officer Jim Lawler’s latest novel, The Traitors Tale: A Novel of Treachery within the CIA. We turned to another seasoned Agency officer, and Cipher Brief expert, Joe Augustyn, to review it. Augustyn told us: “Jim Lawler has written an intriguing and captivating novel that should satisfy the appetite of any spy novel enthusiast. His character descriptions are impressive, his knowledge of the Agency, its bureaucracy and its inner workings is deep, and his operational savvy is on display throughout. Impressive too is his understanding of the dynamics of personal relationships, both professional and personal, which he calls the “metaphysics” of spying.” You can learn more about Lawler and his book from this Cover Stories Podcast interview.
Non- Fiction
While we have reported on a ton of fine fiction over the past six months, real life stories, history and analysis have played an even larger role in our coverage. Among the books we’d like to invite (or re-invite) to your attention here are: Secret Servants of the Crown: The Forgotten Women of British Intelligence by Claire Hubbard-Hall and reviewed for us by Cipher Brief expert Tim Willasey-Wilsey, a real-life former member of the British Foreign Office. Willasey-Wilsey called it a “marvelous book and a valuable addition to what is known about the early days of the British secret services.” We were lucky to have the author join us on a Cipher Brief Cover Stories podcast as well, describing the untold tales of women who silently served – including Katleen Pettigrew who was the inspiration for Ian Fleming’s “Miss Moneypenny” in the James Bond novels.
For an American take on unsung women in intelligence, there is Propaganda Girls: The Secret War of the Women of the OSS by Lisa Rogak. The former director of the CIA’s Office of Public Affairs, Tammy Kupperman Thorp reviewed the book that focuses on four women who played significant roles in the Office of Strategic Service (OSS) influence campaigns during World War II. She writes that women members of the OSS were in charge of “black propaganda” primarily a “series of believable lies designed to cause the enemy soldiers to lose heart and ultimately surrender.”
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There is also a good read out there about the spouses and families of intelligence operatives who serve as well. For a fascinating look at that life, check out Story of a CIA Wife: Married to the Craft by Rosie Mowatt-Larssen. Veteran journalist and contributing Cipher Brief editor Elaine Shannon reviewed that one for us and lauds the author’s “razor wit” and tales of life in numerous overseas posts including time in Moscow where she helped slip KGB tails, serviced dead drops and lived a life that at times was the stuff of spy thrillers. For more on Rosie – check out her interview with us for the Cover Stories podcast.
We also have several books about action in World War II that we’d recommend. Let’s start with Nothing But Courage: The 82nd Airborne’s Daring D-Day Mission and Their Heroic Charge Across the La Fière Bridge by James Donovan. We went to a subject matter expert to review that one – retired Army Major General Jack Leide. The book tells of one of the most operationally important but lesser-known stories of World War II. Leide praised the author for providing “incredibly insightful and intricate descriptions and actions of, not only the allied and German military forces arrayed against each other, but how the operation affected many of the local French residents and resistance forces as well.”
For a far less heroic view of some of the events in that war, there is The Traitor of Arnhem: The Untold Story of WWII’s Greatest Betrayal and the Moment that Changed History Forever by Robert Verkaik. Recently declassified British MI-5 documents help animate this story of a strategic failure that delayed Allied victory in the war and came at a steep human cost. CIA veteran (and Cipher Brief expert) Martin Peterson reviewed the book for us and writes that the author makes a strong circumstantial case that Anthony Blunt, one of Russia’s British agents, played a vital role in passing intelligence to the Germans that damaged the Allies chances of success.
For a story about operational and intelligence success, there’s Taking Midway: Naval Warfare, Secret Codes and the Battle that Turned the Tide of World War II by Martin Dugard. Had the Battle of Midway turned out differently, Hawaii and the west coast of the United States stood vulnerable to Japanese attack. The battle was won by the U.S. though through a combination of steely leadership by Admiral Chester Nimitz, and brilliant cryptological work led by a quirky Lieutenant Commander named Joe Rochefort. Normally, our go-to source for book reviewers are gray-haired subject matter experts. For this one, we tried something different and gave the mission to Jack Montgomery, a U.S. Navy ensign currently serving on a Japan-based ship. Montgomery, whose master’s degree thesis was on the Solomon Islands Campaign, notes that the author’s writing style with short punchy sentences makes the book a quick, enjoyable and informative read. Dugard joined us for a Cover Stories podcast recently in which he explained how he developed his story-telling style and researched the book.
Another book sure to fascinate many Cipher Brief readers is The Determined Spy: The Turbulent Life and Times of CIA Pioneer Frank Wisner by veteran journalist Doug Waller. Wisner’s story sounds like fiction. Standout track star in college, lawyer, innovative leader in the OSS during World War II, one of the founders of the CIA, author of successful and unsuccessful covert actions, prominent player in the Georgetown social set – but victim of what would now be called bipolar disorder – an illness that eventually led to his taking of his own life. Former senior CIA officer (and Cipher Brief expert) Mike Sulick reviewed the book for us noting that the bio was long overdue and “an invaluable contribution to understanding the rewards and pitfalls of covert action as a tool of American foreign policy.” Waller joined us in a Cover Stories podcast to share some of the secrets of writing about this trailblazing figure of U.S. intelligence.
A trailblazer of a different kind was Major General Jack Leide whose book, Professional Courage: My Journey in Military Intelligence Through Peace, Crisis and War, was featured in a January review. Leide has been inducted into four different military halls of fame. The stories he tells – and the lessons learned in Vietnam, in China during Tiananmen Square, and as Central Command Director of Intelligence during Desert Shield and Desert Storm make it a valuable read. He also kindly joined us for a Cipher Brief Cover Stories podcast where he told us about the challenges of telling a demanding boss what they need to know rather than what they want to hear.
The Cipher Brief Threat Conference is happening October 19-22 in Sea Island, GA. The world's leading minds on national security from both the public and private sectors will be there. Will you? Apply for a seat at the table today.
For a completely different kind of book, there is Zero Sum: The Arc of International Business in Russia by Charles Hecker. It is a look at the wild world of global commerce launched from Russia following the fall of the Soviet Union. Cipher Brief expert Nick Fishwick, a veteran of nearly thirty years with the British Foreign Office, reviewed it for us – calling it a “grizzly odyssey” and one “full of crisp soundbites.” Hecker addresses the question of why the west was so wrong in its analysis of the post hammer and sickle Russia.
Our tech savvy followers might particularly be interested in Chasing Shadows: Cyber Espionage, Subversion, and the Global Fight for Democracy, by Ronald Deibert. Jean-Thomas Nicole, a policy advisor with Public Safety Canada and a frequent reviewer for us, says the book “offers an enlightening and terrifying glimpse into the ubiquitous and murky world of mercenary spyware and digital transnational repression.”
To wrap up our summer books newsletter, what would be more appropriate than a book about books? We are referring to The Admiral’s Bookshelf, by retired Navy Admiral (and Cipher Brief expert) James Stavridis. This spring, the admiral published his 15th book, and this one is about 25 books (a mixture of fiction and non-fiction) that he credits with having helped guide his career and life. Former CIA officer (and author himself) Jim Lawler reviewed it for us and praised the way Stavridis candidly discusses not only his successes – but also his stumbles during his long career and how the books on his bookshelf can help all of us avoid some heartache and frustration. Suzanne hosted the Admiral on a Cover Stories podcast where he explained how leaders can learn not only from Sun Tzu’s The Art of War but also Mario Puzo’s The Godfather.
We’ve only touched on some of the books reviewed in 2025 in The Cipher Brief. You can find all of our reviews here.
One of the things that makes Cipher Brief reviews of books so valuable is that our reviewers are experts in their own right. If you think you may have the chops to be a Cipher Brief book reviewer, check out our guidelines – and if you still think you’d be a good fit – drop us a note at undercover@thecipherbrief.com to toss your hat in the ring. Let us know your particular interests and areas of expertise. Whenever possible, we try to marry up expert reviewers with forthcoming books. We try to get the reviewers advance copies – and aim to publish reviews right around the time a book is goes on sale.
We’re wishing you happy summer reading!
The Cipher Brief brings expert-level context to national and global security stories. It’s never been more important to understand what’s happening in the world. Upgrade your access to exclusive content by becoming a subscriber.
Read more expert-driven national security insights, perspective and analysis in The Cipher Brief because National Security is Everyone’s Business.
The Golden Dome is Missing a Key Focus
EXPERT PERSPECTIVE / OPINION – On January 27, 2025, President Trump signed an Executive Order aimed at defending the U.S. against an attack by ballistic, hypersonic and cruise missiles as well as other advanced aerial attacks; the Golden Dome initiative. The Pentagon moved out smartly to fulfill this order. Industry lined up with ideas on how to defend the U.S. and Department of Defense bureaucrats convened and developed a strategy. All the work that has happened is needed. But we need more.
We need to build the technology to support defensive systems to secure the homeland from adversary advanced aerial attacks. But we are missing a crucial part of the equation which could be happening now with only limited additional resources.
The U.S. needs to be moving out diligently to put in place the best collection capability to provide early warning regarding U.S. adversaries. Too often, the U.S. jumps to a solution and forgets that we must start with intelligence to put the building blocks in place to address the solution.
In this case, the Executive Order asks for a study of adversary threat but that is all. There is nothing about developing intelligence for early warning on adversary intent. This is an important oversight. The U.S. must focus on developing warning that lets decisionmakers know when our adversaries are planning a launch. The important satellite tracking mechanisms that will follow the launches should only be used if the intelligence community misses the early warning.
To ensure the U.S. is using its resources to its best ability in building the Golden Dome, the entire intelligence infrastructure of collection, technology to support the collection, and ability to exploit the collection - to include analytical experts - must be synergized to provide early warning that an adversary is considering an aerial attack.
The Cipher Brief brings expert-level context to national and global security stories. It’s never been more important to understand what’s happening in the world. Upgrade your access to exclusive content by becoming a subscriber.
The literature regarding golden dome focuses on interception and tracking missiles once they are launched. There is a lot of discussion about the need for a defensive system. All of this is warranted, and it is the area where the most money needs to be spent. However, the literature is much less focused on what the U.S. needs to put in place prior to launch to buy time for developing options to counter an attack and limit the risk regarding that decision making process.
Without the platforms that can collect on adversary intent, capability, movement, and other anomalies, decisionmakers could be left with rushed choices on the use of defensive systems that could result in catastrophic consequences if the technology detects missiles too late or misreads that aerial attacks are coming our way when they may not be.
Time is the important variable for decision makers. The earlier the intelligence community can present them with analysis and reporting of adversary intent, the better and likely less risky the consequences are for the US.
For example, if the Intelligence Community (IC) can provide the President with information that an adversary has given an order to prepare an aerial attack against the U.S. - while the attack is being planned but prior to launch - then there are more options to stop that attack.
The IC is then alerted to track adversary movements so that decisionmakers know how much time they have to decide on an option and which option will work best under the circumstances. In this scenario, U.S. decision makers have days instead of hours, to plan. This allows for a wide range of options to stop a launch - from diplomacy, to sanctions, to military action.
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The current Golden Dome literature talks a lot about tracking these aerial devices and calls for a new look at radars, both space and ground based. As I stated, a reliance on this architecture risks being too late in the decision cycle. Kudos to the Army for recognizing the need for smart warning by integrating artificial intelligence into their Integrated Battle Command system, but even this initiative does not hit the early warning collection issue head on.
LTG Gainey, commanding general of the United States Army Space and Missile Defense Command (USASMDC) hinted at the issue during a House Armed Services subcommittee hearing in April when he said the Golden Dome also includes left-of-launch operations, providing deny, delay, disrupt and degrade missile defeat effects in coordination with global combatant commands, the Intelligence Community, Joint Staff, interagency, and Office of the Secretary of Defense. This still does not highlight the need for early warning.
The U.S. can detect missile launches with its existing Space-Based Infrared System satellites in geosynchronous orbit. These satellites can tell where a ballistic missile is going and where its warheads are likely to fall, but the United States wants to develop better warning and tracking by creating a Custody Layer — satellites that will watch where all the other guy’s stuff is — and a Tracking Layer that could also determine where more sophisticated weapons, like hypersonic missiles, are headed.
Fred Kennedy, the inaugural director of the U.S. Space Development Agency and a former director of DARPA’s Tactical Technology Office, shares in Aerospace America, his vision of a Custody Layer: "a constellation that would be equipped with moving target indicator radar, imaging radar and other sensors, to keep tabs on an adversary’s offensive 'internet of things.' …..These satellites would be the equivalent of Joint Surveillance Target Attack Radar System and U-2 aircraft, but in space. To strike a missile, you have to know where it could be launched from, after all. Complementing the Custody Layer was the Tracking Layer, the satellites that would detect and track hypersonic or ballistic weapons after launch."
This is all important work and needed but note, it is all focused on launch.
If decisionmakers are being told by the space-based interceptors that attacks are on the way—there is only one option, to intercept. But what if those interceptors misread the information or what if they did not read the tracking in time? In either scenario it could be the beginning of a catastrophic event that is based on a mistake.
For that reason, we need to start with the intelligence and put as much effort into that as we are on the interceptors. Collaboration with the Pentagon and other agencies that track satellite imagery is key. I would also add that the Defense Intelligence Agency needs to play a primary role in this initiative which must include increased human intelligence and all forms of open source to include commercial data.
With the intelligence community and department of defense getting smaller, we need to work together more than ever. Defending our nation is a team sport that requires strong intelligence to set up decision makers and operators to make the best decisions possible, helping to mitigate risk. This cannot happen without the defense and intelligence communities working together to provide the first warning—way before launch. Now is the time to push the intelligence community to upgrade technologies that track missiles by providing warning of aberrations in patterns before launch.
By using Artificial Intelligence (AI) to synthesize critical technical collection with anomalies in open source (OSINT), commercial (CAI), and personal (PAI) data, we could have the cultural breakthrough we need to change how the intelligence community uses technical collection fused with OSINT, CAI, PAI and AI. Against this national security backdrop, we could have our first big win in changing how we process intelligence and safeguard the US. NGA’s Maven program is a big step in the right direction of fusing intelligence to support DoD and the rest of the national security establishment. This practice needs to be more widespread.
Now is the time to use proven technology with expert analysis to provide decision makers increased time and space to counter aerial attacks on the homeland. The resources involved, compared to the amount needed for satellites and lasers to shoot down the missiles, is minimal. This action can be started now, the technology exists. Putting in place early warning buys time for the US to develop the rest of the Golden Dome security.
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Getting NATO to Be Able to 'Fight Tonight'
EXPERT Q&A — Last week’s NATO summit in The Hague was largely seen as a success, with all members (except Spain) agreeing to raise the alliance’s defense spending target to 5% GDP up from 2%. NATO also put on a show of unity and recommitted to collective defense.
The Cipher Brief spoke with Lieutenant General Ben Hodges (Ret.), who served as commanding general, U.S. Army Europe, about what the alliance has to do post-summit to ready defenses for a “fight tonight” posture.
Our conversation has been lightly edited for length and clarity. You can also watch the full conversation on The Cipher Brief's YouTube channel.
The Cipher Brief: We know that President Trump and some of his top national security aides have been deeply, openly skeptical of the NATO alliance, and there have been real questions as a result about American support. I was struck by how effusive, really, President Trump was in his praise of what happened at The Hague and very clear in his commitments. What's your take on how that all played out?
Lt. Gen. Hodges: I think I’m more relieved than surprised. I'm biased because I’ve been a NATO officer my whole Army life, as all Army officers are part of the Alliance. I recognize its importance for America's strategic interests. I'm glad that the president did what he did. There was a huge sigh of relief in the Hague that he even showed up. There was some anxiety about that, or that he might blow it up somehow. So the best outcome did happen. He was there. He stayed for the entire thing. He met with President Zelensky. We got an agreement on 5% across the alliance, with one exception, and then a public affirmation of American commitment to the alliance by the president. That's pretty good.
The Cipher Brief: You’re referring to Article 5 of the NATO charter, which says an attack on any member must be met by all other members. There’s been a kind of rallying cry among some Trump supporters that the idea that American soldiers would fight for Estonia, for example, that’s never gonna happen — that's not America first. Talk a bit about the significance of that specific commitment, because it seems to put to rest what's been said before on that front.
Lt. Gen. Hodges: Article 5 of the Washington Treaty, which created NATO, says an armed attack on one shall be considered an armed attack on all. That commitment to collective security has been the glue that held the alliance together. The Soviet Union for decades, now Russia and other adversaries, see this commitment of now 32 nations that if one is attacked, all the other nations would consider it an armed attack on themselves. That was such a powerful part of the deterrence when it's backed up by real credible capabilities.
For the first time in my life, in his last administration, the president called that into question. I was horrified. That sort of opens a door to a terrible miscalculation by Moscow that maybe the U.S. would not be so committed. Then the Russians could achieve what has always been their dream, which is to break the alliance, to see that members would not respond, and also to continue driving a wedge between Europe and North America. So it was important that the president affirmed it very strongly, clearly and publicly.
Now, some people ask why would we have American soldiers dying for Estonia? It's an absolutely ridiculous assertion because that is people not understanding why the alliance is so important for us. By the way, this Article 5 has only been invoked once in the almost 80 years of history of NATO, and that was after 9/11, when you had Estonians who came and died because of the United States.
Our economic interests are tied to a very prosperous Europe, so we need Europe to be stable and secure and prosperous because it affects our economy. Secondly, the access that we have in Europe from the UK all the way to Turkey and everywhere in between enables us to project power, not only in Europe, but also into the Middle East and down into Africa.
And of course, even the United States does not have enough capability to do everything that needs to be done to protect all of our interests around the world. We need allies, and all of our best and most reliable allies come from Europe, as well as Canada and Australia.
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The Cipher Brief: Do you think this whole NATO-U.S. rift, whatever one calls it, is that all over behind us?
Lt. Gen. Hodges: NATO, the most successful and longest alliance in the history of the world, has 32 nations now. There are going to be huge disputes between nations all the time. France kicked NATO out back during the time of de Gaulle. They left the military structure of NATO for several decades, but came back. The U.S. had huge debates with the UK and France after the Suez crisis. Turkey and Greece have been almost at war throughout. So, there are always challenges inside any sort of a coalition or alliance for all kinds of obvious reasons.
The thing that kept us together was always American leadership and the commitment of several nations to say, look, this is too important for us to lose this collective security because of some argument over an economic thing or past grievance. And there's a reason that there are nations still in a queue wanting to join NATO, because they know that their security is so much better if they're part of this alliance.
The Cipher Brief: The core takeaway seems to be this pledge that all the members except for Spain have made to spend 5% of their GDP on military or military-related stuff. How big a deal is this?
Lt. Gen. Hodges: It's an expectation. It's a commitment that everybody achieves this 5% threshold for investment in defense: 3.5% for traditional, what we would consider defense investments, equipment, training, ammunition, personnel; and then 1.5% for infrastructure, rail, ports, cyber protection, all the things necessary to be able to move alliance capabilities around.
Obviously these things will be exploited in some countries. That would not shock me. But the key was that nations are going to invest in infrastructure, which is badly needed, and the cyber protection of this transportation infrastructure. But also, 3.5 % of GDP, that's almost double for every country from what it was 10 years ago. The United States is not even at 3.5 right now, by the way. So this is going to be a real increase.
Having said all that—and I do believe in the importance of a metric like that—the most important thing, of course, is capability. Do we have the actual capability to do what we're supposed to do? That’s what will deter the Russians, not a sign on the board that says, hey, we're 3.5. It’s real capability: units that are properly trained, fully manned and have lots of ammunition, aircraft that fly, ships that sail. That's got to be the focus. So I'm glad we got this done, but now we've got to make sure that we turn that money into real capability.
The Cipher Brief: Do you mean how they spend it?
Lt. Gen. Hodges: That is a part of it. Where does it go? Germany has a lot of money out there, but the processes are still several years behind. So they've got to fix things internally to take all these euros and turn them into combat formations and capability. They've got the right leadership now to do that in Chancellor Merz.
But also, I think it's important that we emphasize the importance of readiness to be able to fight tonight. This is a mindset thing. It's not just about buying new planes and equipment and hundreds of thousands of drones. Are you ready to actually deploy on very short notice and fight tonight? Can you get there and do you have what you need? To me, that has got to be job one for every secretary of defense, ministers of defense— readiness.
The Cipher Brief: On that “fight tonight” point, it is worth noting that these pledges are to be met by 2035. That's 10 years from now. And obviously, some of the stuff we're talking about takes a long time to manufacture and get out to the battlefield. How concerned are you about that time frame?
Lt. Gen. Hodges: It took us 10 years to get where we are now from Wales. A lot of nations are now spending more than they have since the end of the Cold War. So, of course, I don't like it. We should already be there, including the United States. But I think what we'll see is different leaders, including the American president, continue to track every year. You can't do what they call a hockey stick, where you stay where you are for eight years and then expect that you'll get credit for jacking it up at the end. So there's going to be continued pressure.
But honestly I don't think too many nations are going to need that pressure. What we're seeing in Germany and in the UK, Finland all the way down to Romania. They're not confused about who the enemy is — it's Russia. These countries were already moving well beyond 3.5% before this summit. So, I think we're on the right arc and right direction in most places, just not all.
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The Cipher Brief: For the last several years, for obvious reasons, the war against Ukraine has been front and center at these summits. It suddenly seemed a little bit on the back burner. What are your thoughts on how Ukraine comes out of this summit?
Lt. Gen. Hodges: This is my biggest disappointment from this summit. Ukraine was exactly, what you said, put on a back burner. I'm glad that President Zelensky showed up, that he was invited and that he attended. I'm glad that President Trump met with President Zelensky for about 45 minutes or so. While the president did not reveal a lot of the details, he was more positive about Ukraine than I'd heard from him in quite some time.
Now, to be candid, the president changes his mind all the time but I hope that this signals that he is more willing and open to helping Ukraine as most of our European allies are. I had hoped that this summit would be another affirmation by the Alliance that we're going to do everything we can to help Ukraine. The organizers shortened it in hopes of making sure that President Trump would stay for the whole thing. And so Ukraine was kind of taken out of the agenda.
Nonetheless, what's most important is that there seems to have been a positive meeting there. And most of our European allies are even more committed to helping Ukraine defeat Russia.
The Cipher Brief: You've made the point that Russia is incredibly weakened militarily right now with casualties, the economy, and so forth. And it doesn't seem, in that sense, to be much of a threat. Of course, everything we're talking about and what they were talking about at the summit is all about the Russia threat. So how should we understand the nature of that threat given how weak the country is today?
Lt. Gen. Hodges: This is a great question. Russia, I was certain, would not have made it this long. Given the casualties that they have suffered, the effects of some sanctions on them, and now it looks like they've probably lost Iran as an ally or a source of drones. But China has picked up some of the slack. North Korea continues to provide ammunition. And Russia right now has transitioned to a wartime economy because of course they don't have to worry too much about whether or not the peasants are unhappy that they can't get a new refrigerator. Putin does not have to respond to this sort of thing the way any other democratic leader would have to respond. So he's putting a lot of resources into this.
That would be over if we could figure out how to stop Russia from exporting oil to China and India. But as long as they can keep doing that, and as long as oil prices stay up, then Russia can keep doing what they're doing for quite some time. At the recent economic forum that Russia hosts each year, President Putin sort of downplayed the economic situation challenges they have. But his own people publicly were saying that they're almost in recession, that they are in fact in trouble.
