
Insect crawls on J.Lo during European tour
Singer, dancer and actress Jennifer Lopez was performing in Almaty, Kazakhstan when an uninvited guest joined her on stage. She casually dismissed the intruder, a long-legged insect, and thanked her fans.
00:28 - Source: CNN
Vertical World News 16 videos
Insect crawls on J.Lo during European tour
Singer, dancer and actress Jennifer Lopez was performing in Almaty, Kazakhstan when an uninvited guest joined her on stage. She casually dismissed the intruder, a long-legged insect, and thanked her fans.
00:28 - Source: CNN
Journalists killed in targeted Israeli strike on Gaza
Al Jazeera correspondent Anas Al-Sharif was killed in a targeted strike in Gaza on Sunday alongside multiple other journalists. The Israeli military accused Al-Sharif of leading a Hamas cell, an allegation Al-Sharif had previously denied.
01:50 - Source: CNN
Australia will recognize Palestine in September
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced on Monday that Australia will recognize a Palestinian state at the General Assembly of the United Nations in September. Australia joins the UK, France and Canada in announcing plans to recognize a Palestinian state. The move leaves the US increasingly isolated from some of its closest allies in its defense of Israel's escalating military campaign that's decimated the besieged enclave after almost two years of war.
00:29 - Source: CNN
Wildfires rage across Europe amid heatwaves
Wildfires have been raging across Europe over the past few days, with several countries, such as Italy and Spain, experiencing severe heatwaves.
00:48 - Source: CNN
Gazan boy struck and killed by falling aid
A 14-year-old boy was killed by an airdropped aid package in Gaza on Saturday, according to Al-Awda hospital. The UN has warned that airdrops of aid are ineffective, expensive and dangerous in heavily populated areas.
01:30 - Source: CNN
Hundreds arrested at Palestine Action protest
In the UK, hundreds have been arrested by London police for protesting the British government's decision to ban the group Palestine Action under anti-terrorism laws. The group, which opposes weapons sales to Israel, is challenging the ban. Earlier, police had cautioned they would arrest anyone showing support for the proscribed group. CNN's Isobel Yeung reports.
01:26 - Source: CNN
Ukrainians in Kyiv react to Trump-Putin meeting in Alaska
As US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin prepare to meet in Alaska to discuss a potential end to the war in Ukraine, residents in Kyiv told CNN how they felt about the meeting that, so far, excludes Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
00:43 - Source: CNN
Israelis protest Netanyahu's Gaza policies
CNN's Matthew Chance is in Tel Aviv, where thousands of protesters are gathering to call on the Israeli government to end the war in Gaza
01:49 - Source: CNN
Inside a military raid deep in Ecuador's gang territory
CNN follows a military raid in Duran, Ecuador as they go door to door deep inside gang territory. Senior National Correspondent David Culver is with the authorities as they seize drugs, uncover explosive devices, and make a gruesome discovery. Watch 'Ecuador: The Narco Superhighway' on 'The Whole Story with Anderson Cooper' Sunday August 10 at 9pm ET on CNN.
01:55 - Source: CNN
Ukrainians in Kyiv react to Trump-Putin meeting in Alaska
As US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin prepare to meet in Alaska to discuss a potential end to the war in Ukraine, residents in Kyiv told CNN how they felt about the meeting that, so far, excludes Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
00:43 - Source: CNN
Analysis: Why Alaska signals a slow defeat for Ukraine
President Donald Trump said he'll be meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska to discuss a potential peace deal to end the war in Ukraine that could include 'some swapping of territories.' But as CNN's Nick Paton Walsh explains, the conditions around Friday's summit so wildly favor Moscow, it's hard to see how a deal emerges that does not eviscerate Ukraine.
01:18 - Source: CNN
Zelensky rejects territorial concession with Russia
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky said in a video address after President Trump's announcement to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin that Ukraine is "ready to work together with President Trump," but quashed the idea of any territory concessions.
