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North Korea’s Kim watches missile test-firings from country’s first destroyer

North Korea’s Kim watches missile test-firings from country’s first destroyer
A man watches a television screen showing a news broadcast with file footage of a North Korean missile test. (File/AFP)
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Updated 30 April 2025

North Korea’s Kim watches missile test-firings from country’s first destroyer

North Korea’s Kim watches missile test-firings from country’s first destroyer
  • The official Korean Central News Agency said Wednesday that Kim watched the tests of the destroyer’s supersonic and strategic cruise missiles, anti-aircraft missile, automatic guns and electronic jamm
  • North Korea and Russia have been sharply expanding military and other cooperation in recent years, with the North supplying troops and conventional weapons to Russia

SEOUL: North Korea said Wednesday leader Kim Jong Un observed the test-firings of missiles from a recently launched destroyer — the first such warship for the North — and called for accelerating efforts to boost his navy’s nuclear attack capabilities.
North Korea last week unveiled the 5,000-ton destroyer equipped with what it called the most powerful weapons systems built for a navy vessel. During Friday’s launching ceremony at the western port of Nampo, Kim called the ship’s construction “a breakthrough” in modernizing North Korea’s naval forces.
Outside experts say it’s North Korea’s first destroyer and that it was likely built with Russian assistance. They say North Korea’s naval forces lag behind South Korea’s but still view the destroyer as a serious security threat as it could bolster North Korea’s attack and defense capabilities.
The official Korean Central News Agency said Wednesday that Kim watched the tests of the destroyer’s supersonic and strategic cruise missiles, anti-aircraft missile, automatic guns and electronic jamming guns earlier this week.
He appreciated the ship’s combination of powerful strike weapons and conventional defenses and set tasks to speed the nuclear-arming of his navy, the report said.
During the ship’s launching ceremony, Kim said the destroyer will be deployed early next year. He said the acquisition of a nuclear-powered submarine would be his next big step in strengthening his navy. He underscored the need to beef up North Korea’s deterrence capability to cope with what he called escalating US-led hostilities targeting the North.
An analysis of photos of the warship shows that its anti-air radar system is likely from Russia, said Lee Illwoo, an expert with the Korea Defense Network in South Korea. He said the warship’s engine system and some of its anti-air weapons systems also likely came from Russia.
North Korea and Russia have been sharply expanding military and other cooperation in recent years, with the North supplying troops and conventional weapons to support Russia’s war efforts against Ukraine. The US, South Korea and their partners worry Russia will likely in return provide North Korea with high-tech weapons technologies that can enhance its nuclear program as well as shipping other military and economic assistance.
South Korea’s military said Wednesday that South Korean and US intelligence authorities were closely monitoring North Korean warship development. South Korea’s spy agency separately told lawmakers that North Korea won’t likely be able to deploy a nuclear-powered submarine anytime soon without Russian support.
In March, North Korea unveiled a nuclear-powered submarine under construction. Many civilian experts said at the time that North Korea may have received Russian technological assistance to build a nuclear reactor to be used in the submarine.
Lee said the deployment of a warship with an advanced radar system off North Korea’s west coast could sharply bolster its air defense capabilities for Pyongyang, the capital. Lee said South Korea, which has 12 destroyers, still vastly outpaces North Korea’s naval forces. But he said the North Korean destroyer, which can carry about 80 missiles, can still pose a big threat, as South Korea’s navy hasn’t likely braced for such an enemy warship.


French prime minister warns against snap polls to end political crisis

Updated 21 sec ago

French prime minister warns against snap polls to end political crisis

French prime minister warns against snap polls to end political crisis
  • PM Francois Bayrou called the vote after months of squabbling over a budget that aims to slash spending 
  • President Macron has given his “full support” to Bayrou, according to government spokeswoman Sophie Primas