What I am sure of is that if Ukraine capitulates or fails, or if we turn our back on Ukraine and Russia is able to take a couple of years to rebuild and fix what is broken, they will be knocking on the door of Moldova and probably of Latvia. Their objective is to break the alliance, to show NATO that nations are not really willing to fight against Russia over a piece of Estonia or Latvia. That would be their terrible miscalculation. So to make sure that the Russians never make that terrible miscalculation, we have to get back to where we were in the Cold War days of spending what's necessary, being prepared so that you can have another 40-50 years of no war with Russia.
The Cipher Brief is committed to publishing a range of perspectives on national security issues submitted by deeply experienced national security professionals.
Opinions expressed are those of the author and do not represent the views or opinions of The Cipher Brief.
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The Math Behind Trump's $1 Trillion Defense Budget
OPINION — “The President's FY ‘26 [Fiscal Year 2026] National Defense Budget requests $1.01 trillion, which is a 13 percent increase from FY '25 enacted [as authorized but not yet funded by Congress] levels. This [FY ‘26] includes $848.3 billion for DoD's [Defense Department’s] discretionary budget and $113.3 billion in mandatory funding for DoD via [the FY ’25] reconciliation [bill now before the Senate] totaling $961.6 billion total for the Department of Defense.”
That was a Senior DoD Official briefing reporters last Thursday, on newly-released details of the Trump administration’s defense budget request for the fiscal year 2026, which begins October 1, 2025 and ends September 30, 2026.
In the best of times, the DoD budget process is difficult to understand, but this year it is even more complicated than most. The final defense budget figure depends not only on passage of the FY 2026 Appropriations Bill, but also on the FY 2025 reconciliations bill.
In addition, there are some interesting differences among the Pentagon, House and Senate on how the money is to be spent.
Ideally, a President sends his annual budget proposal to Congress early in the year—late January for example. Congress holds authorization hearings followed by appropriation hearings, and the bills get marked up and passed before the next federal government fiscal year begins on October 1.
But when it comes to defense, for 11 of the past 12 fiscal years, DoD has had to operate under continuing resolutions (CRs) for some months because Congress in those years was unable to pass the necessary defense appropriations bills until after the new fiscal year began.
From DoD’s point of view, that has caused problems because under CRs spending levels normally remain the same as the previous year. CRs also prohibit new starts, disrupt production schedules and generally interfere with defense planning. The situation becomes even more complicated in years of presidential transition.
The fiscal 2025 defense budget was originally put together under the Biden administration. Congress, after President Trump was elected, delayed passage of the Biden fiscal 2025 defense spending plan, approving two short-term CRs. Finally, after Trump became president, Congress approved a full year CR in mid-March 2025. That put DoD funding for this current fiscal year at $852 billion, just one percent above what it was in FY 2024.
Meanwhile, the Trump administration was working with DoD officials on the FY 2026 defense budget, which the Biden administration back in 2024, had projected would be $876.8 billion.
Then, on April 7, 2025, during a joint press conference with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Trump, after mentioning that he had built up the U.S. military during his first term in office, suddenly said, “We have great things happening with our military.”
Trump went on to say something that he had not said publicly before: “We also essentially approved a budget…you'll like to hear this, of a trillion dollars, $1 trillion and nobody's seen anything like it. We have to build our military and we're very cost conscious, but the military is something that we have to build and we have to be strong because you got a lot of bad forces out there now. So, we're going to be approving a budget and I'm proud to say, actually the biggest one we've ever done for the military.”
Trump’s statement about $1 trillion for defense in FY 2026 then became the marching order, but how to do it was the question. A month later, the answer appeared publicly in the form of the FY 2025 reconciliation bill.
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Since the January presidential inauguration, the Trump administration and Republican leadership had been working on this reconciliation bill in order to change much of the Biden FY 2025 budgeting by aligning all spending, taxes, revenue, and the debt limit with a new, agreed-upon FY 2025 Trump budget.
Among many features of this FY 2025 Trump reconciliation bill was the insertion of a $150 billion lump sum for defense programs, to be paid out of U.S. Treasury funds available through 2029. There had been no congressional hearings—the number just appeared.
In early May, when Trump’s Office of Management and Budget (OMB) released its full government fiscal 2026 ‘skinny’ budget, public mention was first made of the $150 billion defense package in the reconciliation bill -- and that some $113 billion of it was to be earmarked for the Pentagon’s fiscal 2026 budget.
That meant DoD’s FY 2026 base budget remained near FY 2025’s $852 billion, but you reached Trump’s announced $1 trillion for overall defense spending by adding the $113 billion in the reconciliation bill along with funds for nuclear weapons paid for by the Energy Department.
Back in May, at the time of that OMB announcement, Senate Armed Services Committee Chair Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) said, “For the defense budget, OMB has requested a fifth year straight of Biden administration funding, leaving military spending flat, which is a cut in real terms…I have said for months that reconciliation Defense spending does not replace the need for real growth in the military's base budget.”
He was joined at that time by Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky), the chairman of the Senate Appropriations Defense Subcommittee, who said, “Make no mistake: a one-time influx reconciliation spending is not a substitute for full-year appropriations.”
On May 22, in a 215-to-214, largely party-line vote, the House passed its version of the FY 2025 reconciliation bill, containing the $150 billion defense package. The reconciliation bill is now up for debate in the Senate. An advantage for the Trump administration in the reconciliation process is that Senate rules allow for a simple majority vote (51 votes) for reconciliation bills, bypassing the usual 60-vote threshold on controversial measures needed to overcome a filibuster.
Meanwhile, House and Senate Armed Services and Appropriations Committees have held hearings on the Trump fiscal 2026 DoD budget request with mixed results.
On June 12, the House Appropriations Committee passed its version of the FY 2026 DoD funding bill that followed the OMB May proposal, keeping the numbers close to the FY 2025 level and reaching the $1 billion Trump goal by adding the earmarked $113 billion in the pending FY 2025 reconciliation bill.
However, questions were raised at the June 18 Senate Armed Services Committee hearing in which Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth was one of the witnesses.
Chairman Wicker said, “What we have in front of us is an inadequate budget request with precious little detail and no follow on data about fiscal years 2027, 2028, or 2029. We must assume, and in fact we have heard, that OMB intends to maintain defense spending at $893 billion across the four years of this administration. So even with a one-time $150 billion [fiscal 2025] reconciliation [bill] infusion, this would leave us at 2.65% of GDP by 2029, below 3 percent of GDP and well below the 5 percent of GDP that we really need.”
Wicker went on, “I understand that if you put reconciliation and the budget request together for this year [FY2026] it exceeds 3 percent, but if we go back to that same baseline for the next three years, after that we'll be under 3 percent. Do you intend to fix that?”
Hegseth agreed that going below 3 percent would be very dangerous, adding, “So does the President of the United States which is why this budget increases from FY25 1.3 percent [if you include reconciliation bill’s $113 billion] and puts us at 3.5 percent of GDP on defense.”
President Trump recently returned from the NATO summit at The Hague where he took credit for the allies adopting a 2035 goal of 3.5 percent for member countries’ core defense spending. It could be embarrassing for the President to find himself below that amount back home.
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Another question raised at Wednesday’s Armed Services hearing was exactly how the reconciliation bill defense money would be spent. At issue was the tradition known as “congressional intent,” for Congress to designate spending amounts for specific defense items in legislation.
At the June 18 Armed Services hearing, Wicker asked, “We will put funds in the reconciliation bill, working with the House and working with the Administration, to get the [President’s] signature on the bill. And we will make clear alongside that the specific congressional intent [on defense items]…Mr. Secretary [Hegseth] do you commit to following congressional intent unequivocally on reconciliation.”
After Hegseth gave a qualifying answer, Wicker demanded, “Do you commit to following congressional intent unequivocally in reconciliation?” This time, Hegseth answered, “Yes.”
I mention this because last Wednesday, Chairman Wicker released what he called an “updated legislative text of the defense reconciliation bill.” It showed his committee had cut down to $1 billion the $3.3 billion it had previously allocated to deployment of military personnel in support of border operations.
However, the next day, Thursday, at a Pentagon press conference called to discuss the FY 2026 defense budget, details of which had just been made available, a Senior Defense Official made clear the figure DoD had for the reconciliation bill was different. He said, “The $5 billion we're requesting [from the reconciliation bill] is for border security for our troops to actually be there as well as for detention support.”
The Defense Official added of the reconciliation funding, “It's the first time the Department of Defense has received mandatory money like this. It's ten-year money with a lot more flexibility than the average discretionary dollar provides.” Remember, under traditional circumstances, congressional intent language in statutes determines how defense money is to be spent.
Under the original reconciliation bill, DoD had 90 days after the legislation became law to send the House and Senate Armed Services and Appropriations Committees their plans for spending the $150 billion. What was to happen thereafter is not spelled out, but it’s clear the “flexibility” that the Defense Official has seen is not recognized by Sen. Wicker and, I expect, others on Capitol Hill.
Will today’s complex circumstances be repeated?
I saw a hint in something the Senior Defense Official said to reporters last Thursday. Asked about the top defense budget figure for FY 2027, he said, “We have not yet discussed what that will look like for [FY] '27. But unless the president's tone changes, I imagine we'll stick with $1 trillion for national defense spending.”
After the June 18, Armed Services hearing, Sen. Angus King (I-Maine) said, “As I understand it, OMB is saying we are going to have a flat defense budget for the next four or five years. Are we playing reconciliation every year from now on?”
The answer is maybe.
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The Downward Spiral of Western Counterintelligence
OPINION — Counterintelligence is one of the most vital functions of the intelligence community, helping protect against foreign threats. Counterintelligence was heavily emphasized during the Cold War, as spying and unregistered foreign agents were at an all-time high across various regions. Over the past several years, numerous investigations, scandals, and reports have surfaced across North America and Europe revealing how foreign governments have influenced politicians and placed agents in key areas of intelligence and daily life, subverting Western counterintelligence efforts.
The signs are clear that counterintelligence is in a downward spiral, leading to major security failures and breaches. How and why is this happening?
A New Axis and Effective Hybrid Warfare
Over the past decade, numerous figures in Europe and America were investigated or found to have major ties to foreign intelligence agencies. Unregistered foreign agents became even more evident in 2022 as the Russian invasion of Ukraine became a full-scale war.
Russia is at the forefront of a new axis that is leading hybrid and information warfare efforts—pushing disinformation and placing agents across various Western institutions to dissuade a united front against the Kremlin’s goals.
Russian influence and sabotage operations have gained steam since 2016, as numerous populist movements—such as Brexit, the American isolationist movement, and far-right parties in Europe— have surged, many of which have allegedly received funding from the Kremlin itself.
Through hybrid warfare, the Kremlin seeks to control the narrative. One method Russia uses is trafficking migrants from Africa and the Middle East and sending them to Europe via the Mediterranean or Eastern borders of the continent. The Kremlin aims to overwhelm the European social system by trafficking migrants towards hot spots such as Finland and Lithuania and propping up juntas in Africa that force migrants to flee to Italy, Spain, and Greece. From there, anti-immigration parties and populist movements gain momentum and come to power. Hungary, Slovakia, Germany, Bulgaria, the Netherlands, Austria, and France all face a wave of populist movements with governments with alleged ties to the Kremlin. China and Iran also have growing influence, particularly in Hungary, which is quickly becoming a potential “Trojan horse” within the EU and NATO.
A Breakdown of Infiltration by Foreign Governments
Numerous scandals, saboteur acts, and links to Russian foreign intelligence have been recorded in the UK, Spain, Germany, Czechia, Poland, Bulgaria, Albania, and Montenegro. Recent FBI and DOJ documents show how Russian information warfare can spread misinformation and disinformation in the US via alternative media channels.
German politicians in the pro-Russian AfD, SPD, and CDU have come under fire for potential influence related to Russian energy, and the ruling Fidesz party of Hungary has all but isolated the Central European nation due to its close ties with the Kremlin.
The Chinese government has ramped up foreign intelligence operations by placing unregistered foreign agents and intelligence operatives who target dissidents in the United States. They also seek to influence day-to-day policies, as seen with the arrest of Linda Sun, a major former aide to NY Governor Hochul.
Pro-Mullah Iranian agents have also been active in Europe, America, and Western-aligned countries in the Middle East—targeting dissidents and potentially using information warfare to further inflame tensions amid Israel’s ongoing wars against Hamas and Hezbollah. A recent kidnapping and murder of a prominent Chabad Israeli rabbi in the UAE has only heightened the sense of urgency for the need for more counterintelligence operations.
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What Went Wrong With Counterintelligence?
The beginning of the U.S. government's negligence toward counterintelligence efforts started when the Soviet Union fell, after which there was no true rival to the United States until China's sharp economic and military boom in the early 2000s.
Another major turning point was the U.S. invasion of Iraq. When the world saw WMD lies by various Western heads of state to justify the 2003 invasion of Iraq, citizens started to lose faith in their governments, allowing foreign rivals to use information and hybrid warfare to subvert democracies. Against the backdrop of governments' and media organizations' lack of faith, rival countries such as Russia, China, and Iran have invested in media misinformation and disinformation. Today, media organizations such as RT have been flagged by the West for being an arm of the Kremlin, and TikTok is currently being discussed in a potential ban for Beijing-linked spyware and disinformation.
Likewise, allied countries are also allegedly subverting Western counterintelligence capabilities, such as Turkey, which is accused of targeting dissidents in Europe and the United States. NYC Mayor Eric Adams faces charges related to working with the Turkish government and acting on influence, such as digressing away from Armenian Genocide recognition in the city. Qatar, the UAE, and Saudi Arabia are also allegedly subvert counterintelligence to target dissidents, seen, for example, in Riyadh’s brutal murder of Washington Post reporter Jamal Khashoggi and Qatar's alleged influence in university protests in the U.S.
Potential Solutions
Now more than ever, Western governments should renew their emphasis on funding and growing counterintelligence capabilities to thwart foreign interference, alongside enhancing ongoing joint intelligence efforts through allies such as Five Eyes,
A main factor of infiltration of foreign governments includes using our own freedom of rights against us. With investigations taking years to conclude due to legislative pushbacks or measures, rival agencies look to subvert this.
A comprehensive counterintelligence focus is needed as the world enters a period of potential global conflict. Perhaps the West should again utilize counterspy doctrines of the Cold War era to mitigate looming threats and enhance counterintelligence efforts.
The Cipher Brief is committed to publishing a range of perspectives on national security issues submitted by deeply experienced national security professionals.
Opinions expressed are those of the author and do not represent the views or opinions of The Cipher Brief.
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Beijing’s Rare Disclosure on DF-5B Missile Signals Shift in Nuclear Messaging
CIPHER BRIEF REPORTING -- China’s state television put a rare public focus on Beijing’s DF-5B intercontinental ballistic missile earlier this month, revealing key details that mark a significant shift in Beijing’s nuclear messaging amid rising global tensions and in the midst of unraveling key arms control agreements.
According to state broadcaster CCTV, the upgraded DF-5B missile is reportedly capable of carrying up to 10 independently targetable warheads, each with a destructive yield estimated to be 200 times more powerful than the Hiroshima bomb. Exact figures remain difficult to verify, as independent assessments vary. But CCTV claims that the missile’s range is approximately 12,000 kilometers (7,460 miles), putting most of the continental United States and Europe within reach. So, why does this matter?
While the details of the DF-5B match some already disclosed details, the notion that state television is putting such a public focus on this is “unusual and perhaps speaks to a willingness on China’s part to begin signaling its nuclear growth in a more public manner,” according to Matt Korda, Associate Director at the Federation of American Scientists’ Nuclear Information Project.
“China has not traditionally commented on the details of its weapon systems and instead almost always sticks to high-level talking points. Perhaps this portends a shift in the country’s communications strategy,” Korda, who also serves as Associate Senior Researcher for the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute’s Weapons of Mass Destruction Program, tells The Cipher Brief.
While the original DF-5 missile, developed during the Cold War, was outfitted with a single warhead, the DF-5B’s multi-warhead capacity—alongside its purported accuracy within 500 meters— represents a significant leap in China’s second-strike capability and nuclear survivability.
Andrew Erickson, a professor of strategy at the Naval War College and visiting China-focused scholar at Harvard University, believes that the renewed focus on this issue “is part of a comprehensive effort to attempt to coerce and intimidate its adversaries regarding the military scenarios about which Beijing prioritizes most.”
“Beijing’s goal is to show that it can match or exceed its adversaries on each rung of the escalation ladder; and also has the capability to utilize rungs, or combination of rungs, that its adversaries either do not possess or are more hesitant to use,” he explained.
Andrew Scobell, Distinguished Fellow for China at the United States Institute of Peace, said, “China’s communist rulers are feeling more insecure than usual, and this disclosure is their way of signaling ‘don’t mess with Beijing’ to Washington and other capitals.”
“The message is: China’s nuclear weaponry and delivery systems are more capable today than ever before with a longer reach and greater accuracy,” he tells The Cipher Brief.
A Rapidly Expanding Arsenal
China’s nuclear arsenal remains smaller than those of Russia or the United States, but it is growing at an unprecedented rate. The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) reports that China has increased its warhead count by about 100 in the past year, rising from 500 in 2024, to over 600 by January 2025.
The SIPRI report notes that China is “expanding its nuclear arsenal faster than any other nuclear-armed state.” Experts estimate that by 2035, if current trends continue, China could possess as many as 1,500 nuclear warheads—a threefold increase that would still place it behind the United States and Russia, which together hold nearly 90 percent of the global stockpile.
But Multiple Independently target-able Reentry Vehicles (MIRVs) —allow a single missile to carry several nuclear warheads, each aimed at a different target. This dramatically complicates interception, as the warheads can overwhelm defenses by arriving on separate trajectories, making coordinated response far more difficult and costly.
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“Current U.S. missile defenses are unable to meaningfully defend against Chinese ICBMs, whether they carry multiple warheads or not,” Korda said. “Having MIRVs certainly complicates that challenge and demonstrates the age-old problem for missile defenses: that offense will always be easier and cheaper than defense.”
Erickson believes that China’s criticism of U.S. missile-defense efforts like the Golden Dome, “and collaboration with Moscow on hypocritical arms control grandstanding rings hollow when Beijing remains silent on, or tacitly condones, Russia’s development of dramatic space control measures,” the most worrisome and threatening of which, is what would be the world’s first satellite-based nuclear weapon according to Erickson.
Projections derived from open-source satellite information and imagery, published in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, note that China has nearly completed close to 350 new ICBM silos that are spread across multiple deserts and mountainous regions, including in Gansu and Inner Mongolia. Depending on deployment strategies, this could enable China to deploy several ICBMs comparable to those of Russia or the United States by the decade’s end.
Implications for Deterrence and Stability
China’s shift comes as the framework for nuclear arms control faces significant strain. With New START, the last remaining treaty limiting Russian and U.S. strategic nuclear arsenals, set to expire in early 2026, and no successor agreement in place, the global arms control architecture appears increasingly obsolete.
Some experts warn that the world is effectively entering an era of unchecked nuclear competition and worry that the growing deployment of artificial intelligence, space-based sensors, and cyber capabilities could erode crisis stability and introduce new pathways to escalation.
Advanced systems can compress decision-making time and increase the risk of miscalculation or technical error, particularly in multi-theater conflict scenarios involving China and Russia. According to SIPRI, “the signs are that a new arms race is gearing up that carries much more risk and uncertainty than the last one.”
Strategic Consequences for the West
The implications of China’s buildup extend far beyond Asia. Despite Russia and the United States’ decades-long atomic dominance, China’s rapidly expanding nuclear missile arsenal indicates a profound shift in global strategic dynamics.
For the West, experts emphasize that China’s nuclear buildup is raising the stakes of deterrence and complicates arms control efforts. It also demands an urgent reassessment of defense postures—particularly as Beijing builds a more flexible, survivable, and modernized nuclear triad – the ability to launch nuclear weapons from land-based missiles, submarine-launched missiles, and strategic bombers. This capability enables Beijing to more credibly challenge Western military presumptions.
“Advanced nuclear weapons and delivery systems are the ultimate backstop supporting Beijing’s efforts to impose a Sisyphean sense of futility on its enemies while supporting the ultimate warfighting options should that preferred approach ultimately fail to deliver,” Erickson said.
Analysts with the Federation of American Scientists have observed that China’s expanded ICBM infrastructure enables more flexible deployment, blending fixed silos with mobile launchers and dual-use capabilities, which complicate both detection and preemption. And as the U.S. continues to serve as the primary security guarantor for Europe and the Indo-Pacific, it faces the potential challenge of confronting multiple nuclear-capable adversaries simultaneously. For example, if drawn into parallel conflicts—such as a war in Ukraine and a Taiwan Strait crisis—experts worry that its conventional forces could become overstretched, increasing a reliance on nuclear deterrence.
The Next Phase of the Nuclear Race
DF-5B represents more than just a technical advancement for Beijing; it is a calculated message to the world. China’s modernization efforts are now a tangible reflection of the leadership’s ambition to move closer to nuclear parity—particularly in capability and survivability—with the United States and Russia.
With arms control faltering and nuclear parity drawing near, the world is poised for a new era of strategic competition, marked by high stakes, blurred red lines, and faster-moving threats. So, what can Washington do?
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Scobell notes that, “America and its allies should reevaluate their deterrence strategies,” pointing out that integrated deterrence sounds good in theory but putting it into action is tougher—especially because it must work across different areas like nuclear and conventional weapons. Deterring China is already a complex endeavor that is made even more challenging in today’s tense U.S.-China environment.
Korda believe that engaging China in arms control talks will be challenging, as Beijing would “have to accept some degree of transparency to join a verifiable arms control regime, and it has traditionally preferred to rely on opacity to safeguard its smaller nuclear arsenal.”
“In addition, China is likely concerned that the United States––particularly through its ever-expanding missile defense architecture, is seeking to erode its state of mutual vulnerability with its nuclear adversaries,” he said.
According to Korda, China likely perceives time to be on its side as it continues to expand its nuclear arsenal and “will likely wait to engage in significant talks until it gains the leverage it thinks it needs to become a more equal negotiating partner.”
Erickson contends that Beijing’s strategic ambiguity remains central to its doctrine: a tactic and a message.
“China doesn’t want us to understand their deterrence strategy; that lack of clarity is baked into the ambiguity,” he notes. “For twenty years of dialogue on these issues, the Chinese government and Chinese experts outside of government did not engage meaningfully. I don’t believe the PLA wants us to understand them.” Still, others see it differently.
“Conventional wisdom in Washington holds that nuclear arms control is dead, but I do not agree. Russia is eager to get into a new agreement, especially if that was coupled with a new overall concept for security in Europe,” Lyle Goldstein, Director for Asia Engagement at Defense Priorities, tells The Cipher Brief. “I believe that Beijing could be persuaded too if afforded the right set of enticing ‘carrots,’ such as a U.S. agreement to a no-first-use accord.”
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An Urgent Call to Close the Loopholes on Chips and China
EXPERT PERSPECTIVE / OPINION -- The core lessons from the Cold War should guide us as we face the new “Axis of Aggressors” today. First among these, is that we need to win the technology race.
Advanced technology made in United States did more than just put an American on the moon, it also solidified our economic foundation, empowered long-term entrepreneurial American leadership, and protected our national interests.
Maintaining this technology leadership should continue to be our priority today. Despite the Biden and Trump Administrations trying to limit the sale of U.S. software used to design semiconductors to Chinese groups, the U.S. government simply has not taken enough meaningful action to actually protect America’s leadership position.
China is embracing loopholes and openly flaunting strategic workarounds in our export policy that allows for the continued development of high-quality semiconductor chips with U.S. technology in China, despite our efforts to restrict Chinese access to such tools.