01:22 - Source: CNN
Israel 'brutally determined' to capture Gaza in new escalation plan
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's military escalation in Gaza, which he claims will capture the city and eliminate Hamas, brings doubtful Israeli citizens to the streets in protest. Palestinians in Gaza scramble for safety and brace for impact as the war intensifies.
02:33 - Source: CNN
Balcony collapses in Gaza under weight of crowd scrambling for aid
As Palestinians rushed toward an aid package airdropped in Gaza City, a balcony collapsed under the weight of the crowd. It is not clear how many people were injured in this incident.
00:41 - Source: CNN
Palestinians and Israelis react to plan to take over Gaza City
Israel's security cabinet has approved a plan to take over Gaza City. The deadline for the first phase of the offensive is October 7, according to an Israeli source. Hear how Israelis and Palestinians have reacted to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's plans for occupation.
01:52 - Source: CNN
What could full control of Gaza City look like?
In a major escalation of the conflict, Israel's security cabinet approved a plan to take over Gaza City. CNN's Oren Liebermann explains what the operation could look like.
01:24 - Source: CNN
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The Hill
a few seconds ago
- The Hill
Russia pierces Ukraine's frontline in push ahead of Trump-Putin summit
The Russian military has pierced pockets of Ukraine's frontlines in the eastern Donetsk region this week, pushing forward just days before Russia's President Vladimir Putin is set to meet with President Trump in Alaska. Russian troops have made gains in a push toward Dobropillia, a city some 60 miles northwest of Donetsk city, according to DeepState, a Ukrainian group linked to the military that tracks battlefield advances through open-source data. In response, Ukraine's 1st 'Azov' Corps confirmed on Tuesday that it was tasked with containing the Kremlin's advances. 'The situation remains complex and dynamic. The enemy is attempting to advance in this direction at the cost of significant losses in manpower and equipment,' the unit said Tuesday on social media. 'Units within the corps have planned and carried out actions to block enemy forces in the area.' The Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-based think tank, said in its analysis on late Monday that Russia's drones strikes at longer ranges are 'likely forcing Ukrainian forces to take alternative roads and further stretch [ground lines of communication], which is likely impacting Ukraine's defensive operations that rely on the consistent flow of equipment, supplies and manpower.' Pasi Paroinen, an analyst with Black Bird Group, a Finnish group that closely tracks the Russia-Ukraine war, said Monday that Ukraine's forces have a 'crisis on their hands.' 'Ukrainians will almost certainly rush in reinforcements to the area, but from where and at what cost? Ukrainians are unlikely to have plenty of ready operational or strategic reserves, which means that the forces need to come off other sections of the frontline,' Paroinen wrote. 'This in turn will open further possibilities for the Russians to exploit elsewhere. Be as it may, there is likely no other choice.' As the fighting has continued in eastern Ukraine, Trump, along with European leaders and Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky, held a joint meeting Wednesday, organized by German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, to discuss the president's upcoming huddle with Putin in Anchorage. In a joint press conference after the call, Zelensky said he warned Trump that Putin is 'bluffing' about his openness to a peace deal. Merz said any negotiations over territory must use the frontlines as a 'starting point,' but ruled out international recognition of Russia's occupation. Some European officials have expressed concerns that the president could cut a bad deal with the Russian leader. The president said Monday the meeting was a chance to 'feel out' Putin, who has not publicly backed off his maximalist demands to topple Ukraine's government. Zelensky said on Tuesday that Ukraine might be asked to withdraw its military from Donbas — the eastern region that includes Donetsk and Luhansk — in exchange for a ceasefire, pointing to discussions with Trump's special envoy Steve Witkoff, who met with Putin in Moscow last week. Zelensky said he was not 'ready to discuss Ukraine's territories, as this is solely a matter of our Constitution.' Trump has chafed at Zelensky's resistance to territorial concessions, once again blaming the Ukrainian leader for Russia's invasion on Monday. Russian aerial attacks continued overnight, with the Kremlin firing 49 drones and two missiles in at least three regions, according to Ukraine's Air Force. 'At present, there is no sign that the Russians are preparing to end the war. Our coordinated efforts and joint actions – of Ukraine, the United States, Europe, and all countries that seek peace – can definitely compel Russia to make peace. I thank everyone who is helping,' Zelensky said on Wednesday on the social media platform X.


