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Indonesia, US and allies launch joint military drills

Indonesia, US and allies launch joint military drills
The annual “Super Garuda Shield” drills will take place in the capital Jakarta and several locations on the western island of Sumatra and the Riau archipelago until September 4. (AFP)
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Updated 8 min 37 sec ago

Indonesia, US and allies launch joint military drills

Indonesia, US and allies launch joint military drills
  • Indonesia and the United States launched joint military drills on Monday that will last more than a week, joining allies from 11 countries in exercises aimed at ensuring stability in the Asia-Pacific
  • The US and some allies such as Australia have expressed growing concern about China’s increasing assertiveness in the Pacific

JAKARTA: Indonesia and the United States launched joint military drills on Monday that will last more than a week, joining allies from 11 countries in exercises aimed at ensuring stability in the Asia-Pacific region.
The annual “Super Garuda Shield” drills will take place in the capital Jakarta and several locations on the western island of Sumatra and the Riau archipelago until September 4.
More than 4,100 Indonesian and 1,300 American troops will take part, joined by participants from Australia, Japan, Singapore, France, New Zealand, Britain and other nations.
The US and some allies such as Australia have expressed growing concern about China’s increasing assertiveness in the Pacific, but Washington has previously said such drills are not aimed at Beijing.
Samuel Paparo, commander of US Indo-Pacific Command, said this year’s exercises were “the largest Super Garuda Shield ever,” adding that they would help participating nations boost deterrence, without elaborating.
“It represents deterring anyone that would hope to change the facts on the ground using violence with the collective determination of all participants to uphold the principles of sovereignty,” Paparo said at Monday’s opening ceremony.
“We do this by getting better every day across all domains... so if the unforgiving hour comes when we need each other as partners, we pick up the phone and we begin operating from a basis of deep trust.”
The program includes staff exercises, cyber defense drills, and a live-fire event, the Indonesian military said.
Countries including India, Papua New Guinea and East Timor also sent observers for the exercise.
Indonesia maintains a neutral foreign policy and tries to keep good relations with Washington and Beijing, walking the diplomatic tightrope in the superpower rivalry.


New Zealand Post suspends deliveries to US over tariffs

Updated 28 sec ago

New Zealand Post suspends deliveries to US over tariffs

New Zealand Post suspends deliveries to US over tariffs
WELLINGTON: New Zealand’s postal service said it had suspended most deliveries to the United States, citing uncertainty over the impact of President Donald Trump’s looming tariffs.
NZ Post said it had temporarily suspended services as of August 21 before the US 15 percent tariff takes effect on August 29.
Only limited letters and important documents — such as passports or legal letters — would be delivered to the United States, said a statement on the carrier’s website.
The move follows similar steps taken by postal services and mail carriers in India, Germany, France, Belgium, Austria and Denmark after the Trump administration said that as of August 29 it would abolish a tax exemption on small packages entering the United States.
The United States started imposing tariffs on foreign nations in April, but most are only coming into force this month after months of negotiations and delays.
NZ Post said it was “working quickly” to make changes to its service and that it hoped to resume deliveries as “soon as possible.”
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon told Radio New Zealand on Monday there was confusion over the impact of the tariffs.
“As these postal organizations have worked out, they can’t guarantee what the tariff rate will be or cost, or how that will all work in practical terms,” Luxon said.
“I’m sure NZ Post, along with its counterparts in other countries, will work with the US to get clarity.”