Along these same lines, Beijing plans to expand the use of open-source chip technology such as RISC V, in order to ween off its reliance on the West and spur the development of advanced chips in China. By leveraging RISC-V, Chinese companies are using open source software derived in the West to design their own processors for AI, cloud computing, and even military applications without violating current U.S. export restrictions.
And this shift is happening now.
Chinese tech giants like Alibaba, Tencent, and Huawei have invested heavily in RISC-V research and development, looking to exploit this back-door access to western open source technology. Additionally, Chinese government-backed initiatives are pouring billions into this effort, positioning it as a national priority.
This should not have been a surprise: after all, experts have been warning for years that this day would come, and China reportedly plans to issue policy guidance to boost the use of RISC-V chips.
This has not gone completely unnoticed, though. Congress has been looking at this technology and China’s ability to exploit it, and has rightfully raised a red flag, while the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry and Security has been ramping up export controls on advanced chip products.
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But despite the alarm bells, Congressional scrutiny, and increasing export actions, the RISC-V loophole remains unclosed – and China has pressed forward and is making progress.
For example, the development of DeepSeek, a Chinese AI-powered chatbot, demonstrated that the United States may not be as far ahead as we once thought in emerging technology, and there are many more reports beginning to surface about advancements of home grown Chinese tech.
According to a recent report from the Center of Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), China’s use of open source technology will bolster its ability to produce AI chips domestically, which is key to China’s long-term AI ambitions.
Another concern about this extensive use of open-source technology by Chinese companies is that it is leading to significant cybersecurity concerns with products built on it. DeepSeek is just one recent example, with the platform coming under cybersecurity scrutiny immediately after its release, with many countries and companies restricting its use. DeepSeek is considered 11 times more likely to be exploited by cybercriminals than other AI models.
A separate CSIS report notes that chip design is intended to be at the forefront of the ongoing struggle to ensure cybersecurity and to thwart hacking and tampering efforts, not be the source of new cybersecurity challenges.
Bottomline—the more Chinese chips there are in the American market, the more vulnerable our critical systems become to potential attacks – both from criminal actors and nation states like China.
CrowdStrike recently reported that Chinese state-sponsored cyber-attacks have increased by 150%, with attacks in financial services, media, manufacturing and the industrial sectors increasing by 300%.
All of this tells us that we need to act now.
One way is to prioritize domestic investment in semi-conductor production and establish a unified approach to semiconductors and advanced technology with our allies and trusted partners. The Trump administration has already made significant strides in this realm – as evidenced by the recent $100 billion investment by TSMC in U.S. semiconductor manufacturing.
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But this type of domestic investment should be just one leg of a much broader strategy. The complicated world of semiconductors and advanced tech goes much deeper.
We also need to take regulatory action that prevents U.S. companies from working with Chinese companies in open source technology forums (e.g. RISC-V International); tightens export controls to apply equally to commercial and open source semiconductor technology; and properly screens technology and semiconductors that contain Chinese IP.
Any approach should be integrated – bringing together both incentivization and regulation to protect America’s economic productivity and national security.
Chips are at the heart of all technology products and the advancement of AI platforms that they power. They are a key part of everyday life – they’re in our phones, cars, smartwatches, etc. and their applications go much further into our defense and military systems - impacting battlefield performance, information acquisition, and evaluation. Ensuring a strategic advantage in this space is crucial to protecting our national security now and in the event of a future global crisis.
In a world of such uncertainty and potential, the United States needs to maintain its lead in chips and advanced technology. In order to do so, though, we need a comprehensive strategy that looks at both our opportunities and potential vulnerabilities – and pays close attention to the threats from our adversaries.
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Opinions expressed are those of the author and do not represent the views or opinions of The Cipher Brief.
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A Good NATO Summit, Though Russia Won a Round
EXPERT Q&A — NATO leaders convened in The Hague this week for a summit aiming to strengthen the alliance's defenses, with the ever encroaching threat of Russia in mind. The meeting was largely a success, with all members (barring Spain) pledging to meet a new 5% GDP defense spending target. It was also a moment for NATO to project unity and recommit to collective defense, following skepticism from the administration of President Donald Trump, who was receptive and praised the alliance — saying it is not a "rip-off" as he has previously said. Ukraine, while a key topic at previous summits in recent years, was notably on the backburner this time around.
The Cipher Brief caught up with General Philip Breedlove (Ret.), a former NATO Supreme Allied Commander, for a post-summit debrief to see what positives came out of the gathering and where he is looking next, from how NATO members go about expanding defense capabilities to whether the alliance offers more support to Ukraine and pressures Russia. Our conversation has been lightly edited for length and clarity. You can watch the full discussion at The Cipher Brief's YouTube channel.
The Cipher Brief: Did things end the way you thought they needed to end this week at the Hague?
General Breedlove: We had a great summit. Let's give some credit to Secretary General [Mark] Rutte and the members of the North Atlantic Council (NAC) because we needed unity. When the U.S. president arrived, they had come to unity on the 5% spending commitment. And I think that set the stage. Our president was the first president in the history of NATO to get the organization to seriously invest when he pushed hard on the 2%. So, it went very well.
The Cipher Brief: This felt like a summit that was almost tailor-made for the president. It was an easy pop-in, not a lot of debate, not a lot of back and forth. They knew what to expect going into it. Do you think that that helped fuel the outcome?
General Breedlove: Yes. Very few people understand how NATO works. The secretary general is actually very important, but he's not the decider. He works for the NAC, just like the Supreme Allied Commander of Europe (SACEUR) works for the NAC. Secretary General Rutte has managed the process extremely well to get everybody to where he needed them to be. We need to give him some credit for organizing all of the nations to get them to the right place.
I think their vision was to keep this short, to the point, get to the things that the U.S. president wants to accomplish, get those accomplished, and come out of this with a big unifying statement. And who is that unifying statement for? Of course, it's for all of our nations and our alliance. But the most important recipient of that message is Mr. Putin.
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Mr. Putin works hard to tear NATO down. He tries to peel off individual countries and leaders. Secretary General Rutte pulled the team together, got them on the same playbook, moved out and didn't waste any time. And I think that's exactly how this U.S. president likes to work.
The Cipher Brief: It was clear going into this that Russia is the real threat to NATO. It's still a little bit unclear as to where President Trump is going to come down on Russia when it comes to how much pressure he's going to be willing to apply. We saw a little bit of movement toward the possibility of more support for Ukraine. What do you think the options are there? And if you’re the Russian president, how are you looking at the outcome of this summit in particular?
General Breedlove: I'm both encouraged and discouraged on this front. I think there are a lot of people who believe we're ready now and we should be going in with the next round of heavy sanctions on Russia, to go after fuels and the shadow fleet. Our U.S. secretary of state, in his statement, said we're not going there now because it might preclude some sort of a ceasefire or peace agreement in Ukraine. So, he's going to hold off. Russia won that round. That's what they want. Keep stalling, keep the Americans thinking there's going to be a deal, and keep attacking Ukraine. So, we've got to move past that. And I think eventually this is going to happen.
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If we learned anything from the 12-day war, it is that our president has a line. And when these parties go over that line, he will act. We hammered Ukraine. We took away their intelligence, we took away their support. We gave it back pretty quick, but the bottom line is that we did damage to Ukraine to get them where we needed to get them. Now it's time to give Mr. Putin a straightforward message “Get on the program, sir, or you're gonna regret it.” It’s time to pull that stick out and use it in the same way we did on several other countries in the last three or four months. That has not happened. We look forward to that happening.
But on your other point, yes, there seems to be some understanding that possibly we're going to keep the flow, maybe even increase the flow, of supply to Ukraine.
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CIPHER BRIEF EXPERT Q&A — NATO leaders convened at The Hague this week and agreed to raise the alliance’s defense spending target to 5% GDP, marking a significant pledge to expand defense capabilities. A key component is the 1.5% dedicated to defense- and security-related spending, a broad category that covers everything from critical infrastructure cybersecurity to upgrading transportation infrastructure for military logistics. Experts say this is a needed area to bolster defense posture, in addition to the traditional purchase of jets, tanks and arms.
Earlier this week, Rear Admiral Mark Montgomery urged NATO to adopt the 1.5% commitment in a piece in The Cipher Brief. He spoke with The Cipher Brief after the summit to assess the progress made and what must come next to translate those pledges into action.
Our conversation has been lightly edited for length and clarity. You can watch the full discussion at The Cipher Brief YouTube Channel.
The Cipher Brief: What do you think of the results of the summit? Success or still a lot of work?
RADM Montgomery: I think with an alliance like NATO, there is always a lot of work. You've got 32 countries, you have 32 ideas, you have 32 threat assessments. But I actually think it went exceptionally well. It went exceptionally well because Secretary General Rutte did a great job corralling the players, with the exception of Spain. But he did a great job with 31, and then he did a terrific job managing President Trump — and that's no easy feat.
This was a landmark summit. The Hague 2025 will be remembered for a true commitment to deterring Russia, and if necessary defeating them if they were to invade a NATO state. And the five percent is certainly part of it, but the language, the direction, the focus, the corralling back in of the United States, all that happened at this summit.
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The Cipher Brief: One thing that wasn't really discussed in any kind of depth was Ukraine. Obviously with Russia being sort of the looming cloud over NATO, I'm wondering what your thoughts are on that.
RADM Montgomery: I fully support Ukraine and I think we should do as much as we can to help them. I recognize, though, that this 5 percent and the discussion of whether Article 5 applies really was about signatory states. There's a deep, deep issue there that we have to be agreed that we're going to defend Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, particularly. I think they're the four most vulnerable states if they're attacked.
Separate from that is the issue that right now the European country in combat with Russia that was illegally invaded by Russia, Ukraine, has relied heavily on NATO support because most of NATO recognizes that if you don't deter Russia here, their next ambition could be Moldova, but it could be Estonia. It could be Romania or Georgia, or it could be the Suwalki Gap and a land bridge to Kaliningrad.
So with all that in play, it was critical that Zelensky got a good reception. I think he did. And the fact that the Ukrainian section was shortened from 42 paragraphs to 10 paragraphs, I don't care. In the end it said we support Ukraine. The NATO contact group is working hard to support Ukraine. European countries are giving Ukraine a lot of money.
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And here's the most important part: for the first time since his election, President Trump indicated he would keep the defense industrial base open for Ukraine or Europeans to purchase the critical air defense systems they need, and even referred to the U.S. potentially being involved in that. There is no European alternative to the Patriot line at Raytheon or to the AMRAAM line in the United States, which is the weapon that goes in their NASAMs air defense system. There's no European alternative to a million rounds a year of 155mm. You're going to need the U.S. to be involved in that. And therefore, it was critical for the president to say that these lines are available to Ukraine. And he did that on two or three different occasions. It wasn't as clean as I'd like it, but he clearly indicated that was his intention.
The Cipher Brief: Next steps for NATO. What do you think?
RADM Montgomery: First, glad to see the 5%. I was really glad that they broke it down to 3.5-1.5, mostly because they'd have never gotten a 5% on planes, tanks, and ships. You'd have had more than Spain break away then — you might've had the UK, France, and Germany. Or they'd put a due date like 2050, something that doesn't really matter. I'm disappointed it slipped to 2035. It should have been 2032 like the Eastern Europeans wanted. Most of the Eastern Europeans, by the way—Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, and Poland—are passing through 4% already and heading to 5% within the next 12 months. And that's just on aircraft, ships, and tanks kind of stuff.
What I really loved about this was the 1.5%. This is about getting cyber right and critical infrastructure protection right. It's about building your defense industrial base. But talking about cyber and critical infrastructure, when you say what's next for NATO, at the last summit, they approved a NATO critical infrastructure center. They put it at SACEUR, and that's critical because what we have to do now is take that center as it comes online in the next year, SACEUR’s war plans, and this money and build the infrastructure that's necessary for the United States to flow our forces from the United States, the UK forces from across the channel, the French forces from deep in Europe—those brigades, divisions, and even corps—to be able to flow across Northern Europe from the ports and the airfields in Belgium, Netherlands, Germany, Poland, Luxembourg, France, and get to the fight. That is not protected right now. That critical infrastructure is not prioritized and protected in a meaningful way.
So, in my mind, the big NATO takeaway is 1.5 percent, the cyber center, and a SACEUR with a war plan. If we can now build ourselves the ligature to deter Russia and if Russia is foolish enough to attack, defeat Russia in an invasion of an Article Five-defended country.
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NATO Lures Trump Back - at a Cost
CIPHER BRIEF REPORTING – The stakes at this week’s NATO summit were sky-high – support for Ukraine, a shoring up of Europe’s defenses, and the viability of the alliance amid a waning U.S. commitment. On that last and arguably most important front, the gathering at The Hague produced surprising results.
By the end of the summit, President Donald Trump’s famous disdain for NATO had morphed into a gush. “This was a tremendous summit,” the president said at a news conference, “I enjoyed it very much.”
Trump spoke in glowing terms about the alliance - “I left here differently,” he said and promised U.S. support for NATO’s Article 5, which compels each member state to respond to an attack against any other, and which he had previously called into question. Trump was also clearly pleased with the summit’s main achievement – a collective pledge by members to contribute 5% of their GDP to defense, something the U.S. president had wanted for years.
Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges (Ret.), former Commander of U.S. Army Forces in Europe, told The Cipher Brief that the summit’s “best outcome” was NATO’s success at bringing Trump back into the fold.
“There was a huge sigh of relief in The Hague that he even showed up, Hodges told us. “There was some anxiety about that, or that he might blow it up somehow.”
“He was there, he stayed for the entire thing. He met with President Zelensky. We got an agreement on 5 % [spending]...and then a public affirmation of American commitment to the alliance by the president. That's pretty good.”
“I actually think it went exceptionally well,” said Rear Admiral (Ret.) Mark Montgomery, a senior member of the Cyber Initiatives Group and director at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. “It went exceptionally well because NATO Secretary General [Mark] Rutte did a great job corralling the players…and then he did a terrific job managing President Trump and that's no easy feat.”
The costs of placating the U.S. president included hitting that 5% figure, which may be difficult for many members to meet, and a relegating of Ukraine’s concerns to the summit’s back burner.
At The Hague, President Volodymyr Zelensky said he was pleased by what he called a “long and meaningful” meeting with President Trump, and Trump himself acknowledged Ukraine’s “brave battle” in a way he hasn’t done previously. Still, some in Ukraine noted that beyond verbal support from Trump and Rutte, there was little new NATO support for Kyiv.
“The problem for Ukrainians is that we are super tired from so many words,” Oleksiy Goncharenko, a member of the Ukrainian Parliament, told The Cipher Brief. He noted that June had been one of the worst months of the war in terms of civilian deaths, and that Russian President Vladimir Putin had been “emboldened” by a failure of the U.S. to hold Moscow accountable. “We want to see concrete results,” Goncharenko said. “We want this war to end as soon as possible.”
“The NATO allies made some brutal and to some extent also cynical trade-offs,” Liana Fix, a Europe expert at the Council on Foreign Relations, told The Cipher Brief. “They wanted the summit to be a success for Donald Trump and to be about defense spending to secure their own security in the long term. It was not designed to be about Ukraine.”
A Trump surprise
President Trump’s pivot didn’t just help with the atmospherics at The Hague. For the moment at least, it means that a bitter and dangerous NATO-U.S. rift has been mended.
Trump has mused out loud about ending U.S. financial and military commitments to NATO. Last week, he said he saw no reason for the U.S. to meet the very 5% spending target he had pushed for – “I don’t think we should,” he said – and on the eve of the summit he refused to commit to U.S. support for Article 5. It “depends on your definition,” he said.
All that seemed like rear-view-mirror material by the time the summit wrapped at The Hague. Rutte’s pre-summit flattering of Trump – including a leaked private message in which he praised the U.S. strikes against Iran and told the president he was “flying into another big success in The Hague” – seemed to have had the desired effect. Trump praised Rutte and the alliance, took credit for the spending pledges, and sought to put to rest any doubts about Washington’s Article 5 commitments. “I stand with it. That’s why I’m here,” Trump said when asked to clarify his position. “If I didn’t stand with it, I wouldn’t be here.”
That full-throated support allowed for a final summit communiqué that included a reaffirmation of the “ironclad commitment to collective defense as enshrined in Article 5.”
“It was important that the president affirmed it very strongly, clearly and publicly,” Lt. Gen. Hodges told us.
“Donald Trump committed to Article 5, but European NATO members paid a high price for that,” Fix said. “The whole summit was about offering 5% to Donald Trump, flattering him and making sure that he stays in the alliance. Of course, it's also in the interest of European NATO allies to increase their defense spending, but they would have never come up with this 5% target. That was specifically for Donald Trump, and it worked.”
Rutte also managed to achieve near consensus among the NATO members – 32 of them – with the exception of Spain – committed to the 5 % ask; ultimately it was split into 3.5 % for core military elements – troops, missiles, ammunition – and another 1.5 percent for “militarily adjacent” spending that nations may devote to infrastructure and cybersecurity.
That drew praise from Rear Adm. Montgomery, who had advocated for the additional commitment.
“What I really loved about this was the 1.5 %,” he said. “This is about getting cyber right and critical infrastructure protection right.”
Beyond the detailed spending targets, experts saw value in the unified message put forth at the summit, given recent transatlantic tensions.
“The degree to which the alliance acts in a unified voice, utilizes consensus, agrees on broad positions, that's a win for the alliance and a big defeat for Putin,” Admiral James Stavridis, a former NATO Supreme Allied Commander, told The Cipher Brief.
The skeptics – and the hurdles ahead
For all the post-summit cheering, there was also skepticism about the implementation of the new 5 % commitments.
While Poland and the Baltic states are already spending nearly 5% of their GDP on defense, other NATO members hover close to 2% and will face political and economic challenges in meeting the new targets. Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez refused to sign on, saying his country would spend 2.1 percent of its GDP on defense, “no more, no less.” Slovakia and Belgium pledged to meet the target but said it would be difficult to do.
Experts noted that in the push to placate President Trump, NATO’s European members had agreed to more than double their military spending at a time when many are already struggling to balance their budgets. Politically, these governments – particularly those in Western Europe, where the Russia threat is less palpable – may have trouble convincing their constituents that military spending should spike at the expense of outlays for social programs.
“To what extent will populists in Europe make defense spending a topic?” asked Fix. “Do they come up with claims like, ‘Why should we spend for defense just to please Donald Trump? We could spend for social welfare and make a deal with Russia.’”
Then there is the timetable.
The NATO communique calls for members to meet their 5% target by 2035. Experts and some intelligence agencies have warned that while Russia’s military and economy have been weakened, new Russian threats to Europe may arise within three to five years of an end of the Ukraine war.
Hodges and Montgomery both said they were disappointed by the long timeline. The Ukrainian president did too.
“This is slow,” Zelensky said of the NATO timeline. “We believe starting in 2030, Putin can have significantly greater capabilities. Today, Ukraine is holding him up, he has no time to drill the army.”
Finally, there is the question of how the money will be spent. As The Cipher Brief has reported, European defense production has often been slowed or thwarted by continent-wide regulations. And while overall defense strategy and standards have been set by NATO commanders, national military budgets and planning are decided by individual nations. Experts stressed the need for NATO’s European members to spend their 5% in a strategic and coordinated fashion.
“The most important thing, of course, is capability,” Lt. Gen. Hodges said. “Do we have the actual capability to do what we're supposed to do? Because that's what will deter the Russians, not a sign on the board that says, Hey, we're at 3.5 percent. You know, it's real capability, units that are properly trained, fully manned, that have lots of ammunition, aircraft that fly and ships that sail. That's got to be the focus.”
Ukraine on the “back burner”
Russia’s full-scale of invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 was the catalyst for a unified NATO front that had eluded the alliance since the end of the Cold War. This week, with the focus on NATO’s overall defense spending, the recent strikes against Iran, and the wish to please President Trump, support for Ukraine took a back seat.
The good news for Ukraine came in the 50-minute meeting Trump held with Zelensky on the summit’s sidelines. Trump spoke of the bravery of Ukrainians and said he would consider providing more Patriot missiles to Ukraine to counter Russian air strikes. "We are going to see if we can make some of them available," Trump said. He also did not reject the idea of approving more U.S. military aid to Kyiv.
But there were no fresh commitments from NATO, only a general pledge of “continued support” for Ukraine. The communiqué made no promise of Ukraine’s future membership in the alliance, which was taken as another concession to Trump, who opposes inviting Ukraine to join NATO. And Fix noted that NATO did not publish a Russia strategy at the summit, presumably over a concern that the U.S. would object – given the Trump administration’s refusal to recognize Russia as the aggressor in the Ukraine war.
“This is my biggest disappointment from this summit, that Ukraine was put on a back burner,” Lt. Gen. Hodges said. “I'm glad that President Zelensky showed up, that he was invited and that he attended. I'm glad that President Trump met with President Zelensky…and he was more positive about Ukraine than I'd heard from him in quite some time. But I had hoped that this summit would be another affirmation by the alliance that we're going to do everything we can to help Ukraine.”
Goncharenko and other members of the Ukrainian parliament were particularly exasperated by the Trump administration’s rationale for not imposing fresh sanctions against Russia. Trump threatened such sanctions following Russia’s recent military strikes and Putin’s intransigence at the negotiating table, but on the eve of the summit, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said sanctions were off the table for now.
“If we come in and crush them with more sanctions, we probably lose our ability to talk to them,” Rubio said.
“I really can't understand it,” Goncharenko said. “So, in the case of Iran, to make them go to the negotiating table, their nuclear facilities were crushed by American bombing. And it looks like it worked, at least it looks like that for the moment. In the case of Russia, they say, if we crush them, we will lose the possibility to negotiate. I can't understand.”
Goncharenko argued that the opposite would be a more logical approach. “If you want to have Russia at the negotiating table with seriousness, you need to crush them first,” he said. “They don't understand any language except the language of strength.”
Montgomery was more hopeful – for Ukraine and for Europe’s overall posture toward Russia.
“The Hague 2025 will be remembered as where there was a true commitment to deterring Russia, and if necessary, defeating them if they were to invade a NATO state,” Montgomery told us. “And the 5 percent is certainly part of it, but the language, the direction, the focus, the crawling back of the United States, all that happened at this summit.”
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North Korea’s Sticking Points: Abduction and Uranium Enrichment
OPINION — In September 2002, North Korea’s supreme leader, Kim Jong-il, admitted to Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi that North Korea had abducted thirteen Japanese citizens — saying that eight were dead and five could visit Japan and return to North Korea. The Japanese public was shocked. Eight dead? At Japan’s request, North Korea returned the remains of two, Megumi Yokota and Kaoru Matsuki to Japan for forensic analysis. The analysis determined the remains did not belong to either person.
In October 2002, President George W. Bush sent Assistant Secretary of State for East Asia/Pacific Affairs, James Kelly, to Pyongyang for meetings with North Korea’s Vice Foreign Minister Kang Sok Ju. During their meeting, Mr. Kang admitted that North Korea had an active gas centrifuge program to enrich uranium for use in nuclear weapons. He rhetorically asked what the U.S. was prepared to do about such a program. The meeting then ended abruptly.
These are the two issues that continue to poison relations with North Korea. The Mr. Koizumi visit to North Korea was done in the spirit of improving relations; the ideal outcome was North Korea apologizing and returning all the Japanese citizens they abducted and adhering to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and other nuclear commitments, given that in 1998 North Korea launched a long-range Taepo Dong missile that flew over Japan. Mr. Koizumi’s meeting with Mr. Kim was not the success it was meant to be. The Japanese public was irate with the results of the visit.
