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Wednesday Briefing: Senate votes on Ukraine aid
Wednesday Briefing: Senate votes on Ukraine aid
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Wednesday Briefing: Senate votes on Ukraine aid

Morning Briefing: Asia Pacific Edition

April 24, 2024

 
 

Good morning. We’re covering the U.S. Senate vote to approve aid for Ukraine and testimony from a former tabloid publisher at Donald Trump’s trial.

Plus how A.I. could change India’s elections.

 
 
 
People waving Ukraine flags outside the Capitol.
Activists waving Ukrainian flags outside the U.S. Capitol yesterday. Mandel Ngan/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

U.S. moved toward approving Ukraine aid bill

The Senate is on track to pass the $95 billion package of foreign aid to Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan. A final vote is expected in the next few hours, and President Biden plans to sign it.

The bill would be a major boost for Ukraine, where troops are fighting Russia with dwindling stores of munitions. It was stalled for months by Republican lawmakers, which had prompted a wave of concern in Kyiv and across Europe that the U.S. would turn its back on Ukraine.

“What this aid means, in the most simple terms, is guns and bullets,” my colleague Marc Santora, who has been reporting from Ukraine since the beginning of the war, told us.

He said it would also provide “a much-needed boost for the morale of both Ukrainian soldiers on the front and civilians living under the threat of near-nightly Russian drone and missile bombardments.”

The breakthrough in Congress is also a boost for Biden, who has spent months pledging support for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan. The bill gives him a push at a time when his credibility and U.S. leadership have been questioned on the world stage.

What’s next: The first significant U.S. military aid for Ukraine in 16 months could arrive quickly. “Most military analysts think that it will take a month or two before we see it really change the dynamic on the front,” Marc said.

High tech warfare: For the U.S. military, the war has been a testing ground for new A.I. tools and other rapidly evolving technologies. The question remains whether the high tech will be enough to help turn the tide of the war as the Russians appear to have regained momentum.

 
 
Donald Trump wearing a suit and a red tie sitting in a courtroom.
Court resumes tomorrow. Pool photo by Yuki Iwamura

A tabloid publisher testified against Trump

Donald Trump sat through a bruising session in court yesterday. The judge questioned his lawyer’s credibility and a key witness pulled back the curtain on what prosecutors said was a conspiracy to influence the 2016 election.

“To me, he’s looked far angrier yesterday and today than he did during all of last week, during jury selection,” said my colleague Jonah Bromwich, who is reporting from the courtroom.

In the pivotal stretch of testimony, David Pecker, the former publisher of The National Enquirer, described a 2015 meeting with Trump and his fixer, Michael Cohen. He said the men had asked him what he and his magazines could do “to help the campaign.” That statement supports the prosecution’s argument that they were aiding Trump’s campaign, not just protecting his reputation.

 
 
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak of Britain sits at a table flanked by ministers.
Britain’s Conservative government won passage of its flagship immigration policy on Monday. Pool photo by Toby Melville

U.K. moves to send asylum seekers to Rwanda

The passage of a contentious bill by Britain’s Parliament on Monday put the country closer to sending asylum seekers to Rwanda.

The legislation overrides a ruling by the Supreme Court that deemed the plan unlawful. The law describes Rwanda as “a safe country” for refugees, after judges ruled that is not. The government says the policy will be a deterrent, especially to people who try to cross the English Channel on flimsy boats. Yesterday, at least five people died while trying to cross the Channel.

Rishi Sunak, Britain’s prime minister, said the first flights to deport asylum seekers would not depart until June or July. Legal experts say the plan is deeply flawed, and rights groups have vowed to fight any attempts to send asylum seekers to Rwanda.

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