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Republican senator calls Trump’s military airstrikes ‘extrajudicial killings’

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Rand Paul’s comments come days after president claimed US lawmakers wouldn’t take issue with Venezuelan strikes

The Trump administration’s military airtrikes against boats off Venezuela’s coast that the White House claims were being used for drug trafficking are “extrajudicial killings”, said Rand Paul, the president’s fellow Republican and US senator from Kentucky.

Paul’s strong comments on the topic came on Sunday during an interview on Republican-friendly Fox News, three days after Donald Trump publicly claimed he “can’t imagine” federal lawmakers would have “any problem” with the strikes when asked about seeking congressional approval for them.

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Air traffic control staffing problems spiked over the weekend, raising concerns about growing disruption

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Air traffic controller staffing shortages worsened over the weekend as the nation’s government shutdown hit its fourth week, leading to delays and anxiety, and experts say it won’t get better until air traffic controllers get paid.

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China willing to give assistance to US after aircraft crash in South China Sea

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China’s foreign ministry said it would be willing to provide humanitarian assistance to the United States after two U.S. Navy aircraft crashed into the South China Sea, spokesperson Guo Jiakun told a press conference on Monday.

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‘He Had A Lot Of Help From Us’: Trump Praises Milei’s Electoral Win In Argentina

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Trump, who had handed his Latin American ally a $40 billion lifeline weeks before the election, cheered Millei’s victory, saying “not only did he win, he won by a lot.”

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Turkish prosecutors file new espionage charges against Istanbul’s jailed mayor

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Turkish prosecutors file new espionage charges against Istanbul’s jailed mayor [deltaMinutes] mins ago Now

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Donald Trump Rules Out Running for Vice President in 2028: ‘Too Cute’

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There is speculation that President Donald Trump will seek a third term in the White House.

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Jamaica braces for its most powerful hurricane as Melissa nears category 5

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Record-breaking hurricane expected to make landfall on Tuesday with 160mph winds, while New Zealand reels from storm damage

The Caribbean is bracing for Hurricane Melissa, one of the most powerful to ever strike the region. Melissa began as a cluster of thunderstorms off the coast of west Africa, which travelled west and developed into a depression, reaching tropical storm status to the north of Venezuela on 21 October. Rapid intensification over the weekend strengthened Melissa to category 4 as it slowly meandered west through the Caribbean Sea.

Melissa is expected to reach category 5 intensity on Monday night, veering north-east towards Jamaica before making landfall tomorrow by about midday, with peak winds of 160mph (257km/h), which would make it the strongest of only five hurricanes ever recorded to hit Jamaica directly. The most recent, and before now the most powerful, was Hurricane Gilbert in 1988, which brought gusts of 130mph.

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Social landlords in England now forced to fix emergencies within 24 hours

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New legal duties follow case of two-year-old Awaab Ishak, who died after exposure to mould in his own home

The first phase of Awaab’s law, which promises to protect tenants from dangerous social housing conditions, comes into force in England on Monday, in memory of a two-year-old boy who died after exposure to mould in his own home.

The new legal duties compel landlords to fix “emergency health and safety hazards” within 24 hours of reporting, investigate significant damp and mould within 10 working days of being notified, make properties safe in five working days after inspection and write the findings to tenants within three working days of inspection completing.

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live: Trump in Asia

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Why Any Deal at the Trump-Xi Summit Is Unlikely to Last

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U.S. President Trump Visits China

It was with a red carpet jig that Donald Trump touched down in the Malaysian capital on Sunday morning to be greeted by Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim ahead of the 47th ASEAN Summit. But the question remains whether the U.S. President will still be in dancing mood upon the culmination of his six-day Asian tour and especially after Thursday’s pivotal meeting with his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping.

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Simmering trade tensions between the superpowers boiled over earlier this month with Beijing ramping up export restrictions on rare earth minerals and permanent magnets—materials vital for myriad industrial processes—prompting Washington to hike tariffs on Chinese exports to 130% from Nov. 1.