To date, the abductee issue continues to be unresolved, with a mandate from the people that there be closure on this sordid chapter of Japan-North Korea relations. Yokota Sakie, the mother of Yokota Megumi, who was a first-year junior high school student when she was abducted in 1977, recently had a press conference imploring the government to bring back the abductees. Ms. Sakie is the only surviving parent of the government-recognized abductees who remain unaccounted for.
Japan recognizes seventeen citizens abducted by North Korea in the 1970s and 80s; five returned to Japan in 2002, but the other twelve are unaccounted for. There are other estimates that there were hundreds of Japanese citizens abducted by North Korea during that period.
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North Korea’s highly enriched uranium program continues to be the major stumbling block in resolving the nuclear issue with North Korea. When North Korea was confronted in 2002 with intelligence indicating a clandestine uranium enrichment program for nuclear weapons, Mr. Kang did not deny it; rather, he apparently made it clear that there was nothing the U.S. – and others – could do about it. It also speaks to North Korea’s long-held determination to be a nuclear weapons state. So, despite the Agreed Framework of 1994 that was meant to end North Korea’s quest for a nuclear weapon, Pyongyang decided to pursue a clandestine program to enrich uranium for nuclear weapons.
Indeed, North Korea is now quite open about this uranium enrichment program. The failure of the 2019 Hanoi Summit was due to Mr. Kim’s unwillingness to include his uranium enrichment sites, in addition to the Yongbyon plutonium site, in a deal to lift sanctions in return for a halt in all nuclear programs. In fact, Mr. Kim recently visited another enrichment site, apparently at Yongbyon, where he was shown pictures of shining centrifuges.
North Korea continues to produce fissile material – plutonium and enriched uranium – for nuclear weapons, while enhancing their ballistic missile capabilities, with a Hwasong-18, a solid fuel Intercontinental missile (ICBM) capable of targeting the whole of the U.S. Most recently, Mr. Kim talked about North Korea’s goal of having a blue water navy, which would give North Korea considerable reach in international waters, an obvious threat to Japan and other neighboring countries.
North Korea’s enhanced nuclear and missile programs and their mutual defense treaty with Russia, with over 11,000 North Korean troops in Russia for the war with Ukraine – in addition to ballistic missiles and artillery and rocket launchers – requires immediate attention.
On June 26 there will be an online symposium in the United Nations on the abduction issue. I and hopefully many others will tune in to this symposium, given that it’s an “ongoing problem and an international challenge that requires immediate resolution.”
This column by Cipher Brief Expert Ambassador Joseph DeTrani was first published in The Washington Times
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Can Europe Really Defend Itself?
CIPHER BRIEF REPORTING – As NATO leaders gather in The Hague this week, they face questions that not long ago would have seemed unthinkable: Can Europe defend itself against a growing threat at its doorstep, as its most powerful member wavers in its commitment to the alliance?
That NATO power is the United States, and since President Donald Trump’s second inaugural, the U.S. has made sharp shifts towards Moscow and away from its longtime European allies. President Trump said in March that the U.S. could not guarantee its support for any NATO nations deemed to be spending too little on defense; Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the U.S. is no longer the “primary guarantor” of European security; and the Trump administration has shown a warmth towards the Kremlin unseen anywhere in Western Europe.
These developments have led to a sea change in European security and defense policy – what Lt. Gen. Sean Clancy, head of the European Union’s military committee, recently called a “global reset.” NATO members have agreed ahead of this week’s summit to boost defense spending to 5% of GDP, a huge jump from a 2% target that many in the alliance had struggled to meet. That change is an acknowledgement of both the growing Russian menace and Trump’s threat to withhold support from NATO nations who miss the 5 % mark.
Trump has also made clear that the U.S. plans to reduce its financial and troop commitments to NATO, and he has shown disdain for the alliance’s European members. Last week, Trump argued that the 5 % NATO target wouldn't apply to the U.S. – “I don’t think we should,” he said, “but I think they should.” And as Europe worked a diplomatic channel to bring Iran to the negotiating table, Trump said Friday that "Iran doesn't want to speak to Europe. They want to speak to us. Europe is not going to be able to help in this one."
“Europe is facing a decision point, a crossroads,” Doug Lute, a former U.S. Ambassador to NATO, told The Cipher Brief. “And the decision is, will Europe stand up as one of the poles in this new multipolar international system?”
Another former U.S. Ambassador to NATO, Kurt Volker, said he believes the U.S. commitment to Europe will remain strong, but only if NATO’s European members make good on their new pledges to boost defense spending.
“What I see is a tremendous U.S. push to strengthen NATO,” Amb. Volker said. “The U.S. has responsibilities globally and especially in Asia and wants to be able to dedicate more resources there. But it can only dedicate more resources and attention if Europe steps up to do more of its own role in securing Europe and in preparing for the defense of Europe, which they are doing.”
The question, then, for Europe, as the NATO leaders meet: When it comes to defense and security, can Europe go it alone? Or, as Amb. Lute put it, “Can [Europe] assemble the hard power it needs in a rapid, emergency basis under the pressure of time? Can it assemble the hard power required to stand by itself?”
What Europe is saying – and doing
Recent European pledges and military budgets would suggest that at a minimum, the European “reset” is underway – and that the continent is taking significant first steps to bolster its own defenses.
To win consensus on the new 5 % spending target, NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte split the commitments into 3.5% for core defense and 1.5% for “defense-related” items including infrastructure and cybersecurity.
5 % may seem a small figure, but it represents a quantum leap for the alliance. Today only 23 of the alliance’s 32 members have met the previous 2% target. (NATO estimates that the U.S. spent around 3.4% of its GDP on defense in 2024.) The percentages of defense spending were higher during the Cold War, when the Soviet Union posed a clear and regular threat to Western Europe from its side of the Iron Curtain. The numbers dropped precipitously after the Soviet state met its demise in 1991.
“After the fall of the Soviet Union, everybody cashed in and defense spending in Europe fell,” Amb. Volker said. Today, he added, “everyone recognizes that Europe has taken too much of a peace dividend and they're not prepared. So that's why they're willing to agree to this 5 % target now.”
NATO has also pledged to boost its surface-to-air defense capabilities, an area in which the alliance has depended heavily on the U.S. And in March, the European Union took steps of its own to boost military spending, creating a 150 billion Euro ($170 billion) “combat readiness” fund for weapons procurement.
Meanwhile, that 1.5 % allotment for infrastructure and cybersecurity is an “underappreciated component” of the European commitment, according to Rear Admiral (Ret.) Mark Montgomery, a senior director at the Center on Cyber and Technology Innovation (CCTI) at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. In a piece for The Cipher Brief titled “Nato’s Critical 1.5 %,” Montgomery said those funds would be “fundamental to NATO’s ability to project power and sustain forces to fight and win wars.”
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“I actually see a lot of very good progress,” former NATO Supreme Allied Commander Gen. Philip Breedlove told The Cipher Brief. He said that a recent tour of eight European countries had convinced him of a broad commitment to spending for “long-term readiness” on defense.
“Most capitals have determined [that] Mr. Putin is not a partner, he's an enemy,” Gen. Breedlove said. “He has now three times amassed an army and marched across internationally recognized borders and invaded his neighbors, and we're going to have to deal with him.”
Beyond the alliance-wide hikes in defense spending, several European countries have made dramatic moves to bolster their own militaries. Earlier this month the British Defense Ministry announced an overhaul of its procurement approach, shifting from a focus on heavy armor to smaller, high-tech weaponry. Germany’s chancellor Friedrich Merz has promised to build “the strongest conventional army in Europe,” and earlier this year Germany made its first permanent foreign deployment since World War II, stationing a 5,000-strong brigade in Lithuania.
“Germany's economy has awakened to this new military-industrial demand signal, especially under new Chancellor Merz,” Amb. Lute said. “There are step-by-step indicators that Europe has changed its perception of the threat, the direct threat to Europe, but also this change in the transatlantic relationship.”
For all the pledges, problems abound. Experts warn that a morass of national and continent-wide regulations may thwart or delay efforts to build a potent European defense force. Overall strategy and standards have traditionally been set by NATO commanders, but national military budgets, planning and purchasing are the purview of individual nations. And Amb. Lute warned that European political swings may also hamper efforts to jump-start military production.
“The government [in Germany] can't simply demand that Rheinmetall, for example, begin to produce where it hasn't produced in the last 30 years,” he said. “You actually have to enter into the capital marketplace. And that counts on a significant and reliable year-after-year demand signal, which has not been the case over the last three decades.”
Geography matters
The most concrete signs of a continent on a war footing can be found along the eastern edges of NATO, in places where proximity to Russia has driven defense policy. While Spain, which sits in southwest Europe, far from any Russian border, spent only 1.3 % on defense last year, Poland – which shares a long border with Ukraine as well as a powerful enmity towards Moscow – has nearly reached the 5 % threshold already. Meanwhile, NATO’s two biggest military spenders per capita are the Baltic nations of Estonia and Lithuania; Latvia is close behind.
“The most fundamental observation here is that geography still counts,” Amb. Lute said. “So the closer you are with a land border to Russia and now a newly aggressive, revanchist, neo-imperialist Putin's Russia, the more these hard defensive measures count.”
Such measures reach beyond military spending. This month NATO held its annual Baltops military exercises, with troops from 20 NATO nations including newly-minted alliance members Sweden and Finland. This year’s drills carried two main aims, NATO officials said: to test NATO’s readiness for a Russian attack, and put on a show of force that might deter the Kremlin from future aggression.
Meanwhile, five European nations—Finland, Poland, Latvia, Estonia, and Lithuania—are withdrawing from the international treaty that bans the use or production of anti-personnel landmines, again citing the Russia threat. And Poland has gone so far as to request that NATO nuclear weapons be stationed on its soil.
“Doesn't surprise me at all,” Gen. Breedlove said of the landmine decision and Poland’s remarks about nuclear weapons.
“Remember, these nations now are really trying to decide, is America a reliable ally or not?” he said. “And if they're going to have to go it alone, they're going to have to take some pretty tough measures to make sure that they can hold, should Russia do what they seem to be continuing to do…and they're going to start taking these more drastic measures because you just can't bet your national sovereignty and existence on a hope.”
The missing pieces in a European defense
A recent report from the International Institute for Strategic Studies estimates that it would take Europe 25 years and nearly $1 trillion to replace U.S. military support if Washington withdrew from the continent.
The report found that key gaps for NATO members would involve aircraft, naval forces, and command infrastructure. NATO officials have also warned that current air defenses may be inadequate to protect against the range of threats that have featured prominently in the Ukraine war – high-tech drones, missiles, and fighter aircraft.
The IISS report makes clear – and many experts agree – that for all the commitments to boost European defenses, the continent remains heavily reliant on U.S. capabilities.
“Where America is absolutely the key is all of the enablers, all of the things that make an army potent – long-range precise fires, deep technical intelligence, developing kill chains and target folders in order to strike,” Gen. Breedlove said. He said he sees minimal immediate risk to Europe, given a badly weakened Russian military, but that in the longer term, the Europeans will need to manufacture or obtain a long list of high-end hardware on their own.
“There are a few things that really only America can do,” Gen. Breedlove said, listing rapid aerial transport, high-performing air defenses such as Patriot missile batteries, and sophisticated intelligence systems. “They really don't have the kind of strategic lift that America brings.”
“We're not talking about tank brigades or ships at sea and so forth,” Amb. Lute said. “We're talking about things like a high-end missile and air defense. Think of the Patriot missile system, which really doesn't have a European rival…the intelligence surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities, and in particular, space-based ISR capabilities. We're talking about air-to-air refueling and that strategic mobility, which is the combination of air-to-air refueling and large-body transport aircraft. So systems like that, for which Europe has relied on the United States, are going to have to become increasingly European owned and operated.”
Lute and others say a fundamental problem for Europe will be that even if the will and funding are there, none of these systems can be produced quickly. It may be that in the short term, while manufacturers in Europe reboot, they will need to spend their money on purchases from American defense firms.
Amb. Volker said he remains optimistic about Europe’s defense future, provided it maintains its current level of resolve.
Filling the gap “is not rocket science, it's easy to do,” he said. “Europe needs to be strategic about this.”
Volker said that while those high-end “enablers” should be a long-term aspiration, Europe’s near-term focus should be on more nuts-and-bolts defense capabilities — troops, armor, artillery, ammunition, aircraft, and so forth.
Ultimately, he said, while some countries will reach the 5 % spending target more quickly than others, the consensus on the gravity of the threat is a good sign.
“The fact that they are agreeing to the target means that there is a recognition that it's needed,” Volker said. “That means there will also be movement toward that target. It will be an iterative process as to how we get there. But no one in Europe is contesting the notion that we need to get there.”
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Former CIA Director on the Priority Intelligence Requirement in Iran
EXPERT INTERVIEW – Tehran’s response on Monday to U.S. attacks against its nuclear facilities over the weekend was measured and possibly calibrated to what appears to be growing impatience by U.S. President Donald Trump over demands for the country to give up its nuclear program.
A social media post by President Trump – also on Monday – that a ceasefire had been reached between Israel and Iran didn’t explain what the parameters of the agreement might be as Iranian missiles continued to fall on Israel.
Iran also fired missiles at a U.S. airbase in Qatar earlier in the day, describing the attack as a “devastating and powerful” response. U.S. officials reported no injuries or deaths in the attack that Iran had warned was coming.
As military commanders continue to assess the total damage to Iran’s nuclear facilities from the weekend attack, U.S. officials say they are still unsure of the location of Iran’s near-bomb-grade uranium stockpile.
We spoke with former CIA Director General David Petraeus (Ret.) about the military mission that seems to have brought a change in behavior from Tehran and about the priority intelligence requirement for the U.S. Intelligence community. Our interview has been lightly edited for length and clarity.
General David Petraeus served more than 37 years in the U.S. military with six consecutive commands, five of which were combat, including command of the Multi-National Force-Iraq during the Surge, U.S. Central Command, and Coalition and U.S. Forces in Afghanistan. He is a partner in the KKR global investment firm and chairs the firm’s global institute.
The Cipher Brief: The U.S. had the element of surprise in the weekend bombing raid. How important was that?
Gen. Petraeus: Surprise is always a tremendous advantage if it can be achieved, and it does appear that this was the case here. There certainly was no air defense fire. Certainly, no aircraft from Iran tried to oppose those that were flying through their airspace. And they even hit two of the sites with submarine-launched ballistic missiles. 25 or so of those were used against the first two sites at Isfahan and Natanz, Natanz being the main enrichment site, of course, that was already hit by the Israelis. A very impressive operation, without question. And again, absolutely no opposition from the ground or from the air.
All of this was done in 25 minutes from entering the airspace to leaving it, having flown all the way from the middle part of the United States, seven apparently B-2 bombers, each carrying two of the massive ordnance penetrators, those 30,000 pound mountain busters, really, bunker buster doesn't quite do it justice, with 5,000 pounds of explosive after they've already burrowed through rock or concrete or what have you.
There are questions, however, after all of this, and I think we have to be very cognizant of them, the most significant is really how much damage actually was done. And you don't know until the BDA - the bomb damage assessment - process has been concluded and intelligence has determined whether or not the facilities were completely destroyed with all of the centrifuges and with all of the highly enriched uranium that was stockpiled at these different sites. Did some of it get moved in the days before? Did some of the centrifuges as well as the HEU get displaced? Is there a hidden site? There have been rumors about that, as you know, I'm sure.
And so how much of the nuclear enterprise is left at this point? And here, we would talk just not about the enriched uranium, the highly enriched uranium - the IAEA said they saw some particles that were enriched to as high as 83%, recently noting that 90%-plus is weapons grade - how many centrifuges are left? Are they operational? Could they enrich the HEU, further to weapons grade? And do they have the expertise left to do all of this, noting that I think it's approaching two dozen of the leading nuclear scientists have now been killed by Israel.
Those are some of the very significant questions that remain to be answered. But without question, this was a very impressive operation carried out by over 125 aircraft, if you count all of the refueling aircraft, you count the F-22 stealth fighters, the F-35 stealth fighter bombers and so forth that escorted them through the airspace, the submarines, the seven B-2 bombers plus jammers, air surveillance, undoubtedly drone surveillance, this was a well-orchestrated effort that shows our men and women in uniform really at their very best.
The Cipher Brief: Talk to us a little bit about how the bomb damage assessement – the BDA - works. I'm assuming when they're assessing the damage from this bombing, they're using a lot of overhead images. You served as director of the CIA. I would assume there would be some human intelligence from sources on the ground that would be woven into that. What are the components of the damage assessment? How does it work?
Gen. Petraeus: Every element of intelligence will be employed in this case. Of course, it will include various forms of imagery intelligence. There will be various forms of signals intelligence if they can get it, cyber intelligence; and as you noted, human intelligence. Measurement and Signals, MASINT, is another whole element; even open-source intelligence, if it can be mined and you can find something. There may be people taking photos of this and we’ve seen repeatedly how useful cell phone videos can be in just seeing what took place. So, the bottom line is that every element, every type of intelligence that can be gathered, will be gathered. That’s the science and then the art, of course, is in the fusion of all of this.
The Cipher Brief: You actually oversaw exercises around this very scenario while you were in Command. I'm wondering if you can talk us through some of the challenges that the U.S. military could have run into as part of this operation. How difficult is an operation like this to actually pull off?
Gen. Petraeus: An operation like this is difficult even without an enemy. 125 aircraft engaged in this - it's a real minuet. Everything is timed out. The fact that it flew from the middle part of the United States all the way across the ocean, across many of the Gulf states and so forth from the Mediterranean to get to Iran and then had to link-up with the F-22s and the F-35s that were presumably already in bases around the region. There are jammers, electronic warfare aircraft. There are aircraft that are performing surveillance tasks, both air surveillance and then others that undoubtedly were looking at the actual targets themselves before and after.
This was a very complicated operation even without any enemy. We did actually do a rehearsal of a plan to destroy Iran’s entire nuclear program. This operation hit just three sites, of course. The rehearsal was formulated after the September 2009 release of information by the International Atomic Energy Agency that Fordow existed. This was known in intelligence circles prior to that but that was a catalyst for the development of a plan to destroy the entire program, and the means for retaliation and the air and ballistic missile defenses and all the rest of this.
That was an enormous plan, even bigger than what was carried out over the weekend. We did rehearse that one time in the continental United States. This is all publicly known. And that meant that we flew laps of the U.S. with the B-2 bombers, given how far their route would be if they took off from the U.S., as appears to be the case in this particular situation. And even then, it was very challenging.
The Cipher Brief: It's fascinating. What can you tell us in terms of what would it take to completely destroy Iran's nuclear program?
Gen. Petraeus: A lot more than this, because there are many other sites. To be very clear about it, all you have to do is look at the various maps of what the Israelis have taken out over the past nine days or so, and you'll see what it was that we were envisioning destroying. Now, some of those are new or more developed than they were back at that time. The air ballistic missile defenses are much more capable or were much more capable until Israel destroyed them than what we faced at that time. So, obviously the situation has evolved, but it was a very substantial operation, and very likely would not have been achievable within a single sortie of aircraft, however large. And there would've been a lot of follow-up operations required to ensure that you got everything. And then also to go after what they could have used to retaliate against energy infrastructure, freedom of navigation in the Gulf, our bases and forces and so forth.
The Cipher Brief: There are fears that Iran may mine the Strait of Hormuz. Once the military operation is over, you mentioned that there are rumors that there may be a hidden site, and one would assume that the intelligence component to this goes into overdrive now. What can you tell us about what is likely happening on the intelligence side?
Gen. Petraeus: I'm sure that the intelligence side has been in overdrive for weeks, if not months, as this has all been contemplated. That's their job. And of course, sharing with the Israelis and taking what they are getting, because their sources and methods and years of experience and expertise are really unmatched. But now there is a crucial task. The priority intelligence requirement is to identify whether all of the highly enriched uranium has been destroyed, whether all of the centrifuges have been destroyed, and what other human expertise is still alive that could restart a program or continue what they were doing with whatever is left at this point in time.
That is a huge, huge question. I'm not sure that at the end of the day that they'll be able to answer that with complete certainty. That has always been a challenge.
The Cipher Brief: You mentioned these aren't really bunker buster bombs, they're mountain buster bombs. How likely do you think it would be if these bombs were successfully dropped in the right place, which it looks like they were - how would they work?
Gen. Petraeus: No other country has this 30,000lb bomb. No other country has an aircraft that can carry this size bomb. What you would typically do is launch one and try to see what the effect was, and others are going to follow. The same is true of Natanz. You have to burrow down through the subterranean chambers to get to the very bottom, which is where the so-called mission spaces were at Natanz. The Israelis did do that already, and I suspect that the combination of the submarine-launched ballistic missiles and MOPs used there will have finished that off.
With respect to Fordow, the bomb will penetrate quite a distance. There's plenty out there in publicly available information that shows how far; it depends though on the particular rock, how dense it is, or concrete or what have you. But eventually it burrows all the way down, and then it literally blows up the 5,000 pounds of explosive that are in the warhead portion of the bomb. And again, if you need to, you just pile drive your way all the way down into the center of that structure.
We'll see what it is that our various imagery intelligence and other forms of intelligence can tell us about how successful this was. There are concerns about photos online, showing trucks outside Fordow in the days leading up to this attack. It’s hard to say how old they were and what was really was going on with them. But that does inject a bit of uncertainty into whether or not all of the HEU was still there, and whether all of the centrifuges were still there. That's going to be a key question for the intelligence community.
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What Was Trump Thinking When He Ordered the Strike on Iran?
OPINION / FINE PRINT — “I want to thank and congratulate Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu. We worked as a team like perhaps no team has ever worked before, and we’ve gone a long way to erasing this horrible threat to Israel. I want to thank the Israeli military for the wonderful job they’ve done.”
That was President Trump last Saturday night during his announcement of the U.S. attacks earlier that evening on three of Iran’s nuclear sites.
It should remind people how important Netanyahu and the Israeli military were in Trump’s off-and-on military and diplomatic decision-making during the weeks leading up to the attack.
Perhaps one key was Trump’s acceptance of Netanyahu’s claim that Iran was very close to having a nuclear weapon, which was done publicly last Tuesday. On Air Force One heading home from the G7 meeting, Trump was asked how close he thought Iran was to getting a bomb and he replied, “Very close.”
At that time, the U.S. intelligence community had assessed that Iran, although increasing the level of uranium enrichment to over 60 percent – with 90 percent needed for a bomb – had not decided to build a bomb.
When Trump was told that his Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard had two months earlier testified to Congress that Iran had not yet decided to build a bomb, he replied, “I don’t care what she said. I think they were very close to having it.”
For me that was another Helsinki moment – taking me back to the July 2018 press conference in Helsinki with Russian President Vladimir Putin, after the two leaders had met together. Trump was asked if he believed his own intelligence agencies or the Russian president when it came to the allegations of Moscow meddling in the U.S. 2016 elections.
Trump replied, "President Putin says it's not Russia. I don't see any reason why it would be." And Trump still believes it today.
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Another key to the close Trump/Netanyahu partnership, I believe, is the timing of Israel’s initial unilateral attacks on Iran, beginning on June 13.
Back in March, Trump announced that he had written a letter to Iran’s Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, saying he wanted to start new nuclear negotiations with Iran. But, Trump warned, that failure to reach agreement within 60 days once negotiations began could result in serious military consequences for Tehran.
Those negotiations began on April 12, and after five rounds of talks, on June 9, Iran rejected the Trump administration's proposal for a new nuclear deal which prohibited Iran from domestic uranium enrichment, removed Iran’s current stockpiles of highly enriched uranium, and the set conditions for lifting sanctions on Iran.