PARIS: French Prime Minister Francois Bayrou on Wednesday warned that snap legislative polls would not help restore stability in his country, after calling a parliamentary confidence vote in less than two weeks that he is widely expected to lose.
Bayrou’s surprise gambit to hold the confidence vote on September 8 has raised fears that France risks entering a period of prolonged political and financial instability.
Should Bayrou lose the vote — called after months of squabbling over a budget that aims to slash spending — he must resign along with his entire government.
President Emmanuel Macron could reappoint him, or select a new figure who would be the head of state’s seventh premier since taking office in 2017, or call early elections to break that political deadlock that has now dogged France for over a year.
Bayrou’s move has also raised questions for Macron, who has less than two years to serve of his mandate, with the hard left calling on the president to resign — something he has always rejected.
Bayrou told TF1 television in an interview that he “did not believe” dissolving the National Assembly and calling snap elections “would allow us to have stability.”
Bayrou is due to host heads of political parties from Monday for last-ditch talks over the budget, which foresees some 43.8 billion euros ($51 billion) of cost-savings rejected by the opposition.
Bayrou told TF1 he is ready to “open all necessary negotiations” with the opposition on the budget, but “the prerequisite is that we agree on the importance of the effort” on the savings to be made.
“The economic situation is worsening every year in an intolerable way,” said Bayrou, warning that the young will be the victims “if we create chaos.”
“There are 12 days left (to the confidence vote), and 12 days is a very, very long time to talk,” he said. “And if we agree on the seriousness, on the urgency of things, then we open negotiations.”

With both the far-right and left-wing parties vowing not to back the government, analysts say that Bayrou has mathematically little chance of surviving without a major political turnaround.
The prime minister fumed against the left and far-right, usually sworn enemies, for teaming up in an alliance “which says ‘we are going to topple the government’.”
Bayrou acknowledged, though, that he was himself not optimistic about winning the vote, saying: “Today, on the face of it, we cannot obtain this confidence (from parliament), but we know that there has not been a majority for a long time.”
Edouard Philippe, a former prime minister and strong centrist contender for the 2027 presidential election, backed Bayrou but said a new dissolution of the lower house could be inevitable in the event of a persistent deadlock.
“If nothing happens, if no government can prepare a budget, how can this issue be resolved? Through dissolution,” he told AFP.
The last such elections, in mid-2024, resulted with pro-Macron forces a minority in a parliament where the far-right National Rally (RN) of Marine Le Pen is the single largest party.
Macron on Wednesday gave his “full support” to Bayrou, according to government spokeswoman Sophie Primas.

Bayrou, 74, a veteran centrist appointed by Macron in December last year, had on Tuesday vowed to “fight like a dog” to keep his job.
But some members of Macron’s camp now believe calling new elections might be the only solution.
“No one wants it, but it is inevitable,” a senior member of the presidential team told AFP on condition of anonymity.
A broad anti-government campaign dubbed “Bloquons tout” (“Let’s block everything“) and backed by the left has urged the French to stage a nationwide shutdown on September 10.
 


NTSB says B-52 bomber nearly hit two different planes in North Dakota last month

NTSB says B-52 bomber nearly hit two different planes in North Dakota last month
Updated 16 min ago

NTSB says B-52 bomber nearly hit two different planes in North Dakota last month

NTSB says B-52 bomber nearly hit two different planes in North Dakota last month
  • Investigators released their preliminary report Wednesday on the July 19 incident that happened after the bomber completed a flyover at the North Dakota State Fair in Minot