In Kuala Lumpur, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said a “framework” agreement for the leaders to “consummate” has been reached for a tariff truce, including a revival of Chinese purchases of American soybeans, a year-long pause on rare earth restrictions, as well as a “final deal” on the sale of social media platform TikTok in the U.S.

In turn, China’s top trade negotiator, Li Chenggang, said the two sides reached a “preliminary consensus” that must now be ratified by each side’s internal approval processes. Certainly, China desperately needs some reprieve from the tariffs as it battles myriad economic challenges, including slowing growth, entrenched deflation, record youth unemployment, and a depressed real estate sector.

“We know China-U.S. relations cannot go back to the past, but we need stability, a soft landing, for the Chinese economy, American economy, and also for the world economy,” says Wang Yiwei, director of the Institute of International Affairs at Renmin University in Beijing.

Still, while much of the world holds out hope that its top two economies with $45 trillion combined output can thrash out a meaningful deal, there is no guarantee. “Bessent’s comments … suggest leaders Xi and Trump will have no formal U.S.-PRC trade agreement to announce on Thursday in Korea,” says Sean King, senior vice president focusing on Asia for consulting firm Park Strategies. “Rather, it seems the two sides have merely come up with yet another framework that just enables them to keep talking.”

Reasons for pessimism are clear. Time and again, Trump has ripped up negotiations on a whim—most recently ending trade talks and hiking import levies on Canada by 10% in response to an anti-tariff ad published by the government of Ontario.

Trump argued that the ad intends to “interfere” with an impending decision on the legality of his tariffs by the U.S. Supreme Court, which is due to hear oral arguments on Nov. 5. Indeed, Wang believes that looming decision may back Trump into a corner in South Korea by strong-arming him into an accommodation lest his tariff leverage be suddenly excised. “This game does not work for the U.S.,” says Wang. “American consumers, markets have suffered. China and the U.S. need relations back to a normal, stable relationship.”

Then again, even if Trump does sign up to a truce, there’s no saying how long it will last—especially if the Supreme Court comes down on his side. According to Forbes, Trump flipflopped 28 times on proposed tariffs from his April 2 “Liberation Day” announcement through July 14—and there have been many more since, as evidenced by the slew of TACO—or Trump Always Chickens Out—memes that have proliferated on social media.

Sticking to a deal “doesn’t seem to be Trump’s game,” says Chong Ja Ian, professor of international relations at the National University of Singapore. “Not just on the trade front, but what he’s doing domestically in the United States—his whole point is disruption and keeping opponents off balance and on the back foot.”

Even with staunch allies. In early September, the Japanese government agreed to reduce auto tariffs from 27.5% to 15% in exchange for a $550 billion investment commitment in the U.S. However, the White House subsequently insisted that the investment deal must first be “clarified”—how much is directed where and when—with Trump reserving the right to impose new levies if he doesn’t like the result. Trump travels to Tokyo on Monday to meet new Japanese PM Sanae Takaichi, and sorting out this confusion will no doubt be at the top of her agenda.

Given this new era of perpetual negotiation, even if a deal is reached between Trump and Xi on Thursday, it’s unlikely to provide lasting relief—and especially as Washington and Beijing are anything but allies. The U.S. squeezing China on access to advanced chips and China’s return limits on rare earths have galvanized each side to address their respective strategic weakness. In May last year, China established a $47.5 billion state fund to boost its semiconductor industry; the U.S., meanwhile, has inked billions of dollars worth of rare earth deals in recent months with nations including Saudi Arabia, Australia, and, just on Sunday, Malaysia.

It speaks to a confrontational dynamic between the U.S. and China that renders interdependence a weakness, self-reliance the new lodestar, and Great Power collaboration largely a thing of the past. Adds Chong: “Given this increasingly competitive orientation, and also the PRC willingness to hit back, I’m afraid that predictability and certainty isn’t going to be forthcoming anytime soon.”


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