During that April-to-June two-month negotiating period, things were going on secretly. In Israel, its military and intelligence agencies were preparing complex plans for attacking Iran’s top military personnel, offensive missile units, air force and air defenses and radar systems.
Joint Chief Chairman Air Force Gen. Dan Caine, during a Sunday press conference, talked about the U.S. preparation activities.
“In just a matter of weeks, this [bombing Iran nuclear sites] went from strategic planning to global execution,” Caine said. He added, “More than 125 U.S. aircraft participated in this mission, including seven B2 stealth bombers, multiple flights of fourth and fifth generation fighters, dozens and dozens of air-refueling tankers a guided-missile submarine, and a full array of intelligence surveillance and reconnaissance aircraft.”
Another indication that U.S. planning for the Iran attack went on during the nuclear negotiations came from what Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said when he appeared with Caine at Sunday’s press conference.
“Iran found out that when POTUS [President of the United States] says 60 days that he seeks peace and negotiation, he means 60 days of peace and negotiation. Otherwise that nuclear program, that nuclear capability, will not exist,” Hegseth said.
On June 13, one day after the Trump negotiation deadline, Israel attacked Iran with
fighter-bomber aircraft and armed drones that had been smuggled into Iran. They incapacitated many of its air defenses and offensive missile system and killed top generals and scientists. In a telephone interview with Reuters, Trump said, “We knew everything [about the Israeli attack], and I tried to save Iran humiliation and death. I tried to save them very hard because I would have loved to have seen a deal worked out.”
Caine said on Sunday, “Israel had an incredible military success especially at the beginning and ongoing in degrading Iranian capabilities in degrading Iranian launchers...It's been incredible to watch what our ally Israel has been able to do.”
He later added, with reference to the U.S. bombing in Iran, “We took advantage of some of the preparatory work [by the Israelis] that's been done over the past week and a half in terms of axis of approach” to Iran targets. He added, “I won't get into the particulars, but as the secretary [Hegseth] said, it was a U.S. strike. We made sure we were not in the same piece of airspace…That was the extent of it.”
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Another aspect of events surrounding the attack, is the impact on future diplomacy by some of Trump’s actions.
For example, the strike plan was largely in place when Trump issued his statement last Thursday about how he might take up to two weeks hoping to get back to negotiations before he decided to go to war with Iran. At the time, U.S. Air Force refueling tankers and fighter jets had been moved into position, and the military was working on providing additional protection for American forces stationed in the region.
There is talk that Trump had the option of calling off the attack at the last minute. But it’s more likely that the President saw the two-week negotiation statement as his attempt to distract the Iranians from U.S. military preparations.
It’s also worth noting Trump’s use of Truth Social harsh messaging when he claims to be seeking negotiations. For example, on last Tuesday, June 17, Trump wrote, “We know exactly where the so-called ‘Supreme Leader’ is hiding. He is an easy target, but is safe there — we are not going to take him out (kill!), at least not for now.”
That is not likely to bring Iran negotiators to the table. Nor would another message Trump sent out the same day: “UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER!”
There was one lighter, but interesting, moment during Sunday’s Hegseth/Caine press conference.
Since April, the acting Defense Department Inspector General has been reviewing Hegseth’s use of Signal messaging to describe U.S. military strikes against Houthi militants in Yemen to non-military individuals.
In his opening statement, Caine said at one point, “I am particularly proud of our discipline related to operational security [secrecy of plans], something that was of great concern to the President, the [Defense] Secretary, [Central Command Commander] General [Erik] Kurilla and me. And we will continue to focus on this.”
The IG report is due out shortly.
Opinions expressed are those of the author and do not represent the views or opinions of The Cipher Brief.
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Will Anything Stop Iran's Pursuit of Nuclear Weapons?
OPINION -- The weekend bombing of Iran’s nuclear sites in Isfahan, Natanz and Fordow surprised the leadership in Tehran. It shouldn’t have, given Iran’s cavalier behavior and their initial dismissive response to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) censure of Iran for “not complying with nonproliferation obligations” and Tehran’s response that ‘Iran would launch a new enrichment center in a secure location and replace the first generation of machines with more modern equipment.”
Israel’s response was quick and deadly: bombing the three principal Iranian nuclear sites and killing leaders in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
The speed and accuracy of the U.S. and Israeli attacks obviously surprised Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Perhaps Mr. Khamenei thought he had more time. He was wrong. Mr. Khamenei may have thought Iran’s 2023 membership in the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) in 2023, and the March 2025 joint military exercise with Russia and China may have tempered Israel’s reaction to Iran’s flaunting of Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty obligations. Or perhaps they thought the January 2025 Iran-Russia Strategic Cooperation Agreement would have provided some cover. Or that Iran’s close relationship with China, certainly since the 2021 China-Iran twenty-five-year strategic agreement on energy and geopolitical issues, would have helped them. But this didn’t happen.
What Iran got were mere statements of support.
Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, is now in Moscow meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin to plead for Russia’s support. Mr. Putin has already said that “There was no justification for the U.S. bombing of Iran and that Moscow was trying to help the Iranian people.” China’s response to the U.S. bombing was equally predictable, “China strongly condemns the U.S. attacks on Iran and bombing their nuclear facilities … calling for an immediate cease fire.”
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Russia is occupied with the war of aggression in Ukraine and the massive casualties and economic devastation it has created. China has severe economic issues that must be addressed, in addition to negotiations with the U.S. on tariffs. Russia relies on Iran for drones and other military support for the war in Ukraine while China is Iran’s largest trading partner and importer of Iranian oil.
Although not a member of the SCO, North Korea continues to have a close relationship with Iran. Indeed, North Korea provided Iran extensive assistance with its liquid-fuel ballistic missile fleet; several Scud short-range models and the No Dong medium-range models (Shahab-3) are based on North Korean technology; and reportedly, North Korea is helping Iran with its Intermediate-range and long-range ballistic missile programs.
There is unconfirmed media reporting that North Korea may be providing nuclear assistance to Iran and a Congressional Research Service report (which cited Jane’s Defense Weekly) on North Korea constructing underground nuclear facilities for Iran.
North Korea could be the outlier in the current Israel-Iran conflict. Their relationship with Iran goes back decades, and much of it dealt with providing Iran with ballistic missiles and conventional weaponry for its war with Iraq. Many of these transactions were for money, something North Korea continues to pursue, either through the sale of conventional weapons or missiles or from its extensive illicit activities program: counterfeiting cigarettes and pharmaceuticals, or its sophisticated cyber theft program, making billions of dollars for the leadership in Pyongyang.
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North Korea also has nuclear weapons and an active fissile material program to produce these nuclear weapons. Iran could seek North Korea’s assistance with the provision of one or more nuclear weapons or fissile material for a dirty bomb.
The Iran-North Korea relationship goes back decades, with North Korea providing Iran with unique military capabilities. But North Korea has been told, and we must continue to tell their leader, Kim Jong-Un, that the sale of nuclear weapons or fissile material for a dirty bomb to Iran – or any other rogue state or terrorist organization -- is a red line that must never be crossed. If crossed, the consequences would be intolerable.
Closely monitoring North Korea’s interaction with Iran is important, especially now.
This also may be the time to reach out to Mr. Kim to resume a dialogue with North Korea, something that hasn’t happened since the failed February 2019 Hanoi Summit and President Trump’s brief meeting with Mr. Kim at the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) in June 2019.
With the new Lee Jae-Myung government in South Korea, and recent confidence building gestures between the two Koreas, this may be an opportune time to reach out to Mr. Kim to reengage.
In the final analysis, Iran may continue to pursue a nuclear weapons capability. In the interim, Iran, a state sponsor of terrorism, may continue to attack U.S. and Israeli military personnel and civilians, working with the IRGC and their proxies. We should be ready.
The Cipher Brief is committed to publishing a range of perspectives on national security issues submitted by deeply experienced national security professionals.
Opinions expressed are those of the author and do not represent the views or opinions of The Cipher Brief.
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Could Iran's Judiciary Chief Be the Next Supreme Leader?
OPINION — As Israel's unprecedented military campaign and targeting of Iranian military leaders and scientists wreaked havoc across Iran last week, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei retreated to a bunker and initiated deliberations over his successor. With the 2024 death of a former leading contender, President Ebrahim Raisi, and Khamenei’s recent sidelining of his son, Mojtaba, the powerful head of Iran’s judiciary and former intelligence minister, Gholam-Hoseyn Mohseni-Ejei, is likely a serious candidate for the role of the Islamic Republic’s next Supreme Leader.
Mohseni-Ejei possesses formidable credentials for ensuring the survival of the Islamic Revolution, the regime’s highest strategic goal. A longtime insider, his career bridges the two most critical organs of internal regime preservation: the judiciary and the Ministry of Intelligence. He had deep-rooted ties to Raisi, his predecessor as judiciary head, and to the current intelligence minister, Esmail Khatib. These relations reflect decades of institutional collaboration, trust building, and ideological alignment. All three men cut their teeth in the judiciary and intelligence bureaucracy, sharing not only a hardline outlook but close connections with Khamenei. With Raisi gone and the regime under siege, Khamenei may view Mohseni-Ejei as the most experienced and dependable successor to steer the Islamic Republic through a moment of existential peril. If so, he almost certainly will make this known to the Assembly of Experts, the body of clerics that chooses the Supreme Leader.
Mohseni-Ejei’s ascent is not based merely on his personal ties. It also reflects the growing centrality of the intelligence-security-judiciary triad in safeguarding the regime’s continuity. More recently, as the Israel-Iran war has intensified, Iranian leaders have shifted their focus further inward— ramping up internal surveillance, searching for traitors, and shutting down communications with the outside world. In this context, his control over the judiciary and having a friend head the Ministry of Intelligence potentially provide Mohseni-Ejei unrivaled leverage over the members of the Assembly of Experts and other powerful figures among Iran’s political factions.
The Cipher Brief has been talking with the foremost experts on the region since the surprise U.S. strike on Iran's nuclear facilities- including former National Intelligence Manager for Iran at ODNI and energy expert Norm Roule and former CIA Director General David Petraeus (Ret.) - about what comes next in Iran. Watch the interviews exclusively on The Cipher Brief's YouTube Channel and subscribe to make sure you stay up to date on how the experts see events unfolding.
Under Mohseni-Ejei’s leadership, the judiciary embraced expansive interpretations of national security law to suppress political unrest, ethnic dissent, and defiance of intrusive morality laws. Khatib’s MOIS has worked in tandem, deploying aggressive surveillance and conducting wide-scale arrests to suppress dissent. To relieve some pressure from a public angry about Iran’s failing economy and petty repressive measures such as mandatory hijab, the judiciary has reduced enforcement of some restrictions over the past year. Nonetheless, the collaboration between Mohseni-Ejei and Khatib since 2021 represents one of the most coordinated periods of state repression during the regime’s four-plus decades of existence.
Crucially, Khamenei’s recent decision to provide the Assembly of Experts with three preferred names—an unprecedented move in the Islamic Republic’s history—suggests a pragmatic urgency favoring survival over process. If Khamenei values institutional loyalty, ideological orthodoxy, and the machinery of domestic control, Mohseni-Ejei may be the logical choice. His past leadership of the MOIS and current control of the judiciary give him operational experience in both managing crises and protecting the Islamic revolution. Moreover, his long-standing ties to Khamenei himself—dating back to his early years monitoring potential “deviation” within the intelligence services—suggest trust built over decades of mutual survival.
Critics may cite Mohseni-Ejei’s role in past abuses, including the post-2009 Green Movement crackdown and his promotion of a crackdown on dress code infractions that led to the Mahsa Amini protests of 2022. However, within the current regime such episodes are not stains but qualifications. With the United States now directly involved in the war, Iran’s leadership may gravitate toward a man whose entire career has been defined by countering sedition, exposing conspiracies, and upholding ideological discipline through the courts and the intelligence apparatus.
In Iran’s increasingly closed and militarized political sphere, the path to supreme authority may not lie in clerical scholarship or charisma, but in institutional command and operational loyalty. Mohseni-Ejei, a consummate enforcer, may well be the last man standing when the Assembly of Experts makes its fateful choice.
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The Intelligence Behind the Strike: Was Everyone Wrong About Iran’s Nuclear Program?
OPINION — On June 13, 2025, just after midnight, Israel launched a military operation against Iran, citing an urgent need to halt Tehran’s march toward nuclear weapons capability. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu justified the strike by claiming that "if not stopped, Iran could produce a nuclear weapon in a very short time. It could be a year. It could be within a few months”. This justification however is at odds with the consensus held until that point by the U.S. intelligence community and most international nuclear experts. For years, that consensus had held firm: Iran was expanding its civil nuclear program, and continued to enrich uranium but had not made the political decision to build a bomb. If Netanyahu’s claim, echoed by Donald Trump, is accurate then Israel and the USIC must have obtained game-changing intelligence that eluded every major intelligence agency to date. But if the longstanding assessments of the U.S. intelligence community and independent experts still hold true, then the justification for the strike raises the troubling prospect of a politicization of intelligence on a scale not seen since the lead-up to the 2003 Iraq invasion.
Israel’s Strike and Its Rationale
Just before dawn on June 13, Operation Rising Lion roared to life as more than 200 Israeli warplanes—including F-35I stealth fighters alongside F-16s and F-15s—took to the skies. In a matter of hours, they unleashed over 330 precision-guided bombs on roughly 100 carefully selected targets across Iran. The strike hit some of the most sensitive and heavily fortified sites in the country: the Natanz uranium enrichment facility, underground nuclear bunkers near Isfahan, missile installations near Tabriz and Kermanshah, and key Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ (IRCG) command centers outside Tehran.
Crucially, the success of the air campaign rested not only on airpower but on an intricate web of clandestine intelligence operations. In the weeks leading up to the strike, Mossad agents reportedly infiltrated Iranian territory, deploying smuggled drones, decoys, and explosive devices to quietly sabotage critical air defense systems, missile batteries, and radar installations. These covert actions—guided by highly specific intelligence on Iranian military infrastructure and response protocols—crippled Iran’s ability to detect or repel the incoming assault. As a result, Israeli fighter jets were able to penetrate deep into Iranian airspace with minimal early resistance, striking high-value targets with precision and speed.
The consequences were swift and severe. Estimates of fatal Iranian casualties range from 224 confirmed to over 400, including high-ranking officials—most notably IRGC commanders Hossein Salami and Mohammad Bagheri—and a number of nuclear scientists. Iran has since retaliated with a barrage of missiles and drones targeting Israeli cities—Tel Aviv, Haifa, and Jerusalem—resulting in dozens of civilian and military fatalities and marking the clearest military exchange between the two states on record.
The scale and precision of Operation Rising Lion made one thing immediately clear: Israel had gathered remarkably detailed intelligence on Iran’s nuclear infrastructure and military command. Dozens of deeply buried or dispersed facilities were hit simultaneously, demonstrating not only technical and military capability but intimate knowledge gained through intelligence of the locations of key Iranian individual targets and facilities.
Yet this operational success—and Iran’s response—has in many ways overshadowed the central question of the justification of the operation. On the night of the strike, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared that the mission was essential to “roll back the Iranian threat to Israel’s very survival,” warning that Tehran was only a year—possibly even months—away from acquiring a nuclear weapon. Israeli military officials echoed this urgency, claiming they had obtained evidence of concrete progress in Iran’s efforts to build weapons components, including a uranium metal core and a neutron initiator—technologies central to assembling a functioning nuclear bomb. In short, Israel’s message was unequivocal: this was not a preventive strike based on a theoretical future threat, but a preemptive action against a near-term, tangible nuclear danger.
But this justification stands in sharp contrast to what most intelligence agencies and nuclear experts believed until now. For years, the broad consensus—shared by the U.S. intelligence community, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), and many independent analysts—was that Iran had not yet taken the step toward building a nuclear weapon.
The Intelligence Picture: What We Knew Before the Strike
In the lead-up to Israel’s strike, the prevailing view among international intelligence agencies and nuclear experts was that Iran’s nuclear program, while increasingly advanced, had not crossed the threshold into weaponization. Tehran has consistently insisted that its nuclear activities are peaceful and that it has never sought to build a bomb. While a decade-long investigation by the IAEA concluded that Iran conducted work related to nuclear weapons between the late 1980s and 2003—under the now-defunct “Project Amad”—it found that those activities were halted and that there were “no credible indications” of weapons development after 2009.
The 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), signed by Iran and six world powers, sought to freeze any weapons pathway by placing strict limits on uranium enrichment and allowing intrusive IAEA inspections in exchange for sanctions relief. That agreement was significantly undermined when the United States withdrew in 2018 under President Donald Trump, reimposing sanctions and prompting Iran to gradually escalate its nuclear activities in retaliation. By 2021, Iran had resumed enrichment at its once-restricted Fordo underground facility, reaching 60% purity—a technically significant step but still short of weapons-grade (90%).
Most importantly, even amid these breaches, Western intelligence agencies and the IAEA maintained that Iran had not made the political decision to develop a nuclear weapon. Their assessments emphasized growing concern over reduced transparency and faster enrichment, but stopped short of declaring that a bomb was imminent. Just days before the Israeli strike the IAEA’s board of governors passed a resolution formally declaring Iran in breach of its non-proliferation obligations—a sign of mounting frustration, but not a definitive confirmation of weaponization. While it is clear that Iran’s nuclear trajectory had become more worrisome in the last few years, the intelligence picture did not suggest that a weapon was imminent—nor that any “point of no return” had yet been crossed.
This restrained view was echoed in the most recent Annual Threat Assessment published by the U.S. intelligence community in March 2025. The report concluded unequivocally: “We continue to assess Iran is not building a nuclear weapon and that Khamenei has not reauthorized the nuclear weapons program he suspended in 2003, though pressure has probably built on him to do so.” It added that “in the past year, there has been an erosion of a decades-long taboo on discussing nuclear weapons in public that has emboldened nuclear weapons advocates within Iran’s decisionmaking apparatus.” In a public hearing before the Senate Intelligence Committee on March 25, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard supported that view, declaring that Iran was not actively pursuing a nuclear weapon.
The IAEA’s own reporting, released just a week before the Israeli strike, aligned broadly with this perspective. The 22-page declassified report warned that the agency could no longer verify the exclusively peaceful nature of Iran’s nuclear program, citing a lack of cooperation and unresolved questions about past undeclared activities. However, it did not assert that Iran was actively developing a nuclear weapon or that a threshold had been crossed. While concerns about Iran’s enrichment levels and transparency had undoubtedly intensified, neither the IAEA nor the U.S. intelligence community had concluded that Iran was on the brink of building a bomb. That, until Israel’s operation, remained the shared judgment.
In a surprising turn on 20 June, Tulsi Gabbard eventually backed President Netanyahu’s claims. As reported by the Wall Street Journal, Gabbard joined the White House Situation Room during U.S. airstrikes on Iranian nuclear sites and clarified later on social media that “America has intelligence that Iran is at the point it can produce a nuclear weapon within weeks to months, if they decide to finalize the assembly”. This shift followed public criticism from Trump—who initially dismissed the ODNI’s testimony and the assessments of the intelligence community as “wrong”.
Forceful public assessments like those made by Netanyahu, Trump and Tulsi Gabbard are rarely issued in isolation. In democratic states, such high-stakes declarations—particularly those that pave the way for military action—are almost always grounded, at least in part, in classified intelligence briefings. Operation Rising Lion demonstrated the extraordinary precision and reach of Israeli intelligence, particularly the capabilities of Mossad and the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF), suggesting that Israel may indeed have uncovered new and highly specific information that shifted its threat perception. This critical intelligence would no doubt have been shared with the USIC. But these statements raise the critical question of knowing what intelligence exactly did Israelis collect to support such a stark depiction of the Iranian threat. And more broadly, what role did that intelligence play—not just in shaping internal decision-making, but in constructing the public justification for war.
A Failure to See—or a Case Built to Convince?
If Israel’s and US - revised - assessments are accurate, then the world has just witnessed one of the most significant failures of intelligence assessments by Western agencies in a very long time. It would suggest that Tehran had quietly advanced past a critical threshold, undetected or underestimated by most intelligence agencies in the world, most notably the U.S. intelligence community. Such a lapse would not only expose a blind spot in monitoring Iran—it would also cast doubt on the broader credibility and responsiveness of the institutions charged with tracking global nuclear threats. After having it right in February 2022 about Russia’s intentions to launch a full scale invasion of Ukraine, did the U.S. intelligence community have it all wrong about assessing Iran’s nuclear capabilities?
But if the prevailing consensus was correct—that Iran had not yet made the decision to build a bomb—then the implications are even more disturbing. In that case, the Israeli and US strikes do not point to a failure of intelligence gathering by western intelligence agencies for several years, but to a serious politicization of intelligence. It would suggest that Operation Rising Lion and Operation Midnight Hammer were not launched in response to an imminent nuclear threat, but rather as the culmination of long-planned military objectives—justified before and after the fact by selectively framed intelligence designed to fit a pre-existing decision for war. It is the kind of political maneuver that will no doubt be scrutinized and debated by intelligence historians for many years.
The Cipher Brief is committed to publishing a range of perspectives on national security issues submitted by deeply experienced national security professionals.
Opinions expressed are those of the author and do not represent the views or opinions of The Cipher Brief.
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OPINION -- This week's NATO Summit will focus on the proposal that each member raise its overall defense spending to 5 percent of gross domestic product (GDP). This makes absolute sense because the security investments by America’s European allies, particularly its Western European allies, since the end of the Cold War have been apathetic. In stepping up to properly resource its defense establishments, Europe has to be sure to prioritize more than just planes, tanks, and ships — but also to invest in the military mobility of NATO forces as well.
At the summit, leaders of each NATO member state are expected to commit to eventually spending 3.5 percent of their GDP on traditional defense expenditures and another 1.5 percent on defense-related outlays. This defense-related spending is principally infrastructure protection and cybersecurity — and it is every bit as critical as the euros spent on weapon systems. This underappreciated component of defense spending is essential — moving troops and equipment efficiently over land, sea, and air is fundamental to NATO’s ability to project power and sustain forces to fight and win wars — and nothing moves if the trains do not run and the power does not work.
The Alliance’s authoritarian adversaries — particularly Russia and China — know that compromising critical infrastructure through cyber and physical attacks would impede the ability of the United States and its NATO allies to deploy, supply, and sustain military forces. This is why Chinese cyber operators, dubbed “Volt Typhoon,” have prepositioned destructive capabilities in energy, transportation, and communications systems to degrade America’s ability to respond to its aggression against Taiwan. This is why Moscow targeted satellite communication systems to degrade Kyiv’s command and control capabilities as Russian forces crossed Ukraine’s border.
In the United States, the Pentagon relies on commercially owned transportation networks to move soldiers, supplies, and military equipment. Private and municipally owned electricity, water, and telecommunications utilities supply American military bases. Across Europe, it is the same. NATO forces rely on critical infrastructure owned and operated by local governments and companies. Military readiness depends on asset owners spending resources to ensure reliable, secure infrastructure wherever NATO forces operate.
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The difference between the United States and NATO is that while the Pentagon has identified the 18 commercially owned strategic seaports, the 70 civilian-owned airfields, and 40,000 miles of commercially owned rail lines it will need to move forces, there is less recognition and agreement within Europe about which transportation networks are most strategically significant. The Supreme Allied Commander Europe’s critical infrastructure priorities are actually straightforward: NATO must be assured that its ability to flow U.S., UK, and French forces into and through Europe is uninterrupted.