San Francisco Chronicle
a few seconds ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
The Latest: European leaders to speak with Trump ahead of Friday summit with Putin
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was in Berlin Wednesday for talks with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and virtual meetings with other European and U.S. leaders ahead of the Friday summit between President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin. European and Ukrainian leaders want to be heard before Trump sees Putin in Alaska, where they've been left out. Zelenskyy is due to meet with the Europeans first and then have a call with Trump and Vice President JD Vance about an hour later. Leaders of the 'coalition of the willing' — the nations that would help police any future peace agreement — will take place last. Zelenskyy says he told Trump: 'Putin is bluffing' 'I told the President of the United States and all our European colleagues, 'Putin is bluffing,'' the Ukrainian president said. 'Russia is trying to portray itself as capable of occupying the whole of Ukraine. This is undoubtedly their desire. Putin is also bluffing, pretending that sanctions are not important to him and that they are not working. In reality, the sanctions are very helpful and are hitting the Russian military economy hard,' Zelensky said. 'Yes, it is true that Russia has several times more weapons, including three times more artillery. But Russia also has three times more losses. And that is a fact.' 'I told my colleagues and the President of the United States of America, our European friends, that Putin definitely does not want peace. He wants to occupy our country, and we all understand that very well. Putin cannot fool anyone,' Zelenskyy said. Putin talked with North Korean leader ahead of Trump summit They talked by phone, with Putin and Kim Jong Un discussing their deepening ties and war efforts against Ukraine ahead of Putin's meeting with Trump in Alaska, according to their state news agencies. Putin also shared with Kim information about his talks with Trump scheduled for Friday in Alaska, TASS reported, citing the Kremlin. According to South Korean assessments, North Korea has sent around 15,000 troops to Russia since last fall and also supplied large quantities of military equipment, including artillery and ballistic missiles, in support of Putin's war efforts against Ukraine. Kim has also agreed to send thousands of military construction workers and deminers to Russia's Kursk region, a deployment South Korean intelligence believes could happen soon. German leader: 'There is hope for peace in Ukraine' Merz said that 'we wished President Trump the very best' ahead of his summit with Putin. 'There is hope of movement' toward peace in Ukraine, Merz said, but 'if there is no movement on the Russian side in Alaska, then the United States and the Europeans should and must increase the pressure' on Moscow. He added: 'President Trump knows this position and he shares it to a very large extent.' Merz also said that Ukraine 'is prepared for negotiations on territorial questions,' but that a legal recognition of Russian occupation 'is not up for debate,' and that negotiations must also include 'robust security guarantees for Kyiv.' The Ukrainian military must be in a position to defend the country's sovereignty effectively, he said. French and German leaders say they pressed Trump to include Zelenskyy Macron said Trump is going to 'seek a future trilateral meeting' involving Zelenskyy as well as Trump and Putin. 'I think that's a very important point in this regard. And we hope that it can be held in Europe, in a neutral country that is acceptable to all parties,' Macron said. Merz stressed that the issue of a ceasefire must come at the beginning of the negotiations, adding: 'President Trump also wants to make this one of his priorities in the meeting on Friday with President Putin, and I very much hope that there is a corresponding agreement.' 'So far, all talks that have been conducted with Putin in the past 3 ½ years have been accompanied by an even harder military answer,' Merz said. 'It must be different this time, otherwise talks that are held are not credible and not successful.' Trump, Europeans and Zelenskyy discuss ceasefire aim ahead of Putin summit German Chancellor Friedrich Merz says European leaders and the Ukrainian president had a 'constructive and good' discussion with Trump on Wednesday. Merz, speaking alongside Zelenskyy, said after the videoconference that 'important decisions' could be made in Anchorage on Friday, and stressed that 'fundamental European and Ukrainian security interests must be protected.' French President Emmanuel Macron says Trump was very clear that the U.S. wants to achieve a ceasefire at the meeting in Alaska. Merz said a ceasefire must be the priority. He said Trump said he wants to make a ceasefire one of his priorities. Miami's Freedom Tower, the 'Ellis Island of the South,' is reopening The building where 400,000 Cubans fleeing Fidel Castro's revolution relied on federal services provided at a cost of $6 billion in today's dollars is reopening next month as a museum that explores the meaning of migration, freedom and homeland. It comes at a sensitive moment — Cuban Americans voted overwhelmingly for Trump, but the president's crackdown on migrants — including Cubans — is increasingly viewed as a betrayal. Protests against Trump have gathered outside the tower. Museum organizers tiptoe around present-day politics. In Miami, 70% speak Spanish as their first language, and compassion for migrants runs deep. Internal Bureau of Labor Statistics emails obtained by The Associated Press under the Freedom of Information Act after Trump fired Commissioner Erika McEntarfer suggest an agency with little of the corrupting partisanship Trump had claimed when he called the report 'phony' and 'rigged.' After the commissioner's firing, BLS employees talked about the importance of accurate numbers and professional integrity in producing data foundational for measuring the economy and holding elected officials accountable. 