Washington makes military aid overtures to Sahel juntas

Washington makes military aid overtures to Sahel juntas
Updated 4 min 45 sec ago

Washington makes military aid overtures to Sahel juntas

Washington makes military aid overtures to Sahel juntas
  • In recent weeks several senior American figures have paid visits to the capitals of Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger
  • Trump has brought US access to key minerals front and center of his negotiations with foreign countries

ABIDJAN: Under President Donald Trump the United States has reset relations with west Africa’s military leaders on a mutual back-scratching basis, bartering help fighting militants for the Sahel region’s mining riches, experts say.
While Joe Biden was in office the US suspended most of the development and military aid it sent to Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger in the wake of the rash of coups that brought juntas to power in the three restive countries between 2020 and 2023.
Trump’s return to the White House has shifted the US away from that stance, as part of a wider pivot in Washington’s African foreign policy and its attempts to counter Russia and China’s influence on the continent.
“Trade, not aid... is now truly our policy for Africa,” Troy Fitrell, the State Department’s top official for African affairs, told an audience in Abidjan, Ivory Coast in May.
In recent weeks several other senior American figures have paid visits to the capitals of Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger, which have all been struggling to root out militants linked to Al-Qaeda or the Daesh group for more than a decade.
In early July, Rudolph Atallah, a security and counterterrorism adviser to Trump, visited Mali to offer the “American solution” for the unrest.
“We have the necessary equipment, the intelligence and the forces to stand up to this menace. If Mali decides to work with us, we’ll know what to do,” Atallah was quoted as saying by the country’s state newspaper.
Several days later, William B. Stevens, the State Department’s deputy assistant secretary for West Africa, likewise raised the possibility of private American investment in the anti-militant fight to an audience in the Malian capital Bamako, after stop-offs in Ouagadougou and Niamey.
“Washington offered to kill the leaders of militant groups, in exchange for access to lithium and gold for American businesses,” said Ulf Laessing, head of the Sahel program at the Konrad Adenauer Foundation, a think tank affiliated with Germany’s conservative CDU party.
Trump has brought US access to key minerals front and center of his negotiations with foreign countries, including in his attempts to end the Russia-Ukraine war and the long-running conflict between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Mali is among Africa’s top producers of gold and lithium, a key component in the electric car batteries necessary for the transition to a low-carbon economy in the age of climate change.
Burkina Faso likewise possesses rich veins of gold, while Niger’s uranium deposits make the desert nation among the world’s top exporters of the radioactive metal.
Although all three Sahel juntas came to power while promising the people greater control and sovereignty over their country’s mineral wealth, the officers in charge have welcomed Washington’s change in tack.
“We have to look at investment, the potential of our countries,” said Mali’s Foreign Minister Abdoulaye Diop in July, hailing “today’s convergence of viewpoints between the American administration and the government of Mali.”
Laessing argued that “some officials in the State Department, worried about the end of USAID and the closure of embassies, pointed out Mali’s rich resources to the Trump administration as a way to encourage it to remain engaged and keep the American embassy in Bamako open, at a point where Russia and China are expanding their influence in the region.”
But for Liam Karr, an analyst at the American Enterprise Institute, any critical minerals deal would be “a much longer-term project.”
“The terrorism threat is the biggest issue... stabilising the region is key to any investment hopes,” Karr argued.
Washington’s courting of the Sahel states comes despite the juntas pivoting toward Russia, having cut ties with the West and former imperial ruler France in particular since the coups.
Moscow has sent mercenaries from the infamous Wagner paramilitary organization, and its successor the Africa Corps, to help the Sahel countries’ armies push back the militants.
After Niger nationalized the local branch of French uranium giant Orano, the Kremlin, which commands the world’s largest arsenal of nuclear weapons, said it wished to mine the radioactive metal in the west African country itself.
So far, Russia’s foothold in the region has yet to provoke the White House’s ire.
In his visit to Mali, security adviser Atallah said he saw no problem with Moscow’s presence in the region, insisting that the country was “free to choose its partners.”
“Since the French were kicked out... and Russia welcomed into the region, Trump sees no problem in accompanying and/or supporting Russian efforts in the region. The fact that the Russians eschew democratic values and human rights promotion also aligns with the Trump administration’s transactional approach to relations between states,” Bisa Williams, a former US ambassador to Niger, said.
Williams, now a consultant and academic, said Trump could strike an agreement that “would guarantee majority or near-majority ownership and a high percentage of extracted minerals in exchange for support fighting terrorism.”
That could involve the deployment of American mercenaries, along the lines of how Russia used Wagner, Williams said.
“That way, he wouldn’t have to defend the policy before Congress or his MAGA base.”