In the face of Russian and Chinese cyber threats, countries across Europe are now starting to rack and stack their cyber resilience investments based on their own assessments of what are the most systemically important entities — those critical infrastructures upon which their nation’s public health, economic prosperity, and national security rely. However, NATO needs its members to prioritize and invest 1.5 percent of GDP in the cyber and physical security of the assets NATO specifically needs — the rail lines that will move forces, the power generation facilities that serve its military bases, and the communications networks that ensure secure command and control. These two lists of infrastructures – individual member states and NATOs - are sometimes not the same.
Once properly prioritized, the 1.5 percent of GDP invested in critical infrastructures will enhance the ability of governments to provide rapid, actionable information about cyber threats so that operators can thwart attacks. But it is not just better information sharing and response actions. NATO members will also need to provide state funds to small and medium size owners and operators of infrastructure who cannot otherwise make needed, preventative cybersecurity upgrades. And NATO member states will have to identify devices — including routers, batteries, and optical displays — made by adversaries like China that could cause infrastructure disruptions, ripping them out of sensitive systems if uninterrupted operation cannot be guaranteed and banning their use moving forward.
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In parallel, the Alliance needs to continue prioritizing critical infrastructure disruption scenarios in tabletop exercises, field training exercises, and wargames so that NATO can identify investments that mitigate the impact of cyber and physical attacks on critical infrastructure. When it is operational, NATO’s forthcoming Integrated Cyber Defense Center can play a key role in both information sharing, strategic planning and asset prioritization.
For far too long, many NATO allies have ignored Russia’s rapaciousness, China’s authoritarianism, Iran’s terrorism, and North Korea’s bellicosity. They failed to invest in the alliance — or even their own defense — and warnings by successive Republican and Democratic presidents went unheeded. Fortunately, President Trump’s vocal complaints about lackluster European defense spending and Vladimir Putin’s violent military aggression against Ukraine have finally convinced NATO members to step up to the plate.
As member states undertake these significant plus ups in their security budgets, they must remember that airfields, ports, and railways across Europe are strategic military assets. So are pipelines, liquid natural gas terminals, and the power grid. This week’s Summit should serve as a reminder to NATO countries that if they do not invest in the physical and cyber security of these critical infrastructures, their forces might look ready, but only on paper.
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Ukraine's Defense Export Pivot Is A Game-Changer
EXPERT PERSPECTIVE/OPINION -- Ukraine may have just fundamentally shifted the global defense landscape. On June 21st, Ukraine unleashed its "Build with Ukraine" program, an initiative poised to redefine security for both the United States and European defense technology ecosystems. No longer merely a recipient of aid, Ukraine is transforming into a formidable contributor to global security, commencing arms exports this summer.
This strategic imperative will establish production lines for potent Ukrainian-developed weapons—drones, missiles, and artillery—directly within allied nations, starting with Europe, but with a clear potential for expansion to other partners, including the United States. This strategic move not only bolsters Ukraine's defenses but also empowers partners to forge their own security through in-country manufacturing of cutting-edge military hardware.
For the European Ecosystem, the implications are profound. The "Build with Ukraine" program offers a significant pathway to fortify and integrate the continent's defense industrial base.
Many European nations have historically relied heavily on United States defense imports or struggled with fragmented domestic production capabilities. This Ukrainian initiative provides a compelling alternative: direct access to battle-tested, innovative defense technologies that have proven their efficacy in modern conflict. By establishing production lines on European soil, allied countries can achieve several critical objectives.
First, it significantly enhances defense self-sufficiency and resilience. Producing weapons systems like drones, missiles, and artillery domestically means reducing reliance on external supply chains, which can be vulnerable to geopolitical disruption. This aligns perfectly with the growing European push for strategic autonomy and more robust common security and defense capabilities. European countries can tailor production to their specific needs, ensuring a more consistent and responsive supply of critical armament.
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Second, the program fosters deeper industrial collaboration and integration within Europe. Participating countries will not only be producing Ukrainian designs but will inevitably engage in technology transfer, joint research and development, and will share other expertise, such as manufacturing, by virtue of closer relationships. This could lead to the emergence of new defense industrial clusters, driving innovation and creating highly-skilled jobs across the continent. Such integration would also streamline logistics, maintenance, and training, contributing to greater interoperability among European militaries.
Third, it presents a unique opportunity to fast-track technological advancement. Ukrainian defense innovations, forged in active conflict, often possess cutting-edge features that can be highly valuable. By integrating Ukrainian designs into their own production, European industries can absorb new methodologies, improve domestic manufacturing, and potentially develop incrementally more advanced iterations. This knowledge transfer will inevitably spill into other sectors, boosting overall technological competitiveness.
Finally, we should not ignore the strong economic dimension. President Zelenskyy's emphasis on a $43 billion defense industry budget for Ukraine in 2025, coupled with his hope for partner countries to allocate 0.25% of their GDP to support Ukraine's defense industry and domestic production, underscores the significant economic incentives. For European economies, participation could translate into substantial investments in manufacturing infrastructure, job creation, and export opportunities for components and services, improving economic growth and stability.
While the immediate focus of the "Build with Ukraine" program is Europe, the phrase from Zelenskyy’s announcement, "and possibly beyond," strongly suggests potential avenues for collaboration with the U.S. and the implications are multifaceted.
Partnering with the U.S. would offer opportunities for new defense cooperation and technology sharing. The U.S. has provided significant military aid to Ukraine and this program could evolve into joint ventures where American defense companies partner with Ukrainian counterparts to produce advanced systems. Such partnerships could leverage Ukrainian innovation and battlefield experience with American industrial scale and technological depth, leading to hybrid systems or enhanced capabilities beneficial to both sides.
It could also diversify the global arms market and strengthen supply chains. An independent Ukrainian arms export capability, especially one that enables production in allied nations, reduces over-reliance on a few dominant defense producers. This diversification will enhance global security by making critical defense technologies more widely available among allies, thereby bolstering collective deterrence and defense postures. For the U.S., this means allies are better equipped, potentially reducing the burden on American military resources in future contingencies.
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The program also highlights Ukraine's evolving strategic role. Kyiv's shift from aid recipient to a significant defense technology provider reshapes its geopolitical standing. For the U.S., this means a stronger, more self-reliant partner in Eastern Europe, capable of contributing actively to regional and global security. This elevated status may lead to deeper strategic alliances and more robust coordinated efforts on numerous future security challenges.
There are obvious lessons for U.S. defense innovation here. Ukraine's rapid development and deployment of effective, often unconventional, defense technologies in a high-intensity conflict offers tremendous insights into agile development, rapid prototyping, and adapting commercial technologies for military use. The U.S.’ defense industrial base, while powerful, has faced criticism surrounding the pace of innovation and acquisition. Engaging with the "Build with Ukraine" program could provide a direct conduit for incorporating "lessons from the battlefield" into U.S. defense research and development, as well as acquisition strategies, fostering greater agility and responsiveness.
While the U.S. defense industry is vast, partnerships with Ukraine's program could open new market opportunities and stimulate much-needed competition. American defense firms might find avenues for co-production, technology licensing, or even acquiring stakes in Ukrainian defense companies. Increased competition, spurred by access to new, battle-proven technologies, may also drive innovation and efficiency within the U.S. domestic defense sector.
Ukraine's "Build with Ukraine" program is more than just an arms export initiative; it is a strategic repositioning that will reshape defense industrial cooperation and technology transfer.
For Europe, it promises enhanced self-sufficiency, deeper integration, and technological uplift. For the United States, it opens doors to new partnerships, diversified supply chains, valuable insights into agile defense innovation, and a stronger, more capable ally.
This program marks a significant step towards a more interconnected and resilient Western defense ecosystem, where innovation is shared, production is localized, and collective security is paramount. The full implications will unfold over time, but the foundation for a transformative new era in global defense collaboration is clearly being assembled.
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Experts Assess Iran Strikes, Response and What Comes Next
General David Petraeus served more than 37 years in the U.S. military with six consecutive commands, five of which were combat, including command of the Multi-National Force-Iraq during the Surge, U.S. Central Command, and Coalition and U.S. Forces in Afghanistan. He is a partner in the KKR global investment firm and chairs the firm’s global institute.
Norman Roule is a geopolitical and energy consultant who served for 34 years in the Central Intelligence Agency, managing numerous programs relating to Iran and the Middle East. As NIM-I at ODNI, he was responsible for all aspects of national intelligence policy related to Iran, including IC engagement with senior policymakers in the National Security Council and the Department of State.
Ralph Goff is a 35-year veteran of the CIA where he was a 6-time Chief of Station with extensive service in Europe, the Middle East, and Central and South Asia including several war zones. He served as Chief of Operations for Europe and Eurasia. Goff also served as Chief of CIA's National Resources Division, working extensively with "C Suite" level US private sector executives in the financial, banking, and security sectors. Goff is reportedly being considered as one of the candidates for deputy director of the CIA.
Glenn Corn is a former Senior Executive in the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) who worked for 34 years in the U.S. Intelligence, Defense, and Foreign Affairs communities. He spent over 17 years serving overseas and served as the U.S. President’s Senior Representative on Intelligence and Security issues. He is an Adjunct Professor at the Institute of World Politics.
Ambassador Joseph DeTrani served as the U.S. Representative to the Korea Energy Development Organization (KEDO), as well as former CIA director of East Asia Operations. He also served as Associate Director of National Intelligence and Mission Manager for North Korea, was the Special Envoy for the Six-Party Talks with North Korea, and served as the Director of the National Counter Proliferation Center, ODNI. He currently serves on the Board of Managers at Sandia National Laboratories.
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How Resilient is the Energy Market in Midst of Middle East Crisis?
EXCLUSIVE EXPERT PERSPECTIVE -- One would have thought that the outbreak of a major war between Iran and Israel with daily missile salvos, would have immediately led to an energy crisis, but trauma in the market that once would have seemed extraordinary, barely makes the headlines today. So, what does this tell us about how today’s energy markets are responding to the potential of violence in a chokepoint where 20 million barrels of crude oil and oil products move through the Strait of Hormuz each day?
“Countries and traders have learned that tectonic developments that don’t impact supply or demand products often produce only short-term fluctuations in the market,” says energy expert Norm Roule, who, since retiring from ODNI as the National Intelligence Manager for Iran, has been routinely traveling the region meeting with senior leaders.
“The chronic turbulence in Europe and the Middle East, particularly since the 2019 attack on Abqaiq, appears to have baked geopolitical risk resilience into the market. Energy markets are well supplied. U.S. production remains significant, despite predictions of modest declines in 2026.
In a Cipher Brief Subscriber+ exclusive interview, we talked with Roule about demand, the overall global market and the impact of Chinese stockpiles.
Norman Roule is a geopolitical and energy consultant who served for 34 years in the Central Intelligence Agency, managing numerous programs relating to Iran and the Middle East. As NIM-I at ODNI, he was responsible for all aspects of national intelligence policy related to Iran, including IC engagement with senior policymakers in the National Security Council and the Department of State.
The Cipher Brief: The President has given Iran two weeks to accept a diplomatic solution to demands that it give up its ambitions to develop a nuclear weapon, which the U.S. and Israel insist is the focus of the country’s nuclear program. What energy-related developments do you expect to be occurring behind the scenes over the next two weeks?
Roule: The U.S. is almost certainly working with the Saudis and Emiratis, who will use their diplomatic channels with Iran to discourage escalation, to manage OPEC, and to prepare their oil sectors for increased production and export through alternative channels to replace any oil lost due to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz (SoH). I would also expect that the U.S. is working with these countries to provide support for their air defenses. Washington will be busy when it comes to working with other regional partners to prepare the region for what could be a sharp conflict.
The two-week delay in a U.S. attack will provide welcome time for planning with key economic partners to discuss potential releases from their strategic oil stockpiles. On this last point, our strategic needs differ significantly from those of decades past, given our robust domestic production. Nonetheless, this crisis reinforces the need to avoid drawdowns of our strategic oil stockpile for political reasons alone, as some have claimed was done in the recent past.
The Cipher Brief: What is the near-term outlook for oil prices then, and how do you expect higher oil prices to impact the global economy?
Roule: As long as the threat of a U.S. attack on Iran remains a possibility, prices are likely to remain in the upper 70s, with possible further spikes driven by dramatic moments in the conflict. Depending on the intensity of the conflict, prices could reach $120 or $140. If the conflict is brief, the impact is likely to be minimal. But longer and higher oil prices bring a mix of issues. Oil-producing countries, including the United States, will benefit from higher oil revenues, while developing countries and those with limited energy import reserves are likely to suffer. Higher oil prices will contribute to higher inflation, constraining growth and will sharpen the call for interest rate cuts. President Trump has already complained that this crisis has pushed up oil prices and complicated his efforts to bring down inflation.
The Cipher Brief: Iran has threatened to close the Strait of Hormuz multiple times over the past few years, knowing that is a powerful way to gain the attention of the world’s diplomats and media. As we see this threat resurface, which countries are most likely to be affected if Tehran makes good on the threat?
Roule: The oil from the SoH reaches global consumers, but the vast majority goes to Asian markets. China, India, South Korea, Pakistan, and Japan are the primary purchasers.
The U.S. imports little crude oil and condensate from the SoH. In 2024, our imports from the region reached around 500,000 b/d, or only around seven percent of our total crude and condensate imports. So, a decision by Iran to shut the SoH would not directly hurt the U.S., and they know it.
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The Cipher Brief: What are the alternatives to move oil outside of the region if the Strait of Hormuz is closed?
Roule: Up front, we need to remind ourselves that we are talking about replacing an artery that moves around fifteen per cent of global crude oil supply and 20% of liquefied natural gas. That speaks of the importance to the global economy, but it is just as important to think about this in terms of volume and frequency of the quantity of energy shipped, the number of distribution points involved, and the shipping architecture needed to move the energy. In terms of national source, I believe over a third of the oil that transits the SoH is produced by the Saudis.
We shouldn’t ignore the impact closure of the SoH would have on the economies of the Gulf countries which import a tremendous amount of food and other commodities that sustain their populations and economies. The region’s ports are critical to region. Jebel Ali Port, for example, is the tenth largest container port in the world.
However, sticking to oil and other energy exports, there are additional routes we could use, but they cannot replace the SoH in terms of quantity. However, the use of these options could provide some relief, both in terms of exports and costs. Ships using these outlets would save on delivery costs and avoid the high insurance premiums associated with war zones. Of course, Iran could choose to attack these routes in the event of a conflict using missiles, drones, or even terror groups. Gulf Arab states have worked hard with the U.S. and other partners to build domestic defenses against such threats as well as to establish system redundancies to restore operations in the case of a successful attack.
The most important would be the Saudi East-West Pipeline. This 1,200-kilometer pipeline connects Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province oil fields and facilities at Abqaiq to an export terminal in Yanbu on the Red Sea. The pipeline has a capacity of around five million barrels per day. I believe it carries only a tenth of that today. In 2019, Riyadh converted some of the system's natural gas lines to handle crude oil, which allowed the route to handle around seven million barrels. So, if necessary, we should feel confident the Saudis will be creative with their domestic pipeline architecture to maximize exports. Using this route would add distance to those destined for Asia and would require shipments to pass through Yemen, thus exposing them to Houthi attacks.
We also have the Emirati outlet in Fujairah. This line fluctuates between 1.5 and 1.8 million barrels per day, to a point outside the SoH that is home to the world’s largest underground oil storage facility. Abu Dhabi uses a 400-kilometer pipeline to ship Murjan crude from the Habshan oil fields. This line can carry about 500,000 b/d of crude. We are already seeing increased interest by Asian buyers in contracts for loads from this source, as well as Omani crude, which also loads outside the SoH.
Last, Iran would try to use Jask Port. Opened in 2021 on the Gulf of Oman, the port could allow Iran to export around 300,000 b/d from a pipeline that begins at Goreh in the north. However, the output here is modest to the global market. Iran’s priority at this point certainly isn’t maintaining export revenue or market share. I don’t see the U.S. putting an oil blockade, but if that ever happened, it wouldn’t be difficult to halt exports from this outlet.
The Cipher Brief: How would Iran try to close the SoH, and how difficult would it be for U.S. forces to respond?
Roule: My sense is that none of the actors involved in the current conflict, including Iran, want to see the war expand into the Persian Gulf. Israel’s focus will be on Iranian energy targets. Tehran may believe it has no choice but to attack U.S. bases in the wake of a U.S. strike on Fordow, or it could believe actions in the Gulf would pressure the U.S. and Europe to end the conflict. This strategy works only if Tehran believes its targets will respond by pressuring Israel to end hostilities.
The problem for Iran is that whereas the threat of action against the Gulf has diplomatic value, the reality is Tehran can do little damage to Israel in these waters. Closure of the Gulf will hurt Tehran as much as its adversaries. Iran depends on the waterway not only to export its own oil, but for a significant amount of its food imports. Shutting the Strait would damage the world economy in the short term. For Tehran, the diplomatic cost would be severe. It would put an end to the détente that has shaped Iran’s relations with the Gulf Cooperation Council. The economic damage to emerging economies of an oil price spike would be tough to bear, costing Tehran’s diplomatic support at the United Nations. Finally, the action could even contribute to the demise of the regime as countries unite to open the waterway and turn on Iran’s military at a time when Israeli’s actions seem to undermine the regime’s hold on power in Tehran and other cities.
Nonetheless, Tehran has a number of disruption options. At the low end, the actions are meant to message Iran’s potential power to support its threat messaging. For example, We’ve already seen reports of GPS jamming interference, which makes it difficult for ships to navigate the crowded waters and could lead some to cross into Iranian-claimed territory inadvertently. Cyber-attacks against ships and regional energy entities are a potential option for Tehran. Gulf Arab states have worked hard to defend against Iranian cyber attacks but the pool of potential economic and human cyber targets is vast.
Next on the escalation ladder, we have the potential for harassment by drones, military guards in speed boats, calls for sanitary inspections, claims of smuggling, or intrusions into national waters. U.S. and partner forces could assist by accompanying vessels. Gulf countries and their commercial partners have reduced traffic to the Gulf to minimize exposure to Iranian attacks.
As your readers will agree, the extreme case would be if Iran chose to mine the SoH or use its submarines or use coastal or ship-borne missiles against tankers or oil platforms. The U.S. would respond quickly of course, drawing upon existing regional naval and air units as well as those brought by our carrier task forces. Washington would also likely seek partners.
The United Kingdom is already on site, and burden sharing would extend to Gulf naval partners as well as India. New Delhi has strong strategic interests in keeping the waterway open, and there is a precedent here. In 2019, India escorted its oil tankers in the Strait of Hormuz during a period of heightened tensions with Iran. If Iran did undertake mining the Gulf or threatening traffic with coastal missile or small naval operations, restoring shipping operations would likely require a several-week military campaign.
My sense is that in the near term, Iran’s rhetoric on a potential Gulf threat will continues, but all parties will do what they can to prevent incidents in the Gulf region that could escalate into open conflict. The U.S., British, and other partners in the region have prepared for years for such this threat and our regional military leadership is traditionally among the best our nation has to offer. Further, recent experiences against the Houthis have only sharpened preparedness of a force that has spent years dealing with Iranian harassment of vessels. If conflict in the Gulf does erupt, we shouldn’t doubt that Iran will disrupt shipping, but we should be well-equipped to deal Iran a devastating response to Iran’s military capabilities throughout the Gulf.
The Cipher Brief: Given the overproduction in OPEC+, wouldn’t the group be able to replace oil lost through a closure of the SOH?
Roule: The challenge is that whereas much of OPEC’s spare capacity could be brought on within a few weeks, the bulk would be locked in the Persian Gulf. It probably would be better to think about the market rebalancing through a combination of increased OPEC production, shifted distribution, and strategic reserve releases designed to deal with what the world would hope would be a relatively short conflict.
The Cipher Brief: What about potential strategic surprises from China?
Roule: Perhaps the only surprise about China in this crisis is that some expected it to behave differently from the way it has in the past. Iran is a key component of China’s Belt and Road Initiative, the BRICs, and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization. However, China has avoided involvement in regional security issues, leaving that to the United States and its partners. China also remains the primary buyer of Iranian oil at deeply discounted rates. These purchases are significant to its smaller refineries, which would be unwilling to pay the full price demanded by any Emirati or Saudi replacement oil. China’s diplomacy has not played a role in shaping the global response to this developing crisis and once again underscored the limits of its influence in the region. Beijing opposed the recent International Atomic Energy Agency censure of Iran, condemned Israel’s attacks, and held a few ministerial meetings. China likely evacuated some of its citizens from Iran. It seems highly unlikely that Beijing would take any steps to involve itself militarily.
Beijing likely believes that it can stand out of this conflict and still retain its influence with Iran, its role as Iran’s chief energy customer, a key place in Iran’s economy (and nuclear industry), while letting the U.S. pay the diplomatic and financial costs of maintaining regional security. The conflict may even bring benefits to China. Beijing’s military has been able to watch Israel operate U.S. weaponry in action and the U.S. naval and air operations in the region have provided similar intelligence gathering opportunities. Beijing will likely use these lessons as it plans to deal with U.S. defense of Taiwan.
Even in an extreme scenario where the Islamic Republic could fall and be replaced by a pro-U.S. government, China has little incentive to intervene. Riyadh and Abu Dhabi are pro-U.S. and yet they remain essential and profitable partners for Beijing. There is no reason to think a pro-U.S. Tehran would be any different.
The Cipher Brief: What potential wild cards do you see?
Roule: Every crisis produces secondary and tertiary impacts. The natural gas story seems the most likely to cause such consequences here. Qatar produces approximately 20 percent of the world's LNG, and all of its product must transit through the Strait of Hormuz (SoH). Violence in the Gulf will threaten this important energy source for many countries.
It was recently reported that Israel conducted a drone strike against a refinery in the 2-200-mile South Pars Gas Field shared by Qatar and Iran. The attack had no impact on Qatari operations or even any significant impact on Iranian operations. Yet it made headlines. But it shows that any military operations touching that that field will touch the markets immediately. Closer to the region, Iranian attacks on Israel’s gas industry will impact Egypt and Jordan. Israel exported around ninety percent of the production of its Chevron-operated Leviathan gas field – its largest – to these two countries in 2024. These are critical imports: Egypt depends on Israel for 15 to 20 percent of it natural gas. Israel closed exports when its war with Iran began. The halt caused Egypt to almost immediate halt fertilizer production. After the decline in Iranian missile attacks and negotiations with Egyptian officials, Israel just agreed to restore gas to Cairo.
Updated on June 21 adding additional details.
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The Next War Won’t Target Cities, It Will Target Choke Points.
OPINION — In the age of strategic disruption, critical infrastructure is both the terrain and the target. The West’s optimization of systems for efficiency and scale has inadvertently created a landscape of chokepoints. These points of failure are deeply embedded in our cloud ecosystems, energy corridors, undersea cables, and satellite constellations. They are invisible until they fail, but when they do, the consequences are significant.
From Ukraine’s reliance on Starlink to the Colonial Pipeline ransomware attack and the use of the ubiquitous SolarWinds as an ingress point for intelligence services, we are witnessing a new form of conflict, one that prizes disruption over destruction.
Strategic Infrastructure as a Conflict Domain
Russia’s war on Ukraine has exposed more than battlefield vulnerabilities. With terrestrial networks degraded, Ukraine has leaned heavily on Starlink for everything from military coordination to civilian communications. But Starlink is not a national or multilateral infrastructure. It’s privately owned and largely unaccountable. This effectively places a geopolitical chokepoint in the hands of a single executive.
That same private provider now underpins crew and cargo transport for the International Space Station. Following the retirement of the U.S. Space Shuttle and the eventual possible dissolution of joint operations with Roscosmos, the continuity of one of the world’s most symbolically unifying scientific efforts will depend entirely on a single company’s launch manifest.