'Our data moves markets because it is some of the most timely and accurate information on economic conditions that businesses and policymakers have,' McEntarfer wrote to the staff. 'BLS data impacts the decisions of the Fed, the President, Congress, and millions of businesses and households. The work of this agency is vital to the US economy.' Zelenskyy and other European leaders to speak with Trump ahead of his Friday summit with Putin Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Wednesday arrived in Berlin for talks with the German chancellor and virtual meetings with President Trump and other European leaders ahead of Friday's planned summit between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has convened the virtual meetings in an attempt to make sure European and Ukraine's leaders are heard ahead of the summit in Alaska, where Trump and Putin are expected to discuss a path toward ending Moscow's war in Ukraine. Zelenskyy and the Europeans have been sidelined from that summit. German government spokesperson Steffen Meyer said the intention of Wednesday's meetings was to 'make clear the position of the Europeans.' Protests being organized for Trump-Putin summit The group Stand Up Alaska is organizing rallies on Thursday and Friday in the state, where sentiment toward Russia has cooled since Putin invaded Ukraine in 2022. The Anchorage Assembly voted unanimously to suspend its three-decade-long sister city relationship with Magadan, Russia, and the Juneau Assembly sent its sister city of Vladivostock a letter expressing concern. Dimitry Shein, who ran unsuccessfully for Alaska's lone seat in the U.S. House in 2018, fled from the Soviet Union to Anchorage with his mother in the early 1990s. He expressed dismay that Trump has grown increasingly authoritarian. Russia and the U.S. 'are just starting to look more and more alike,' he said. ▶ Read more about Alaska's history with Russia Trump's evolving rhetoric about Zelenskyy and Putin Candidate Trump repeatedly said he could end the war in Ukraine 'in 24 hours.' But since President Trump's Jan. 20 inauguration, the road to a peace deal has been fraught with changing dynamics among Trump, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Russian President Vladimir Putin. The summit between Trump and Putin set for Friday in Alaska could now be a pivotal moment in the 3 1/2-year-old war. 'At the end of that meeting, probably the first two minutes, I'll know exactly whether or not a deal can be made,' Trump said Monday. ▶ Read more about what Trump has said about Zelenskyy and Putin. National Guard awaits assignments in DC The troops reported for duty on Tuesday, ramping up after the White House ordered federal forces to take over the city's police department and reduce crime in what the president called — without substantiation — a lawless city. The law lets Trump control the police department for a month. How aggressive the federal presence will be remains unclear. An Army spokesperson who spoke on condition of anonymity to freely describe ongoing operations said Tuesday that, so far, what troops have been told 'clearly and distinctly' is that they will be in a support role to law enforcement. What form that support will take remains to be determined. The Army spokesperson also said that since mobilizing up to 800 National Guard troops could take until week's end, their assignments may not be known until week. White House orders review of Smithsonian exhibits Ahead of the country's 250th birthday, the White House is seeking to ensure that the content in the nation's preeminent museums aligns with Trump's interpretation of American history. The examination will look at all public-facing content, such as social media, exhibition text and educational materials, to 'assess tone, historical framing, and alignment with American ideals.' US national debt reaches record $37 trillion The national debt eclipsed this new milestone years sooner than pre-pandemic projections. The Congressional Budget Office's January 2020 projections predicted the U.S. reaching the milestone after fiscal year 2030. But the debt grew faster than expected as the COVID-19 pandemic shut down much of the U.S. economy and the Trump and Biden administrations borrowed heavily to stabilize the national economy. And according to the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Trump might make an announcement of his own, too. The center said in a statement that 'our beautiful building will undergo renovations to restore its prestige and grandeur' and credited Trump's advocacy. Trump complained during a March visit that the building is in a state of 'tremendous disrepair.'