Shortly after an airliner made an aggressive maneuver to avoid colliding with a B-52 last month over North Dakota, the bomber nearly collided with a small private plane as it flew past the Minot airport, according to the National Transportation Safety Board.
Investigators released their preliminary report Wednesday on the July 19 incident that happened after the bomber completed a flyover at the North Dakota State Fair in Minot. The close call with Delta Flight 3788 is well known because of a video a passenger shot of the pilot’s announcement after making an abrupt turn to avoid the bomber. But the fact that the B-52 subsequently came within one-third of a mile of a small Piper airplane hadn’t been previously reported.
The SkyWest pilot told his passengers that day that he was surprised to see the bomber looming to the right, and the US Air Force also said that air traffic controllers never warned the B-52 crew about the nearby airliner. Officials said at the time that the flyover had been cleared with the FAA and the private controllers who oversee the Minot airport ahead of time.
These close calls were just the latest incidents to raise questions about aviation safety in the wake of January’s midair collision over Washington, D.C., that killed 67 people.
The NTSB report doesn’t identify the cause of the incidents, but the transcript of the conversation between the three planes, the air traffic controller on duty in Minot and a regional FAA controller at a radar center in Rapid City, South Dakota, show several confusing commands were issued by the tower that day. Investigators won’t release their final report on the cause until sometime next year.
With the B-52 and Delta planes converging on the airport from different directions, the controller told the Delta plane that was carrying 80 people to fly in a circle to the right until the pilot told the controller he didn’t want to do that because the bomber was off to his right, so he broke off his approach.
“Sorry about the aggressive maneuver. It caught me by surprise,” the pilot can be heard saying on the video a passenger posted on social media. “This is not normal at all. I don’t know why they didn’t give us a heads up.”
At one point, the controller intended to give the Delta plane directions but mistakenly called out the bomber’s call sign and had to cancel that order.
Less than a minute after the B-52 crossed the path of the airliner, it nearly struck the small plane that was also circling while the bomber flew past the airport on its way back to Minot Air Force Base where 26 of the bombers are based.
Aviation safety consultant Jeff Guzzetti, who used to investigate plane crashes for both the NTSB and FAA, said the controller didn’t give the commands for the Delta and Piper planes to circle soon enough for them to stay a safe distance away from the bomber.
The transcript shows the local controller calling the regional FAA controller to get permission every time before he issued a command to the planes. Guzzetti said it is not clear whether taking that extra step to consult with the other controller delayed the commands or whether the Minot controller simply didn’t anticipate how close the planes would come.
“It all just kind of came together at the same time very quickly, and this controller was not on top of it,” Guzzetti said.
The Minot airport typically handles between 18 and 24 flights a day. But at this moment, three planes were all arriving at the same time.
After the close calls, all the planes landed safely.
These North Dakota close calls put the spotlight on small airports like Minot that are run without their own radar systems, but it is not clear whether that contract tower program that includes 265 airport towers nationwide had anything to do with the incident. There was one controller staffing the tower in Minot at the time of incident, and a controller at a regional radar center in Rapid City was helping direct planes in the area.


Trump’s doubling of tariffs hits India, damaging ties

Trump’s doubling of tariffs hits India, damaging ties
Updated 29 min ago

Trump’s doubling of tariffs hits India, damaging ties

Trump’s doubling of tariffs hits India, damaging ties
  • The new tariffs threaten thousands of small exporters and jobs in India, including in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s home state of Gujarat, and are expected to hurt growth in the world’s fastest-growing major economy

WASHINGTON/NEW DELHI: US President Donald Trump’s doubling of tariffs on imports from India to as much as 50 percent took effect as scheduled on Wednesday, delivering a serious blow to ties between two powerful democracies that had in recent decades become strategic partners.
A punitive 25 percent tariff, imposed due to India’s purchases of Russian oil, was added to Trump’s prior 25 percent tariff on many imports from the South Asian nation. It takes total duties as high as 50 percent for goods as varied as garments, gems and jewelry, footwear, sporting goods, furniture and chemicals — among the highest imposed by the US and roughly on par with Brazil and China.
The new tariffs threaten thousands of small exporters and jobs in India, including in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s home state of Gujarat, and are expected to hurt growth in the world’s fastest-growing major economy.
There was no indication of renewed talks between Washington and New Delhi on Wednesday, after five rounds of talks failed to yield a trade deal to cut US tariff rates to around 15 percent — like the deals agreed by Japan, South Korea and the European Union. The discussions were marked by miscalculations and missed signals, officials on both sides say.
India’s trade ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment. But an Indian government source said New Delhi hoped the US would review the extra 25 percent tariff, adding that the government plans steps to help cushion its impact.
There was no Indian market reaction to the move on Wednesday as bourses were closed for a Hindu festival, but on Tuesday equity benchmarks logged their worst session in three months after a Washington notification confirmed the additional tariff.
The Indian rupee also continued its losing streak for a fifth consecutive session on Tuesday, ending at its lowest level in three weeks.
While the tariff disruption would be bruising, it may not be all gloom and doom for the world’s fifth-largest economy if New Delhi can further reform its economy and become less protectionist as it seeks to resolve the crisis with Washington, analysts said.
A US Customs and Border Protection notice to shippers provides a three-week exemption for Indian goods that were loaded onto a vessel and in transit to the US before the midnight deadline.
Also exempted are steel, aluminum and derivative products, passenger vehicles, copper and other goods subject to separate tariffs of up to 50 percent under the Section 232 national security trade law.
Indian trade ministry officials say the average tariff on US imports is around 7.5 percent, while the US Trade Representative’s office has highlighted rates of up to 100 percent on autos and an average applied tariff rate of 39 percent on US farm goods.