And the vulnerabilities don’t stop in orbit.
China’s Volt Typhoon advanced persistent threat (APT) has compromised critical infrastructure across the West’s energy, transportation, communications, and water sectors, positioning itself to disrupt these services. Meanwhile, Salt Typhoon, though primarily focused on espionage, has targeted telecommunications in ways that could just as readily be weaponized for disruption.
The 2021 Colonial Pipeline attack paralyzed fuel distribution across the Eastern Seaboard. The 2022 Amazon Web Services outage rippled across the U.S. economy, disrupting transit, banking, and government operations. In the 2020 SolarWinds hack, a single point of failure allowed foreign intelligence agencies into countless critical government and private sector providers to collect intelligence. That access could have just as easily been used to disrupt or degrade service at any time. Each of these failures was enabled not by enemy bombs, but by our own centralization.
These are not one-off incidents; they are previews.
From Kinetic Threats to Systemic Shocks
Western military doctrine still leans heavily on deterrence theory, emphasizing kinetic parity and power projection. But adversaries, state and non-state alike, have embraced disruption: cheap, deniable, and disproportionately effective.
Disruption doesn’t just break infrastructure. It breaks continuity and system trust. A fiber cut can cascade through supply chains. A GPS spoofing attack can ground aircraft or misguide autonomous systems. A corrupted DNS entry can unplug and undermine public trust more effectively than propaganda.
China, Russia, Iran, and cybercriminal cartels understand this well. They aren’t planning to storm Washington or London. They’re aiming to quietly unplug them.
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The West Needs a Doctrine of Resilience
While we have national defense strategies, cyber strategies, and even climate resilience frameworks, we lack a coherent doctrine for infrastructure survivability in the face of hybrid warfare. This is the gap.
We need a strategic shift: one that places redundancy, diversification, and graceful degradation at the heart of national security planning.
Here’s where we start:
● Diversify Critical Dependencies: No nation should rely on a single internet connection, launch provider, cloud vendor, or data exchange. Resilience begins with optionality.
● Map and Understand Chokepoints: Governments and corporations must identify and test which cables, corridors, and cloud dependencies could paralyze operations if taken offline for 24 hours.
● Enforce Resilient-by-Design Architecture: Estonia’s “digital twin” model offers a blueprint for mirroring state functions in secure offshore environments. Redundancy is not waste, it’s defense.
● Embed Graceful Degradation: Systems must be designed to degrade gracefully under duress. Total failure should never be the first mode of collapse.
● Integrate Resilience into Alliances: NATO and EU collective defense cannot stop at tanks and treaties. Infrastructure interdependence demands shared risk maps, failover protocols, and decentralized defense capabilities.
Friction Is the New Firepower
Strategic deterrence in the 21st century is not just about overwhelming force, it’s about resilience. Survivable systems don’t break cleanly. They resist, reroute, absorb shock, and continue functioning under strain. That’s friction. And friction, in this context, is power.
We are not preparing for the next war. We are living in its early chapters. Cyberattacks, infrastructure sabotage, and platform capture are no longer theoretical, they are operational tools being used in real time.
If we want to maintain continuity, legitimacy, and deterrence in the years ahead, we must stop treating infrastructure as a given and start defending it like a frontline.
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Opinions expressed are those of the author and do not represent the views or opinions of The Cipher Brief.
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The Rampant Leadership Corruption Plaguing China and Russia
OPINION — In March 2025 the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) published an unclassified report on “Wealth and Corrupt Activities of the Leadership of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).” It was an insightful analysis of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s anti-corruption campaign. It was also a primer on the excessive wealth of Mr. Xi and other former and current senior officials. Indeed, it was an expose on the hypocrisy of the leaders of the CCP.
The same can be said for the Russian Federation. Former Russian anti-corruption opposition leader Alexei Navalny, who died in February 2024 in a Russian penal institution, documented the excessive wealth of Russian President Vladimir Putin and a few of his close associates – Sergei Shoigu, Secretary of the Security Council of the Russian Federation and Dmitry Medvedev, Deputy Chairman of the Security Council.
China and Russia have active anti-corruption organizations that in fact do remove some senior and many low-level officials convicted of corruption. China’s Central Commission for Discipline Inspections found over 4.7 million officials guilty of corruption. The irony, however, is that little is said about the wealth of Mr. Xi or former Prime Minister, Wen Jiabao. Journalistic research going back to 2012 found that the family of Mr. Wen and the then-incoming president, Mr. Xi, had both amassed significant wealth.
As for Russia, according to Mr. Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Foundation, Mr. Putin’s Party is “full of crooks and thieves.” Mr. Navalny’s 2021 You Tube film, which amassed over 100 million views in its first week, showed Mr. Putin’s extravagant palace that cost the state $1 to $1.4 billion. And Mr. Shoigu “practically openly created a corrupt network of charitable foundations through which they collected bribes from oligarchs and built palaces and vacation homes.” And then-Prime Minister Medvedev “profited from a complex business network which collected bribes by using offshore schemes and charity foundations.”
Mr. Wen’s family – mother, wife, son and siblings – controlled assets of at least $2.7 billion in 2012. Mr. Xi’s siblings, nieces and nephews reportedly held assets worth over $1 billion in business investment and real estate. And as of 2024, Mr. Xi’s family retains millions in business interests and financial institutions. It is possible – and likely – that these holdings are managed indirectly on Mr. Xi’s behalf.
According to the ODNI report: “Nearly every senior Chinese party official has moved part of their ill-gotten gains overseas for safe keeping, mostly to English-speaking countries, like America, Canada, and Australia, that enjoy the rule of law. Or to tax havens like the British Virgin Islands, Panama, or the Cayman Islands. The Panama Papers in 2016 exposed offshore companies linked to relatives of Politburo members, like Mr. Xi’s brother-in-law and Mr. Wen’s son. Hard numbers are hard to come by, but it’s known that China is hemorrhaging trillions of dollars as officials and others seek safe havens to stash their cash.” The same Panama Papers traced $2 billion to Mr. Putin, with estimates of over $200 billion available to Mr. Putin, from oligarchs and other sources, to dole out to his cronies.
A Rand June 2024 report said: “corruption in Russia is not a problem that can be eradicated by a change of policy or personnel, it is a feature of the system itself.”
Corruption is like a cancer that slowly eats away at leadership credibility. In 1858, reportedly during the Lincoln-Douglas debates, Abraham Lincoln said: “You can fool all the people some of the time and some of the people all the time, but you cannot fool all the people all the time.” Eventually, the people will demand transparency and openness from their governments and demand unwavering integrity from their leaders.
The Wall Street Journal June 7th Peggy Noonan column – Republican Sleaze, Democratic Slump -- mentioned: “Charges of influence peddling, access peddling --$TRUMP coins, real-estate deals in foreign counties, cash for dinners with the president, a pardon process involving big fees for access to those in the president’s orbit….” If this is the perception of some people, then these concerns must be addressed.
The U.S. is the “shining house on the hill.” All nations look to the U.S. for hope and freedom from tyranny, hunger, wars, injustice; where the rule of law governs and all people have the unalienable right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Indeed, the U.S. is the model for other countries, especially China and Russia, where corruption is rampant and the leaders are enriching themselves.
This column by Cipher Brief Expert Ambassador Joseph DeTrani was first published in The Washington Times
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Amid Crisis, A Lesser-Told Story of US-Iran Similarities Holds Some Hope
OPINION — As experts studiously debate what the latest Israel-Iran fighting will lead to, including a possible Iranian collapse, one enduring but less understood reality goes mostly untreated: Iranians and Americans are more alike than they are different, and that likeness holds hope for a friendlier future. A new Iranian revolution would bring significant uncertainty and risk. But it would also bring to the fore Iranian ideals that, in many ways, are also very American.
A Palpable Likeness
A few years ago, while enjoying a relaxed dinner with a senior Iraqi officer, he proceeded to lecture me and a few other Americans on why he thought that America and Iran were destined to come together. He delivered a monologue about the similarities between the American and Iranian people, which I initially doubted but subsequently vetted with numerous Iran experts who largely agreed. His premise, which I now believe to be mostly accurate, boiled down to three commonalities between Americans and Iranians: we are imbued with a revolutionary spirit and national pride, we are unyielding entrepreneurs, and we are bureaucratic in our official decisionmaking, sometimes to a fault.
An AI-generated comparison of Iranian and American government structures, albeit simplistic, highlights the regimented bureaucracy that, at best, characterizes both countries’ careful and considerate decisionmaking and, at worst, leads to sloth. (Author-prompted AI-generated graphic)
Commonalities Could Become Bridges
These similarities are more than just quaint observations; they are core characteristics that inspire a nervous hope that our two countries will come together. A primary Israeli objective is regime change, the fallout of which could be destructive and violent. If regime change were in the offing, Washington would do well to understand and anticipate how the US-Iranian similarities could quickly become affinities influencing any path forward. In this environment, Iranian outreach, diaspora pressure, and US ally assistance would emerge as critical vectors for US action.
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What Would It Take to End the Regime in Iran?
CIPHER BRIEF REPORTING – As U.S. President Donald Trump demands Iran’s “unconditional surrender” and hints that Iran’s Supreme Leader could also be targeted amid Israel’s Operation Rising Lion, experts are reconsidering the complicated equation of regime change.
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Wednesday, rejected President Trump’s demand, saying, “Intelligent people who know Iran, the Iranian nation, and its history will never speak to this nation in threatening language because the Iranian nation will not surrender” and warned that Tehran would retaliate against U.S. involvement in Israel’s ongoing military operation.
Israel’s bombing campaign has sharply escalated an internal shadow conflict that has simmered for decades. While Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar has insisted that Israel’s official goal is not regime change in Tehran, at least not yet, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu seems to be encouraging internal uprising, hinting at the broader strategic stakes of the conflict.
“The time has come for the Iranian people to unite around its flag and its historic legacy by standing up for your freedom from the evil and oppressive regime,” he said over the weekend.
Inside Iran, the reaction is divisive and complex as evident at the defiant public rallies but history shows that waves of dissent in Iran have both surged and faded, often crushed by brutal crackdowns.
“There would need to be a perfect storm for the Islamic Republic to be toppled,” Reza Khanzadeh, Senior Foreign Policy Advisor to the U.S.-Iran Chamber of Commerce, tells The Cipher Brief saying that it is his personal view that it would require “a combination of severe weakening across all power structures within the regime, at least a 50 percent level of defection from military members of the IRGC and Basij, a national mass uprising in the hundreds of thousands – if not millions – that is perpetually self-sustaining with protesters willing to die for change.” Also critical, he says, is the need for a strong opposition leader to guide the movement.
A History of Crushed Revolts
Over the last two decades, anti-government protests including the Green Movement of 2009 - which sent thousands of Iranians into the streets to protest the results of the presidential election - and widespread demonstrations in late 2017 and 2019 in response to a significant spike in fuel prices, raised the specter of vulnerability for the regime. The uprisings were met with violent suppression and limited international support. Experts point to the regime’s unbroken chain of command and loyal security forces as key reasons.
“The main reason for this failure is that the means of repression have not cracked in Iran. They have stayed steadfastly supportive of the regime,” Karl Kaltenthaler, Professor of Political Science at the University of Akron, tells The Cipher Brief. “The Shah fell because his forces for controlling the populace started to splinter. That is not happening with the clerical regime,” said Kaltenthaler, who warns about the complicated nature of regime change. “There is no question that the regime is unpopular with many, if not most, of its citizens. But that is not enough to topple the regime.”
He attributes much of this repressive strength to the “very powerful and large security apparatus in place in Iran built around the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) that is very intent on preserving the regime.”
So, what, if anything, do analysts believe could finally crack the regime’s grip?
“Iran’s regime, a steel vault of clerical control, requires choking its oil revenue and banking access through merciless sanctions to ignite internal collapse. Since 1979, it’s dodged crises with cunning, so only an economic stranglehold and a youth-fueled revolt too fierce to quell can break its grip,” says John Thomas, Managing Director of international public affairs firm Nestpoint Associates. “Reform is a fantasy while the IRGC stands firm; overthrow demands splitting their ranks or crippling their command.”“Iran’s regime, a steel vault of clerical control, requires choking its oil revenue and banking access through merciless sanctions to ignite internal collapse. Since 1979, it’s dodged crises with cunning, so only an economic stranglehold and a youth-fueled revolt too fierce to quell can break its grip,” said Thomas. “Reform is a fantasy while the IRGC stands firm; overthrow demands splitting their ranks or crippling their command.”
Others point to the decisive role public messaging needs to play. “When the revolutionaries took over in 1979, one of their first major moves was to seize the state broadcasting station. They were able to declare the revolution a success and call people into the streets,” Janatan Sayeh, a research analyst at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, tells The Cipher Brief. “Now, in contrast, we’ve just seen Israel bomb Iranian broadcasting infrastructure. A more coordinated effort would’ve been to message directly to Iranians. Israel has the capability—just like it’s done in Gaza and Lebanon—to deliver targeted messaging, even to specific neighborhoods.”
From his purview, the Israelis could’ve said, “We support your fight for freedom. We’ll provide air support if you plan to mobilize against a specific civic institution—not necessarily a military one. We’ll pause airstrikes from this hour to that hour.” That would’ve made more sense.”
In what appeared to be a soft-power pivot, the U.S. State Department recalled dozens of staffers to revive Voice of America’s Farsi-language broadcasts over the weekend.
Sayeh suggested that a more “strategic target” for Israel “would have been the judiciary—specifically, those who execute protesters or special police units that suppress dissent.” He also pointed to the incoherent messaging of leaving rather than standing against the oppression.
“Right now, they (Washington) are telling Iranians to evacuate Tehran while simultaneously bombing,” Sayeh said. “How can you expect people to overthrow a regime under those conditions?”
Amid increasing public pressure from President Trump and threats of retaliation by the Supreme Leader, Reza Khanzadeh warns that U.S. involvement should be restrained.
“For hopes of a positive relationship between Washington and Tehran, the United States should not play an active role in influencing Iran’s political future unless there is that perfect storm for the Islamic Republic to end,” Khanzadeh noted. “And even then, Washington’s involvement must be light-handed.”
Some analysts do see fragments in Tehran’s repressive rule. Inflation, sanctions, and isolation have contributed to the country’s economic hardships. As Israeli strikes have intensified in both scale and sophistication, they have put unprecedented pressure on Iran’s nuclear infrastructure at the same time that the country’s younger population is more connected to global ideas and less tolerant of repression.
“There’s a point of no return in geopolitics. If the regime survives this, it’s going to come out more hostile. Any new agreement with (Tehran) would just delay the inevitable,” Sayeh insists. “If this escalates further and Washington gets pulled into a war by Tehran’s retaliation, that could be a death sentence for the regime. But if it doesn’t escalate—and Iranians are left with a broken country and the same regime—then the sense of betrayal and hopelessness will deepen.”
Others predict that the entrenched power structures and the leadership’s historical survival instincts remain formidable obstacles. While Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu has said that regime change “could be a result” of continued attacks, experts emphasize that the leadership’s ideological resilience, combined with sophisticated control of its internal security and intelligence apparatus, makes a sudden crumble unlikely.
As Kaltenthaler observes, “Even if Khamenei, the Supreme Leader, were killed, it would not lead to regime collapse” in large part because “there is no organized opposition strong enough inside of Iran to topple the IRGC-clerical regime.”
Khanzadeh concurred that “the unfortunate reality is, even with economic hardships and youth opposition increasing, the likelihood of there being a correlation to a sustained opposition or regime change is very low.”
“Iran’s brain drain is one of the highest in the world. Most individuals inside Iran would rather leave the country than stay and fight,” he said. “They are jaded by their previous failed attempts, frustrated by the older generations, who they partly blame for the uninhabitable conditions they are in, and unwilling to die for change.”
Khanzadeh also says that while “Iran has a lot of highly intelligent, politically savvy, socially conscious, and charismatic individuals who could rise up and become this leader,” most are “dead, or in prison and withering away, or they are not publicly stating their intent to avoid imprisonment or death, or they have left the country.”
Even so, the challenges associated with regime change don’t seem to have much of an impact on the streets.
“Everyone is talking about regime change; everything is ready to go,” one twenty-something musician in Tehran tells The Cipher Brief. “This is the best situation for years. I am very optimistic.”
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Why Iran’s Nuclear Program Cannot Be Dismantled from the Air
OPINION — As Israel launches one of the most expansive covert-kinetic operations in recent memory against Iranian nuclear infrastructure, a critical question returns: can airpower—supported by advanced ISR, precision-guided munitions, and even U.S. bunker-busting weapons—permanently dismantle a hardened and decentralized nuclear program? The answer is no. That remains true even if the United States committed its full arsenal of deep-penetration munitions and stealth aircraft. Iran’s nuclear system is built not just to resist physical strikes, but to survive them—strategically, legally, and doctrinally.
Start with Fordow, Iran’s most fortified enrichment site. It sits buried 80 to 90 meters deep inside the Kuh-e Daryacheh mountains. The U.S. GBU-57A/B Massive Ordnance Penetrator can pierce up to 60 meters of reinforced concrete under ideal conditions—but it's not designed to penetrate layers of deep mountain rock, which scatter blast effects and reduce impact. Even when a bomb penetrates, it’s impossible to confirm the destruction of IR-6 centrifuge arrays or determine the fate of enriched uranium. Destroying a building is not the same as eliminating the capacity for breakout.
Natanz, the better-known site, poses different problems. Its facilities are more exposed but have already shown resilience. The 2009–2010 Stuxnet attack disrupted rotor speeds; in 2021, a power grid attack shut down cascades. Both efforts avoided explosive sabotage to prevent aerosolizing stored uranium. Strikes on cascade halls or storage vaults could trigger exactly that outcome. Meanwhile, Iran was building new, deeper cascade chambers at Natanz—modeled after Fordow’s hardened design.
But these tactical concerns are just the surface. Since at least 2003, Iran has transformed its nuclear program into a compartmentalized, redundant network. The Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI) oversees public-facing sites, while critical R&D, procurement, and materials engineering are embedded across the Ministry of Defense, the military-linked SPND, and IRGC-run logistics and engineering firms. Universities like Malek Ashtar, Sharif, and Shahid Beheshti—sanctioned for proliferation-related research—support advanced work on centrifuge rotors, uranium metallurgy, and simulation models. The fuel cycle is spread across multiple cities: conversion at Isfahan, enrichment at Fordow and Natanz, heavy water production at Arak. Knock out one node, and others remain. This system wasn’t built just to function—it was built to survive.
The IRGC’s Passive Defense Organization has guided this shift since the early 2010s, hardening and camouflaging sites, moving assets underground, and routing logistics through civilian infrastructure. Its approach echoes Soviet and North Korean doctrine: survive the first strike, reconstitute after. Dual-use facilities, buried nodes, and mobile corridors form a system designed not to prevent attack, but to absorb it.
A turning point in this evolution was Iran’s move to fully domestic centrifuge production. Before, Iran relied on illicit procurement networks for sensitive components like rotors and bellows. Now it manufactures them using its own aerospace and metallurgical sectors. This change has rendered traditional interdiction strategies obsolete. There are no longer foreign supply chains to target. Disrupting production now means striking sovereign industrial plants not legally defined as nuclear sites—raising major questions under international law about proportionality, attribution, and escalation.
Since Friday, Israel has reportedly killed 14 Iranian nuclear scientists. But the strategic impact will be limited. These personnel were part of a deep and compartmentalized labor structure that includes rotor fabrication teams, enrichment system modelers, and logistics engineers—many of whom remain untouched. Iran’s nuclear knowledge is archived, teachable, and distributed through classified academic programs and military-run technical institutes. Continuity does not depend on who is killed—it depends on what survives.
Even if a strike damages facilities, it won’t provide strategic certainty. Since Iran ended its implementation of the JCPOA’s Additional Protocol in 2021, the IAEA has lost continuous access to surveillance footage and no longer has what Director General Rafael Grossi calls “continuity of knowledge.” When inspectors visited the Turquzabad warehouse in 2018—after its exposure by Israeli intelligence—they found undeclared nuclear material. That remains the only site revealed, but others may exist. And while Iran’s enrichment levels now far exceed JCPOA limits—the IAEA reports that Iran holds over 120 kilograms of uranium enriched to 60% U-235, just one step below weapons-grade—its activities technically remain within the bounds of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), which allows enrichment of any level as long as it’s not diverted to weapons use. Iran’s uranium metal work at Esfahan, for example, is ostensibly for reactor fuel but has clear relevance for building warhead cores. Enrichment cascades, uranium conversion, and simulation software all remain dual-use by design. A bombing campaign can eliminate equipment, but not the legal narrative, institutional structure, or strategic doctrine that sustain the program.
The weaponization side is even harder to target. A nuclear device requires more than enriched uranium—it also needs implosion systems, neutron initiators, hydrodynamic tests, and precision detonators. According to the IAEA’s 2011 annex and the Institute for Science and International Security reports from 2019 to 2020, based on documents from Iran’s nuclear archive , Iran has explored all of these. Testing at the Parchin military complex and archived core design files are part of the record. These assets are not only small and relocatable—they don’t even involve fissile material. They’re nearly impossible to detect by ISR, let alone destroy, and can only be verified through intrusive on-site inspections. Strategically, Iran is not racing to build a bomb. It is positioning itself just below the threshold—able to weaponize rapidly without openly violating the NPT. This posture, formalized by Mohsen Fakhrizadeh and internalized across SPND, maximizes leverage while minimizing legal risk. And it cannot be destroyed from the air.
Nor will a strike yield reliable post-strike clarity. Iran has invested in denial and deception: false facades, buried heat sources, multispectral camouflage, and encrypted site-to-site communications. These frustrate ISR and make battle damage assessments guesswork. The U.S. faced similar issues in Iraq from 1991 to 2003, where mobile infrastructure routinely eluded satellite and aerial surveillance. Iran’s situation is worse—because there's no inspector access, and no ground-truthing. Damage can only be inferred from secondary signatures like heat plumes or seismic shockwaves, none of which guarantee success.
What Iran now possesses is structural latency. This is more than technical know-how—it’s the ability to reconstitute a nuclear program after large-scale physical degradation. Designs, enriched stockpiles, rotor manufacturing, conversion tools, simulation models, and trained scientists are spread across the Iranian state. These aren’t hidden threats. They are sovereign capabilities built into the system. The model is similar to Saddam Hussein’s “just-in-time” reconstitution strategy in the 1990s: Iraq had no bombs, but preserved enough design data and networks to restart under better conditions. Iran has deliberately adopted that same logic. As long as legal ambiguity is preserved, scientists remain protected, and facilities go uninspected, no strike can destroy the true core of the program.
Common analogies are misleading. Israel’s 1981 strike on Iraq’s Osirak reactor worked because the facility was pre-operational, had no uranium fuel, and no supporting infrastructure. There was no fuel cycle, no cascade system, and no redundancy. None of that applies to Iran. Today’s program is hardened, dispersed, and far closer to the nuclear threshold. Osirak is no longer a relevant model.