Vietnam evacuates tens of thousands ahead of Typhoon Kajiki

Vietnam evacuates tens of thousands ahead of Typhoon Kajiki
Updated 22 min 12 sec ago

Vietnam evacuates tens of thousands ahead of Typhoon Kajiki

Vietnam evacuates tens of thousands ahead of Typhoon Kajiki
  • The typhoon – the fifth to affect Vietnam this year – is currently at sea
  • More than 325,500 residents in five coastal provinces have been slated for evacuation

VINH, Vietnam: Tens of thousands of residents were being evacuated from coastal Vietnam on Monday, as Typhoon Kajiki barrelled toward landfall expected to lash the country’s central belt with gales of around 160 kmh.
The typhoon – the fifth to affect Vietnam this year – is currently at sea, roiling the Gulf of Tonkin with waves of up to 9.5 meters (31 feet).
More than 325,500 residents in five coastal provinces have been slated for evacuation to schools and public buildings converted into temporary shelters, authorities said.
The waterfront city of Vinh was deluged overnight, its streets largely deserted by morning with most shops and restaurants closed as residents and business-owners sandbagged their property entrances.
By dawn nearly 30,000 people had been evacuated from the region, as 16,000 military personnel were mobilized.
Two domestic airports were shut and all fishing ships in the typhoon’s path have been called back to harbor.
“I have never heard of a typhoon of this big scale coming to our city,” said 66-year-old Le Manh Tung at a Vinh indoor sports stadium, where evacuated families dined on a simple breakfast of sticky rice.
“I am a bit scared, but then we have to accept it because it’s nature – we cannot do anything,” he said, among only a few dozen people camped out at the evacuation site on Monday morning.
The typhoon is expected to make landfall around 1:00 p.m. (0600 GMT) with winds of 157 kilometers per hour (98 miles per hour), Vietnam’s National Center for Hydro-Meteorological Forecasting said.
Scientists say human-caused climate change is driving more intense and unpredictable weather patterns that can make destructive floods and storms more likely, particularly in the tropics.
“Normally we get storms and flooding, but never this big,” said 52-year-old evacuee Nguyen Thi Nhan.
The typhoon’s power is due to dramatically dissipate after it makes landfall.
The Joint Typhoon Warning Center said conditions suggested “an approaching weakening trend as the system approaches the continental shelf of the Gulf of Tonkin where there is less ocean heat content.”
Over a dozen domestic Vietnamese flights were canceled on Sunday, while China’s tropical resort of Hainan evacuated around 20,000 residents as the typhoon passed its south.
The island’s main city, Sanya, closed scenic areas and halted business operations.
In Vietnam, more than 100 people have been killed or left missing from natural disasters in the first seven months of 2025, according to the agriculture ministry.
Economic losses have been estimated at more than $21 million.
Vietnam suffered $3.3 billion in economic losses last September as a result of Typhoon Yagi, which swept across the country’s north and caused hundreds of fatalities.


Mexican drug lord Ismael ‘El Mayo’ Zambada to plead guilty to federal charges

Mexican drug lord Ismael ‘El Mayo’ Zambada to plead guilty to federal charges
Updated 30 min 8 sec ago

Mexican drug lord Ismael ‘El Mayo’ Zambada to plead guilty to federal charges

Mexican drug lord Ismael ‘El Mayo’ Zambada to plead guilty to federal charges
  • Longtime leader of the Sinaloa cartel is scheduled to appear before a federal judge in Brooklyn for a change of plea hearing
  • Appearance comes after federal prosecutors said two weeks ago that they wouldn’t seek the death penalty against Zambada

