logo
Hegseth to attend Asia defense summit, with no China meeting planned

Hegseth to attend Asia defense summit, with no China meeting planned

Yahoo7 days ago

U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth will travel to the Shangri-La Dialogue, the largest defense conference in Asia, where he will deliver a speech on the Pentagon's approach to the region under the second Trump administration.
While in Singapore, though, Hegseth is not expected to meet with his counterpart from China, as his predecessor Lloyd Austin did last year. Beijing normally sends its defense minister to the summit but is unlikely to this year, downgrading its participation to a lower-level official.
The gap would make it a year since an American defense secretary has met in person with his Chinese counterpart, even as the two militaries continue speaking at lower levels.
'It is a signal that they are concerned about the level of engagement,' a U.S. defense official said of the Chinese choosing not to send their defense minister.
Incoming defense secretaries usually take the Shangri-La Dialogue to project the new administration's policy toward the region, which America's military has considered the most important in the world for the last decade. Austin visited Singapore all four of his years in office and used his speeches to discuss the value America put on working with like-minded countries.
While there, Hegseth is expected to meet with counterparts from Southeast Asia and U.S. allies, such as the Philippines, Australia and Japan.
Notably, Hegseth still lacks several top advisers on his Asia team. More than five months into the administration, there is no permanent appointee to run the Pentagon's China office and no nominee to lead Indo-Pacific policy overall.
Hegseth previously visited Asia in March, where he affirmed the U.S. military would keep its focus on the region as some countries worried about an isolationist turn in American foreign policy.
'What the Trump administration will do … is truly prioritize and shift this region of the world in a way that is unprecedented,' Hegseth said in a March press conference in Manila.
Hegseth has pledged to 'restore deterrence' to the Indo-Pacific as China continues a massive military buildup and grows more aggressive around U.S. partners in the Philippines and Taiwan.
Members of the Biden administration's Pentagon team have bristled at the critique, arguing they did just that. The head of Indo-Pacific Command Adm. Samuel Paparo has said that the U.S. military would still win in a fight against China, but that he doesn't like the trend lines with China's industrial base outpacing America's.
This year's conference will be headlined by French President Emanuel Macron and feature a large group of European countries, also arriving at a moment of doubt in Washington's policy toward the region.
After Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine, the Biden administration urged countries in Europe and Asia to grow more involved in each other's security. To wit, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy attended the Shangri-La Dialogue last year.
Defense News reported in March that the new Pentagon team has urged Europeans to stay out of the region, though, and focus on defending their own continent alone.
'[There is] no demand signal from the U.S. for the Europeans to be involved in the Pacific,' a European official said at the time.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump can end deportation protections for Cuban and Haitian nationals, Supreme Court says
Trump can end deportation protections for Cuban and Haitian nationals, Supreme Court says

CNN

time11 minutes ago

  • CNN

Trump can end deportation protections for Cuban and Haitian nationals, Supreme Court says

The Supreme Court on Friday allowed President Donald Trump's administration to suspend a Biden-era parole program that allowed a half million immigrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela to temporarily live and work in the United States. It was the second time this month that the high court sided with Trump's efforts to revoke temporary legal status for immigrants. The Supreme Court previously cleared the way for the administration to revoke another temporary program that provided work permits to hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans. The court's brief order was not signed. Two liberal justices – Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson – dissented from the decision. Though the emergency decision from the Supreme Court is not final – the underlying legal case will continue in lower courts – the order will allow the administration to expedite deportations for those who had previously benefited from the program. This story is breaking and will be updated.