There’s also no historical precedent for dismantling a program as deeply embedded as Iran’s without physical access. Libya’s 2003 disarmament followed years of behind-the-scenes negotiations and was catalyzed not just by fear of invasion, but by Gaddafi’s desire to normalize relations with Western banks and oil markets. Libya never enriched uranium domestically; its centrifuges were still in crates, acquired through the A.Q. Khan network, and its warhead designs were copies of Pakistani blueprints. South Africa, by contrast, had built six nuclear weapons—but it dismantled them in secret between 1989 and 1991 under a tightly controlled domestic program, then revealed their existence only after apartheid’s end to facilitate international reintegration. The process was driven by regime transition, not external pressure, and was verified only after full IAEA access. Syria’s al-Kibar reactor, destroyed by Israel in 2007, was based on a North Korean gas-graphite design and had no support infrastructure: no enrichment, no reprocessing, and no declared energy program to obscure it. No bombing campaign can replicate the political and technical conditions that enabled disarmament in those cases.
A truly effective dismantlement would resemble not strikes, but a ground incursion. It would involve seizing Fordow and Natanz, securing uranium stockpiles, capturing cascade schematics and procurement records, and either debriefing or removing scientists tied to the IRGC, AEOI, and university research programs. It would require IAEA and intelligence personnel embedded on-site, conducting forensic audits in centrifuge labs, metallurgy workshops, and simulation centers. This is what worked in Iraq and Libya: control, not just precision. No air campaign can do that from 35,000 feet.
At best, the airstrikes will buy time. At worst, they will destroy inspection leverage, push the program further underground—both physically and politically—and risk triggering the very breakout they aim to prevent. They offer the appearance of resolution, not its substance. Denial, if it is to be real, must go beyond temporary disruption. It must mean verified removal of capacity, control of personnel, and physical access to infrastructure. The hard truth is this: if disarmament is the goal—as President Trump insists when he says Iran must never acquire a nuclear weapon—then airstrikes alone won’t achieve it.
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How Things Could go from Worse to Devastating for Iran
CIPHER BRIEF REPORTING – Given the state of damage Iran has suffered since Israel launched a devastating round of airstrikes targeting nuclear and military leaders last Thursday – and an increasing sense of urgency in Washington, experts are gauging the potential for things to go from worse to devastating not only for Tehran’s nuclear program, but for its regime.
As the U.S. reportedly relocates refueling aircraft to Europe, Israel’s military says it now has complete control over Tehran’s air space. Israeli officials are issuing evacuation warnings to many of the 10 million Iranians living in parts of the capital that may be targeted in the coming days. And that warning was reiterated by President Donald Trump as he abruptly left a meeting of G7 leaders in Canada on Monday.
“Iran should have signed the “deal” I told them to sign,” President Trump posted on social media. “What a shame, and waste of human life. Simply stated, IRAN CAN NOT HAVE A NUCLEAR WEAPON. I said it over and over again! Everyone should immediately evacuate Tehran!” wrote President Trump as the White House announced he was leaving the G7 meeting early “because of what’s going on in the Middle East”.
The World Wants to Know, What’s the Plan?
Both Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese leader Xi Jinping have offered to play a role in de-escalating the situation but President Trump says he’s working on something much bigger than a ceasefire.
“We have plans,” General Frank McKenzie, former Commander of U.S. Central Command told The Cipher Brief in a video interview on Friday, just hours after Israel’s airstrikes began. When asked whether the potential for U.S. involvement in Israel’s ongoing operation would be something that U.S. military planners are considering in a case like this, McKenzie explained, “We have plans for virtually any contingency in the Middle East, including this particular contingency, and we would be prepared to execute those plans if the President of the United States directed us to do so.”
While the president hasn’t yet detailed what his plans might be, he has directed the deployment of more than 30 U.S. refueling aircraft to the region. The USS Nimitz is also expected to join assets that are already pre-positioned for any potential U.S. military engagement.
How Bad is It for Iran Right Now?
Israel has already inflicted significant damage on Iran’s nuclear and military program since its airstrikes began five days ago. “The Israelis have inflicted profound damage that will set back the nuclear program many months, if not years,” former National Intelligence Manager for Iran at ODNI, Norm Roule told The Cipher Brief. “The damage includes the loss of significant personnel, with the killing of multiple senior nuclear program managers who understood how to build, manage, and maintain large nuclear programs.”
Roule says the destruction of Iran’s above-ground installations has cost Iran a key centrifuge facility and a power facility, and that the attack on the power facility likely also damaged thousands of underground centrifuges, due to the sudden loss of power.
“The destruction of a uranium-metal production facility, conversion plant, and fuel fabrication buildings at Esfahan set back a key aspect of the program needed for weaponization and fuel production,” said Roule. “The attacks appear to have caused above-ground damage at Fordow, but most of the facility remains intact, underground. Until Fordow is destroyed, Israel will not have achieved the nuclear-related goals of this operation.”
Roule estimates that complete destruction of the Fordow facility will likely require either U.S. military involvement or Iran’s voluntary dismantling of the site as part of the nuclear deal as laid out by the U.S. Administration.
But the broader damage to the country’s military has been profound and likely permanent, according to experts who note that Israel’s initial raids wiped out most of the country’s senior nuclear and military leadership, destroyed much of its air force and eroded a significant portion of its missile launch capability.
“The regime may control the streets of Tehran in name, but Israel effectively controls its near-term future,” said Roule. “Jerusalem will decide which ministries will remain intact, whether fuel depots will be destroyed, and so on. And to use a regime phrase often directed against the U.S. and Israel by Iran’s leaders since the beginning of the Islamic Republic, there “isn’t a damn thing (the Islamic Republic) can do about it.” Indeed, the Supreme Leader of Iran has effectively gone into hiding to stay alive.”
How Much Worse Could it Get?
Cipher Brief Expert and former NATO Supreme Allied Commander retired Admiral James Stavridis, writing in Bloomberg, said a possible strategy for destroying Iran’s nuclear program - as part of a joint Israeli-U.S. operation - would likely begin with a comprehensive cyberwar campaign “probably coinciding with an onslaught of cruise missiles and drones attacking Tehran’s remaining Russian-supplied S-300 and S-200 air-defense stations, and Iranian surface-to-air systems like the Bavar 373 or Khordad 15. The cyber-offensive would best be set off inside Tehran’s military electric grid: The Israelis probably have that ability — essentially cyber-boots on the ground” eventually leading to “heavy air strikes, probably led by US B-2 Spirit strategic bombers carrying 30,000-pound Massive Ordnance Penetrators, aka “bunker busters.”
If Iran Strikes Back
Many experts agree that Iran, which has launched a series of retaliatory missile strikes against Israel since Thursday, would increase the number of missile strikes as well as “bombings at U.S. and Israeli embassies and commercial facilities worldwide would be likely and cyberattacks a certainty,” according to Stavridis.
“Tehran might close the Strait of Hormuz with mines, small craft and short-range surface-to-surface missiles,” Stavridis wrote in Bloomberg, “This would shut down 35% of the world’s oil and gas shipments, and it would take perhaps months for the U.S. and allies to reopen it. Tehran might also strike at Saudi or UAE offshore oil and gas facilities or even attack the Saudis’ main energy facilities on land.
Perhaps the biggest concern expressed by U.S. leaders both officially and unofficially since Thursday’s attacks began, is the potential for Iran to target American military personnel stationed in the region, who are well within range of Iranian missiles. According to McKenzie, those missiles could “gain a much higher volume of fires against those targets”.
“But here's the problem,” he told us. “If they did that, they're going to kill Americans. That's probably going to bring the United States into this war. And if the United States comes into this war as a result of an Iranian attack on American troops, I don't know that regime change would be off the table. They've got to be very much aware of this. We should remember that the overall priority for Iranian state craft remains regime preservation.”
The Implications of Regime Change
Sources have reported that President Donald Trump objected to an Israeli plan early on to target Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. But as the conflict escalates and Trump puts more pressure on Iran to return to the negotiating table over its nuclear program, the idea of regime change – according to some experts – shouldn’t be off the table.
“His death would throw an already-confused regime into even more chaos, making regime collapse and change more likely,” said Roule. “Most of the world’s Shi’a follow leaders who advocate a less severe and less activist form of religious rule. He will have followers within Iran and outside, particularly among Lebanese Hezbollah, who will seek revenge and blame the United States for his killing.”
While the U.S. and Israel have killed other senior Iranian leaders in the past, including Hasan Nasrallah, Quds Force General Qassem Soleimani, Yahya Sinwar, and others, threat of retaliation didn’t have much of an impact. “But the Supreme Leader is in a different category,” says Roule. “Targeting him has likely been the subject of considerable debate within Israel, weighing the risks against the potential gains.”
It was a U.S.-led drone strike that killed General Soleimani in January, 2020 prompting fears then of massive retaliation. “It is impossible to overstate the significance of this action,” former CIA Director General David Petraeus (Ret.) told us at the time. “Soleimani was, in U.S. terms, a combination of CIA Director, JSOC Commander, and Special Presidential Envoy for the Mideast. He was the second most important person in Iran and the architect and commander of Iranian initiatives to solidify control over the Shia Crescent. He had the blood of hundreds of American and coalition soldiers on his hands and that of countless of our Iraqi and partner elements in the region.”
Roule estimates that if the Supreme Leader were to be targeted or killed in the current operation, “the weight of regime decision-making would shift dramatically, likely to a hardline group of Khamenei’s current inner circle advisors who are closely allied to the Revolutionary Guard. Appointing a successor would be difficult in wartime, but it may be possible, particularly if seen as a placeholder. Any successor would lack Khamenei’s stature, however, and thus wouldn’t strengthen the regime in the long term.”
Roule proposes additional considerations if in fact the regime were to fall, including the possibility of a military coup led by Revolutionary Guard officials, warning that if the country falls into chaos, it will be important to secure nuclear material as quickly as possible.
What Instruments of Power Does Iran Still Have?
Iran’s regional proxies – nurtured at a cost of billions of dollars over many years – have lost the majority of their power. Iran’s stronghold in Syria disintegrated with the overthrow of former President Bashar Al-Assad. Hamas has lost its leadership and its ability to launch any kind of significant attack after years of Israeli decimation following the brutal terrorist attack it launched on Israel in October of 2023.
“Iran has a real problem because they also lost Lebanese Hezbollah, which was their strategic hedge against Israel,” said General McKenzie. “They've been decapitated. They will replace commanders. They have people they can bring up, so the Quds force will remain a potent and capable force. That's not going to go away. But again, it serves the ultimate ends of Iranian policy. So, the question to ask is really, where's Iranian policy going to go?”
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Israel’s Bid to End the Iranian Nuclear Threat
OPINION — In the early hours of June 13, Israel launched a series of airstrikes, codenamed Operation Rising Lion, targeting Iranian nuclear facilities, military infrastructure, and senior civil-military leaders. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu clarified that the operational objective of this campaign seeks to degrade and destroy the Iranian nuclear weapons program. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) declassified intelligence revealing Iran’s covert plan to accelerate uranium enrichment that would enable Iran to reach weapons-grade uranium in a “short period of time.” The IDF’s assertion also supports the recent International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) resolution confirming Iran’s noncompliance with nonproliferation obligations and engaging in “undeclared” nuclear activities. Iran has simultaneously continued to reject U.S. proposals and threatened to expand its nuclear program during negotiations. Iran’s non-compliance with the IAEA and its constant threats of increasing uranium enrichment indicate that the regime was negotiating in bad faith.
Operational Effects
The Israeli air campaign is designed to impose significant costs on Iran’s military capabilities and will temporarily halt Iranian enrichment activities. Strikes hit nuclear targets in Natanz, Esfahan, and Fordow, including enrichment facilities, power grids, and uranium production sites. Commercial satellite imagery confirms significant damage, though the IAEA reported no radiation spikes on June 13. This suggests that the IDF, given the current tempo of operations, has not yet destroyed the centrifuges and fuel conversion facilities. Still, Israeli officials maintain that the IDF will continue to strike these facilities. However, it is unclear at this time of writing what operational effect these airstrikes can achieve to fully dismantle Iran’s nuclear weapons program.
The ongoing Israeli campaign has brought the sophistication and reach of the Israeli intelligence apparatus once again to the public view. Before launching the first wave of missiles on Iranian targets, Israel launched one-way attack drones from a drone unit that it covertly assembled near Tehran. These drones struck Iranian ballistic missile launchers and components of the Iranian air defense system, thus degrading Iran’s counter-assault capabilities and rendering Iranian air defense ineffective.
The Iranian military has been preparing for a potential U.S. or Israeli airstrike over the past weeks. Senior Iranian military commanders were actively inspecting air defense zones, radar sites, and airbases across Iran to review military preparedness and defensive measures in anticipation of U.S. or Israeli strikes. Iran also repositioned some of its missile launchers and air defense components, including Russian-made S-300 systems, near Natanz and Fordow nuclear sites. While these defensive measures failed to decisively intercept Israeli missiles, the air assault did not come as a surprise to the Iranian regime. What has come across as a total shock to the Khamenei regime is the parallel decapitation campaign of several senior Iranian commanders and key nuclear scientists. The precision with which Israel was able to eliminate several top brass military officials, including the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Commander Hossein Salami and the Armed Forces General Staff Mohammad Bagheri, within 12 hours of launching Operation Rising Lion is truly extraordinary. A Hezbollah-like decapitation campaign of Iranian commanders indicates that the operation must have been supported by a network of robust human and signals intelligence. This is yet another feather in Mossad’s cap that has demonstrated its successful infiltration of Iran’s senior leadership circles.
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Iranian Command and Control at the Brink
Israeli air assault has temporarily disrupted Iranian command and control, as evident from Iran’s disorganized counterattack. Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei swiftly appointed replacements for slain commanders, particularly for the Armed Forces General Staff and the IRGC Commander positions. Such positions are essential to restore operational coordination for a counterattack on Israel. Six hours after Israel’s strikes, Iran launched around 100 drones likely to suppress Israeli integrated air defense grids, followed by several waves of ballistic missiles. While the majority of Iranian projectiles were intercepted, some Iranian missiles impacted Israel and caused dozens of casualties in central and southern Israel. Iranian missiles also damaged several high-rise buildings in Tel Aviv. The impact sites in Israel clearly indicate that the projectiles were destined towards civilian centers, not military positions.
The military utility of Iranian counter assault is negligible, as it failed to degrade Israeli military capabilities by any degree. The October 2024 air assault on Israel caused some damage to IDF airbases in Tel Nof and Negev, and other military sites in central Israel. The October 2024 strikes were a result of a preserved command and control structure and effective coordination among different branches of the Iranian armed forces. The ongoing Iranian counterattack campaign until now has largely aimed at densely populated civilian areas, suggesting that Iran’s campaign was not a result of well-informed and coordinated military planning. The lack of military focus in the Iranian counter assault raises serious questions on the Iranian military’s command and control structure. A weakened command structure will likely fail to effectively defend Iran against Israeli strikes and conduct further offensive operations.
Forcing Negotiations with Predetermined Outcomes
It is still too early to fully evaluate the impact of Israeli military operations in Iran or to predict their effect on Iran’s nuclear weapons program. Israel has, however, established complete air superiority over Iran after destroying the bulk of Iranian air defense systems. This leaves Iranian military assets and nuclear sites more vulnerable to Israeli attacks than ever before. Israeli airstrikes have also destroyed Iranian missile launchers and silos, severely undermining Iran’s ability to respond decisively. The continued Israeli assault thus positions Iran at a significant operational disadvantage.
Iran faces a decisive defeat due to two reasons: First, with the current pace of Israeli military operations, Iran risks losing a significant proportion of its remaining conventional military capabilities. The Iranian military reportedly used a fewer number of stand-off weapons than originally planned in its retaliation because Israeli airstrikes rendered several airbases inoperable, complicating resource movement in a time-sensitive environment. Iran continues to lose its air and ground assets and is rapidly depleting its ballistic missile stockpile. Secondly, the killing of several senior Iranian civilian and military leaders, including individuals close to Ali Khamenei, complicates crisis management and diplomacy. A leadership crisis in Iran’s senior-most civil-military ranks will disrupt operational planning at all levels, making interagency coordination extremely difficult.
The operational success of Rising Lion could very likely lead to a strategic victory if the Iranian regime can be forced to the negotiating table with a predetermined outcome—one that would compel Iran to fully dismantle its nuclear weapons program and allow international watchdogs to take over Iranian nuclear facilities. The White House maintains that it will not stop Israel but continues to signal that Iran must give up on its nuclear ambitions for hostilities to stop. Iran’s rejection of further nuclear talks amid countering Israeli assault and its isolation, with regional proxies hesitant to engage, has severely weakened Tehran’s position. Continued Israeli strikes can therefore force Iran to negotiate denuclearization. Iran must use the limited time and resources at its disposal to accept the rising demands for denuclearization and allow international watchdogs to confiscate and deal with its current uranium stockpile.
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Opinions expressed are those of the author and do not represent the views or opinions of The Cipher Brief.
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What’s Happening in L.A. May Not Stay in L.A.
OPINION / COLUMN -- “At this early stage of the proceedings, the Court [for the Northern District of California] must determine whether the President [Donald J. Trump] followed the congressionally mandated procedure for his actions. He did not. His actions were illegal -- both exceeding the scope of his statutory authority and violating the Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. He must therefore return control of the California National Guard to the Governor of the State of California forthwith.”
That was the decision of United States District Judge Charles R. Breyer, Northern District of California, on June 12. It was paused last Thursday by a three-judge panel from the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals which will hold a hearing today.
But Judge Breyer’s opinion is worth further study because it not only lays out the law underlying a President’s ability to take control of state National Guard but it also raises serious constitutional questions that are directly relevant to the protests happening now in Los Angeles.
First, some facts from the Breyer opinion: Governor Newsom serves as Commander-in-Chief of the California National Guard when it is under state control. California has the largest National Guard in the country, with 18,733 members, 12,212 of whom are currently available.
President Trump is the Commander-in-Chief of the U.S. Armed Forces, including the National Guard when it is under federal control. A president can call the National Guard into federal service under Title 10, section 12406, of the United States Code. That is what happened here.
Let’s remember how we got here.
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On June 6, 2025, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) began carrying out immigration raids in Los Angeles. ICE executed search warrants at multiple locations across the city and as Breyer put it, “Federal immigration authorities have been ramping up arrests across the country to fulfill President Donald Trump’s promise of mass deportations.”
Last month, The Washington Post reported that White House Deputy Chief-of-Staff Stephen Miller and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi L. Noem were raising the daily nationwide target for ICE to arrest migrants for deportation to 3,000, more than double the 1,270 they had been targeting prior to last month. President Trump and others have previously talked about a goal of one million deportations in 2025, which appears now to be unlikely.
When ICE targeted several locations in downtown L.A., including two Home Depot stores, a donut store, and a clothing wholesaler, there were public protests in the Garment District and at the Metropolitan Detention Center. The protests were explicitly about the immigration raids where some 80 people had been detained and 44 arrested.
That evening, as Breyer described it, “protesters reportedly marched in downtown Los Angeles…Some protesters threw “concrete chunks, bottles of liquid, and other objects at Federal Protective Service officers guarding a parking lot gate; some protesters attempted “to use large rolling commercial dumpsters as a battering ram…Officers protected the gate entrance with pepper balls and other nonlethal force, until LAPD [Los Angeles Police Department] arrived and pushed the crowd away.”
Two federal buildings were vandalized and by 11 p.m. that night, many of the protesters had left and some 11 people had been arrested for engaging in unlawful behavior.
The next day, on June 7, some Customs and Border Protection officers arrived in Los Angeles from San Diego to assist ICE with immigration enforcement operations, but in Washington, Trump had prepared other plans.
The Militia Act of 1903 authorizes the President under section 12406 to “call into Federal service members and units of the National Guard of any State in such numbers as he considers necessary,” but only if the U.S. “is invaded or is in danger of invasion by a foreign nation; there is a rebellion or danger of a rebellion against the authority of the Government…or the President is unable with the regular forces to execute the laws of the United States.”
The act as amended, also says any orders issued under section 12406 be issued “through the governor of the respective State … from which State … such troops may be called.” Congress later amended the statute to add the requirement that National Guard federalization orders “shall be issued through the governors.”
According to the Breyer opinion, the President had drawn up a memo to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Homeland Security Secretary Noem that asserted, “[N]umerous incidents of violence and disorder have recently occurred and threaten to continue in response to the enforcement of Federal law by [ICE] and other United States Government personnel. To the extent that protests or acts of violence directly inhibit the execution of the laws, they constitute a form of rebellion against the authority of the Government of the United States.”
In response, Trump’s memo explained that due to “these incidents and credible threats of continued violence,” he was calling “into Federal service members and units of the National Guard under 10 U.S.C. section 12406 to temporarily protect ICE and other United States Government personnel who are performing Federal functions, including enforcement of Federal law, and to protect Federal property, at locations where protests against these functions are occurring or are likely to occur based on current threat assessments and planned operations.”
Breyer pointed out that the memo did not name California, Los Angeles, or any other geographic area.
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Trump’s memo directed Hegseth “to coordinate with the Governors of the States and the National Guard Bureau in identifying and ordering into Federal service the appropriate members and units of the National Guard under this authority.” Trump called for “at least 2,000” Guard personnel to be on duty “for 60 days,” and added that Hegseth could “employ any other members of the regular Armed Forces as necessary.”
That same night, June 7, Hegseth announced that 2,000 members of the California National Guard were being “called into Federal service effective immediately for a period of 60 days.” The Hegseth order was sent to the California National Guard Adjudant General.
Breyer’s opinion notes that neither Trump nor Hegseth notified “Governor Newsom of their intent to federalize the California National Guard prior to issuing the June 7 Memo or the June 7 DOD Order…Governor Newsom said he only learned of the June 7 DoD Order from the Adjutant General after the Adjutant General received it.”
The Adjutant General relinquished command to the commander of U.S. Northern Command, and the commander, not the Governor, has issued all orders to the federalized National Guard, according to the Breyer opinion.
The National Guard troops arrived in Los Angeles on June 8, and that afternoon “protesters increased to about 3,500, particularly near the Metropolitan Detention Center, where the National Guard was deployed,” according to the Breyer opinion. The New York Times reported that the “aggressive federal response … in turn sparked new protests across the city.”
That day, Governor Newsom’s office wrote to Secretary Hegseth, stating that the June 7 DoD Order did not comply with the law and asserted the National Guard deployment represented “a serious breach of state sovereignty that seems intentionally designed to inflame the situation.”
The next day, again without consulting with Newsom, Defense Secretary Hegseth announced he had ordered the federalizing of an additional 2,000 California Guardsman for 60 days, and 700 active-duty Marines were being prepared for deployment to Los Angeles.
On June 10, Governor Newsom and the State of California brought a lawsuit against the President, the Secretary of Defense and the DoD, asking the Federal District Court to rein in the President’s use of military force in Los Angeles and to limit the military to guarding federal buildings and personnel and not participating in civilian or immigration law enforcement tasks.
Judge Breyer blocked Trump and Hegseth from using California’s National Guard at all.
Today’s Court of Appeals argument will focus on continuing to hold off Breyer’s temporary decision that the Trump federalized National Guard be returned to Newsom’s control, while appeals on it take place.
It is worth pointing out that in his original June 7 memo, President Trump did not specifically limit his directive to California’s National Guard, leaving open the possibility that it could serve as a precedent to federalize other state National Guards as well.
In a court filing, Delaware, Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Vermont, Wisconsin, Rhode Island, and the Office of the Governor of Kansas contend that they “are implicated by the unlimited scope of” the President’s June 7 Memo.
And that’s why there is a lot more involved in this case than most people realize.
The Cipher Brief is committed to publishing a range of perspectives on national security issues submitted by deeply experienced national security professionals.
Opinions expressed are those of the author and do not represent the views or opinions of The Cipher Brief.
Have a perspective to share based on your experience in the national security field? Send it to Editor@thecipherbrief.com for publication consideration.
Read more expert-driven national security insights, perspective and analysis in The Cipher Brief