NEW YORK: Former Mexican cartel kingpin Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada is expected to plead guilty Monday to federal charges related to his role in the violent drug trade that for years flooded the US with cocaine, heroin and other illicit substances.
The longtime leader of the Sinaloa cartel is scheduled to appear before a federal judge in Brooklyn for a change of plea hearing.
The appearance comes after federal prosecutors said two weeks ago that they wouldn’t seek the death penalty against Zambada, who was arrested in Texas last year.
Prosecutors, in a court filing ahead of Monday’s hearing, said they expect the 77-year-old to plead guilty to one count of racketeering conspiracy and one count of running a continuing criminal enterprise.
Zambada pleaded not guilty last year to a range of drug trafficking and related charges, including gun and money laundering offenses.
Lawyers for Zambada didn’t immediately respond to an email seeking comment Friday.
Prosecutors say the Sinaloa cartel evolved from a regional player into the largest drug trafficking organization in the world under the leadership of Zambada and co-founder Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzman.
They say Zambada presided over a violent, highly militarized cartel with a private security force armed with powerful weapons and a cadre of “sicarios,” or hitmen, that carried out assassinations, kidnappings and torture.
Guzman was sentenced to life behind bars following his conviction in the same federal court in Brooklyn in 2019. His two sons, who ran a cartel faction, also face federal charges.


SpaceX postpones Starship test flight over ground system issue

SpaceX postpones Starship test flight over ground system issue
Updated 31 min 19 sec ago

SpaceX postpones Starship test flight over ground system issue

SpaceX postpones Starship test flight over ground system issue
  • SpaceX is now targeting as soon as Monday, August 25, for Starship’s next launch attempt
  • Development of SpaceX’s next-generation rocket has faced repeated hiccups this year

Elon Musk’s SpaceX on Sunday called off the launch of Starship’s tenth mission from Texas over an issue at its launch site, delaying an attempt to achieve several long-sought development milestones missed due to past tests ending in early failures.
The 70.7-meter-tall Super Heavy booster and its 52-meter-tall Starship upper half sat stacked on a launch mount at SpaceX’s Starbase rocket facilities as it was being filled with propellant ahead of a liftoff time of 7:35 p.m. ET (2335 GMT).
But roughly 30 minutes from liftoff, SpaceX said on X it was standing down to allow time to troubleshoot an issue with ground systems.
Musk had been poised to provide an update on Starship’s development progress prior to the rocket’s launch on Sunday, but a placeholder live stream indicated it had been canceled.
Similar postponements in the past have been resolved in a matter of days. SpaceX is now targeting as soon as Monday, August 25, for Starship’s next launch attempt, according to its website.
Development of SpaceX’s next-generation rocket, the center of the company’s powerful launch business future and Musk’s Mars ambitions, has faced repeated hiccups this year.
Two Starship testing failures early in flight, another failure in space on its ninth flight, and a massive test stand explosion in June that sent debris flying into nearby Mexican territory have tested SpaceX’s test-to-failure development approach.
Still, the company has continued to swiftly produce new Starships for test flights at its sprawling Starbase production facilities. NASA hopes to use the rocket as soon as 2027 for its first crewed moon landing since the Apollo program.
The setbacks underscore the technical complexities of Starship’s latest iteration, packed with far more capabilities such as increased thrust, a potentially more resilient heat shield and stronger steering flaps crucial to nailing its atmospheric reentry – key traits for Starship’s rapid reusability that Musk has long pushed for.
The stacked system had been expected to blast off from Texas around sunset on Sunday before its Starship upper stage separated from the Super Heavy booster dozens of miles in altitude. Super Heavy, which has returned for a landing at its launch pad in giant mechanical arms in past tests, would have instead targeted the Gulf of Mexico for a soft water landing in order to test a backup engine configuration.
Starship was to briefly ignite its own engines to blast further into space, where it would have attempted to release its first batch of mock Starlink satellites and reignite an engine while on a suborbital path around the planet.
After that phase, the ship targets an atmospheric reentry over the Indian Ocean, a crucial flight phase that tests a variety of prototypical heat shield tiles and engine flaps designed to endure a barrage of blazing heat that has largely shredded the rocket’s exterior during past flights.
“Starship’s reentry profile is designed to intentionally stress the structural limits of the upper stage’s rear flaps while at the point of maximum entry dynamic pressure,” SpaceX said on its website.