FAILED TALKS
White House trade adviser Peter Navarro said India must simply stop buying Russian oil to reduce US import taxes.
“It’s real easy, that India can get 25 percent off tomorrow if it stops buying Russian oil and helping to feed (Russia’s) war machine,” Navarro told Bloomberg Television.
Washington says India’s purchase of Russian oil helps fund Moscow’s war in Ukraine and that New Delhi also profits from it. India has rejected the accusation as a double standard, pointing to US and European trade links with Russia.
China remains a top buyer of Russian oil, but Trump has said he does not immediately need to consider similar extra tariffs on Chinese goods amid a delicate US-China trade truce.
Commenting on the punishing levy, India’s junior foreign minister Kirti Vardhan Singh told reporters: “We are taking appropriate steps so that it does not harm our economy, and let me assure you that the strength of our economy will carry us through these times.”
“Our concern is our energy security, and we will continue to purchase energy sources from whichever country benefits us.”

EXPORTERS LOSE COMPETITIVE EDGE
US-India two-way goods trade totaled $129 billion in 2024, with a $45.8 billion US trade deficit, according to US Census Bureau data.
Exporter groups estimate the tariffs could affect nearly 55 percent of India’s $87 billion in merchandise exports to the US, while benefiting competitors such as Vietnam, Bangladesh and China.
Rajeswari Sengupta, an economics professor at Mumbai’s Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research, said allowing the rupee to “depreciate is one way to provide indirect support to exporters” and regain lost competitiveness.
“The government should adopt a more trade-oriented, less protectionist strategy to boost demand, which is already slackening,” she said.
Sustained tariffs at this rate could dent India’s growing appeal as an alternative manufacturing hub to China for goods such as smartphones and electronics.
“Up to 2 million jobs are at risk in the near term,” said Sujan Hajjra, chief economist at the Anand Rathi Group. But he noted that robust domestic demand will help to cushion the blow, and that India has a diversified export base and a solid earnings and inflation outlook.
The US-India standoff has raised questions about the broader relationship between India and the US, important security partners who share concerns about China.
However, on Tuesday the two issued identical statements saying senior foreign and defense department officials of the two countries met virtually on Monday and expressed “eagerness to continue enhancing the breadth and depth of the bilateral relationship.”


TikTok owner ByteDance sets valuation at over $330 billion as revenue grows, sources say

TikTok owner ByteDance sets valuation at over $330 billion as revenue grows, sources say
Updated 28 August 2025

TikTok owner ByteDance sets valuation at over $330 billion as revenue grows, sources say

TikTok owner ByteDance sets valuation at over $330 billion as revenue grows, sources say
  • ByteDance sets valuation at over $330 billion for new share buyback, sources say

HONG KONG: ByteDance, the owner of short-video app TikTok, is set to launch a new employee share buyback that will value the Chinese technology giant at more than $330 billion, driven by continued revenue growth, said three people with knowledge of the matter. The company plans to offer current employees $200.41 per share in the repurchase program, the people said, up 5.5 percent from $189.90 each it offered them about six months ago which valued ByteDance at roughly $315 billion.
The buyback is expected to be launched in the autumn.
The latest buyback at a higher valuation will come as ByteDance consolidates its position as the world’s largest social media company by revenue, with its second-quarter revenue up 25 percent year-on-year, the people said.
That jump resulted in the company’s second-quarter revenue hitting about $48 billion, two of the people said, most of which is from the Chinese market as it continues to face political pressure to divest its US arm.
The revised valuation and the second-quarter revenue growth details had not been reported previously. The sources declined to be named as they were not authorized to discuss the information with media.
ByteDance did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
In the first quarter, ByteDance’s revenue rose to more than $43 billion, making it the world’s No. 1 social media company by sales, topping Facebook and Instagram owner Meta’s $42.3 billion in that period.
Both firms maintained sales growth above 20 percent in the second quarter, helped by robust advertising demand.
ByteDance’s biannual buybacks allow employees of the privately held company to cash out some holdings and reflect a balance sheet strengthened by its expanding domestic and international businesses.
It is increasingly common for late-stage private companies to conduct regular buybacks to retain and provide liquidity to employees without an exit such as an initial public offering.
Many, including SpaceX and OpenAI, use external investor capital to fund these programs. ByteDance has been an outlier, steadily using its own balance sheet in a signal of financial flexibility and healthy margins. ByteDance is also widely regarded as one of China’s artificial intelligence leaders, having invested billions of dollars in buying Nvidia chips, building AI-related infrastructure and developing its models.