NBC News
a minute ago
- NBC News
Far-right populists top polls in Germany, France and Britain for the first time
LONDON — For the first time in modern history, far-right and populist parties are simultaneously topping the polls in Europe's three main economies of Germany, France and Britain. A poll Tuesday showed Alternative for Germany — which is under surveillance by the country's intelligence services over suspected extremism — is now the most favored by voters. The survey by broadcaster RTL put the AfD at 26%, ahead of the ruling Christian Democrats at 24%. This is a high watermark for the European far right, a once fringe movement whose virulently anti-immigration, anti-Islam and culture-war politics were shunned by the mainstream just a decade ago. Today, these parties have developed deep ties with President Donald Trump and his Republican allies, who openly cite nationalists such as Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán as inspirations on policy and tactics. For years, France's National Rally has consistently led polls ahead of the country's next presidential election in 2027. And Britain's Reform U.K., led by Trump ally and friend Nigel Farage, has since April topped most polls there. Far-right parties have been elected over the past few years into the governments of Italy, Hungary and elsewhere. The center right and the center left have hemorrhaged votes amid high inflation, fears over immigration and collapsing faith in institutions — all familiar issues in America, too. Tuesday's polling milestone is 'a sign of the power of populism, disinformation and the failure of established parties to understand what is happening,' said Nic Cheeseman, a professor of democracy and international development at England's University of Birmingham. Though the far right has been making gains for the past decade, Cheeseman believes the polls showing the far right leading Europe's top three economies is 'a first — at least in modern times.' There is no guarantee that London, Berlin and Paris will be ruled by far-right parties; these countries' next elections are not until 2029, 2029 and 2027 respectively. These groups are all polling in the 20s and 30s percentage-wise, enough to lead polls in Europe's multiparty systems but not enough to govern alone outside of a coalition. Most of Europe's politicians on this former fringe reject the 'far right' label, with its historical connotations of the Nazism that marauded the continent 80 years ago. Many scholars say these parties nevertheless fit the academic model, defined by nativism — the idea that perceived 'non-native' groups threaten their social fabric — and harsh punishments for criminality. The roots of the far-right surge lie in the world financial crisis of 2008, which prompted government to cut budgets for public services and lowered living standards, some experts say, compounded by the Arab Spring of 2011 that birthed civil war in Syria and a mass refugee crisis in Europe four years later. More recent societal stressors such as the coronavirus pandemic and war in Ukraine have further increased the allure of populism, according to Hans-Jakob Schindler, the senior director of the Counter Extremism Project, a nonprofit international group. But populist parties in Europe have also harnessed social media more powerfully than their more centrist opponents, he said. 'They are masters of using social media much better than any of the more established parties,' he said. 'When you have easy solutions to complex problems' — as he says populist parties do — 'it's easier to communicate than complex political issues that the actual parties, who do politics rather than just doing populism, will have to deal with.'