I'm a physician and I'm worried that our health agencies are facing increasing chaos
I'm a physician and I'm worried that our health agencies are facing increasing chaos

Fox News

time12 minutes ago

  • Fox News

I'm a physician and I'm worried that our health agencies are facing increasing chaos

The American health system is bleeding out, and it desperately needs a real doctor. Leading Health and Human Services (HHS) today is like navigating a chaotic hospital — patients in every hallway, monitors screaming, seconds ticking away. Yet, instead of a seasoned physician who triages and trusts proven protocols, that hospital is overseen by an activist named Robert F. Kennedy Jr. A patient's oxygen level plummets; nurses turn to HHS Secretary Kennedy. Instead of orders, they get a lecture on conspiracies. Chaos follows. That chaos is now national. Our health agencies are trying to perform open-heart surgery while debating the effectiveness of a scalpel. Scientists who should be developing next-generation cancer vaccines are, instead, defending 60-year-old elementary science. Conspiracy ideology is beginning to take over, and we're all going to pay the price. I'm a board-certified physician and one of the most-followed online, and since Kennedy took office, I've been forced to swap from fact-checking Instagram influencers to fact-checking the nation's top public-health official. Our nation's health system is in shambles, and the leadership of HHS plays a pivotal role in fixing this disaster. That's why it's deeply alarming that Kennedy, who continues to spread misinformation and denies the fundamentals of medicine, remains at the helm of the agency. Although he claims he's "not anti-vaccine," his words and actions tell a different story. He recklessly attacks vaccine efficacy, spreads disproven theories linking vaccines to autism, and denies fundamental virology — from diseases like HIV, measles, and more. I'm all for healthy skepticism, but scientific skepticism means investigating data, not cherry-picking it … or making it up. These aren't privately held beliefs either — a post on his active X account states that the HPV vaccine "increases cervical-cancer risk" all despite mountains of real-world data showing up to 88% drops in cancer among vaccinated teens. Sweden, England, and even the CDC surveillance report plunging pre-cancer rates. Recently, he claimed, "50% of the population is diabetic" and that "one out of every three kids" already has the disease. In reality, true estimates put China's diabetes prevalence around 12%, and the U.S. pediatric figure closer to one in 300. If one of my interns inflated numbers by a factor of 10, they'd be sent back to remedial math. Kennedy does it regularly on primetime television. Worse, he's now canceled $12 billion in disease outbreak prevention programs, proposed a 26% cut to the NIH budget, and pink-slipped roughly 20,000 public-health scientists and staff. Those decisions have consequences: dozens of federally funded vaccine clinics in Arizona, Minnesota, Nevada, Texas and Washington were canceled just as measles cases blew past 1,000 — the worst surge in a generation. He's dismantling the firehouse while buildings are burning. Public health cannot survive an HHS head who guts the programs that keep us safe and then fans the very myths that make outbreaks explode. Kennedy's long record of undermining proven public health measures and spreading scientific falsehoods makes him a threat to millions of Americans. Certainly, he should never have been confirmed to lead the office in the first place, but choosing to leave him in charge is like handing the keys to a driver who continues to insist that stop signs and red lights are optional. Today, I say that Kennedy is the wrong person to lead HHS. The integrity of our nation's health agencies demands leadership grounded in facts, research, and transparency — not misinformation. Doctors like me take an oath to 'do no harm.' We must call out leaders like Secretary Kennedy when they cause great harm to public health. We must stop the bleeding.

US Steel-Nippon deal raises emissions concerns
US Steel-Nippon deal raises emissions concerns

E&E News

time15 minutes ago

  • E&E News

US Steel-Nippon deal raises emissions concerns

An emerging White House-backed deal to allow a Japanese firm to purchase U.S. Steel could have implications for the industry's greenhouse gas emissions. President Donald Trump plans to hold a rally Friday in Pittsburgh to celebrate the deal, which he has described as a 'planned partnership' with Nippon Steel that will be 'controlled by the United States.' But clean energy advocates are concerned that Nippon's acquisition of Pittsburgh-based U.S. Steel, one of the biggest American steel producers, could delay the industry's transition away from coal-based blast furnaces. Advertisement 'This deal poses real threats to steel decarbonization in the U.S.,' Astrid Grigsby-Schulte, project manager of the Global Iron and Steel Tracker at the firm Global Energy Monitor, said in an email. 'On a global scale, Nippon has a lot of work to do to align with net zero goals and this extends to their acquisition of U.S. steel.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store