TIKTOK SALE
Despite outpacing Meta on revenue this year, ByteDance’s valuation remains less than a fifth of Meta’s roughly $1.9 trillion market capitalization — a gap analysts attribute largely to political and regulatory risks in the US
ByteDance faces intense pressure in Washington, where lawmakers have raised national security concerns over its Chinese ownership.
Congress last year passed a law requiring ByteDance to divest TikTok’s US assets by January 19, 2025 or face a nationwide ban of the app, which has 170 million US users. President Donald Trump has granted TikTok multiple reprieves and last week extended the deadline for the company to divest its US assets to September 17. He said US buyers were lined up for TikTok and the deadline could be pushed back again.
Some lawmakers have criticized the delay, arguing his administration is flouting the law and ignoring national security concerns related to Chinese control over TikTok. ByteDance is profitable as a company, but TikTok’s US business has been loss-making so far, said two of the people. TikTok did not respond to a request for comment from Reuters.
If the sale of TikTok’s US business is finalized, it is expected to be owned by a joint venture formed by an American investor consortium and ByteDance, which will maintain a minority stake.
The consortium, which has emerged as the frontrunner, includes ByteDance’s current shareholders Susquehanna International Group, General Atlantic and KKR as well as Andreessen Horowitz, Reuters previously reported. Blackstone recently dropped out of the consortium after several delays in the deal’s timeline. The new ByteDance buyback could help bolster morale among its US-based staff, some of whom are concerned about TikTok’s uncertain future. TikTok has also been working on preparing a potential standalone app for US users, sources told Reuters earlier, though it remains unclear if any contingency plan will be finalized amid Trump’s ongoing trade talks with Beijing. 


US CDC director Susan Monarez is out after less than a month on the job, federal officials say

US CDC director Susan Monarez is out after less than a month on the job, federal officials say
Updated 28 August 2025

US CDC director Susan Monarez is out after less than a month on the job, federal officials say

US CDC director Susan Monarez is out after less than a month on the job, federal officials say
  • Monarez, 50, was the agency’s 21st director and the first to pass through Senate confirmation following a 2023 law

NEW YORK: The director of the nation’s top public health agency is out after less than one month in the job, US officials announced Wednesday.
“Susan Monarez is no longer director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. We thank her for her dedicated service to the American people,” the US Department of Health and Human Services wrote on social media.
HHS officials did not explain why Monarez is no longer with the agency.
Before the department’s announcement, she told The Associated Press: “I can’t comment.”
Monarez, 50, was the agency’s 21st director and the first to pass through Senate confirmation following a 2023 law. She was named acting director in January and then tapped as the nominee in March after Trump abruptly withdrew his first choice, David Weldon.
She was sworn in on July 31 — less than a month ago, making her the shortest-serving CDC director in the history of the 79-year-old agency.
Her short time at CDC was tumultuous. On Aug. 8, at the end of her first full week on the job, a Georgia man opened fire from a spot at a pharmacy across the street from CDC’s main entrance. The 30-year-old man blamed the COVID-19 vaccine for making him depressed and suicidal. He killed a police officer and fired more than 180 shots into CDC buildings before killing himself.
No one at CDC was injured, but it shell-shocked a staff that already had low morale from other recent changes.
The Atlanta-based federal agency was initially founded to prevent the spread of malaria in the US Its mission was later expanded, and it gradually became a global leader on infectious and chronic diseases and a go-to source of health information.
This year it’s been hit by widespread staff cuts, resignations of key officials and heated controversy over long-standing CDC vaccine policies upended by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
During her Senate confirmation process, Monarez told senators that she values vaccines, public health interventions and rigorous scientific evidence. But she largely dodged questions about whether those positions put her at odds with Kennedy, a longtime vaccine skeptic who has criticized and sought to dismantle some of the agency’s previous protocols and decisions.
The Washington Post first reported she was ousted, citing unnamed sources within the Trump administration.