
Report: Paris should apologize for Polynesia nuclear tests
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NHK
21 hours ago
- NHK
Afghan Taliban seek to end international isolation
The Taliban interim government in Afghanistan has signaled that the country wants to ends its international isolation following Russia's recent recognition of the Islamist group's rule. The Taliban regained power in August 2021. The interim government's economy minister Din Mohammad Hanif spoke with NHK in Kabul on Saturday. The interview came after Russia became the first state to recognize the Taliban government last month. Hanif said the recognition has good benefits politically and economically. He expressed hope that Russia will extend economic cooperation with investment and the development of the country's mineral resources. Hanif said they will request other countries to recognize their government as well. The minister denied that women's human rights are being violated in Afghanistan, and said the country's religious customs should be respected. Japan, the United States and European countries have been critical of the Taliban's strict restrictions on women's rights to education and employment.


NHK
a day ago
- NHK
Chinese fishing boats head out to East, South China Seas
Fishing boats have set sail from Chinese ports after the lifting of an annual ban on operating in parts of the East and South China Seas. The areas include waters around Taiwan, and those off the Senkaku Islands in Japan's Okinawa Prefecture. Japan controls the Senkaku islands. The Japanese government maintains they are an inherent part of Japan's territory. China and Taiwan claim them. On Saturday, the Chinese government lifted the ban that it had imposed each year for what it says was to protect marine resources. A large number of boats left a port in Quanzhou in Fujian Province, facing the East China Sea. Tensions were raised after the ban was lifted in 2016, when more than 200 fishing boats swarmed to waters near the islands. Some of them, including Chinese government vessels, entered Japan's territorial waters. Fujian provincial authorities apparently hope to prevent tensions this year. They have instructed fishers to be rigorously attentive to sensitive sea areas and consciously avoid political risk. Officials are expected to strengthen monitoring and law enforcement measures for the ships. One of the fishers told NHK that they are not allowed to operate near Japan and Taiwan, and that their activities are restricted to designated maritime zones. Chinese government ships have often entered Japan's territorial waters near the Senkaku Islands. The Japan Coast Guard says a record high number of such vessels were spotted in the contiguous zone just outside Japanese territorial waters on 355 days in 2024.

Japan Times
3 days ago
- Japan Times
Trump's Golden Dome still shrouded in mystery, even for its builders
The companies expected to create U.S. President Donald Trump's "Golden Dome for America' know the objective: to protect the U.S. from missiles and airborne threats. They know it means billions of dollars' worth of contracts. But they don't know much about what, exactly, they are expected to do — and at an event last week, the government officials who might tell them weren't even allowed to mention the project by name. Attendees at the 28th annual Space and Missile Defense Symposium in Huntsville, Alabama, saw signs early on that the topic on everyone's minds might be tricky to discuss. Before the event even began, the industry groups hosting it removed a Golden Dome-focused panel. "Information regarding Golden Dome for America will be promulgated by the government,' they said. Major defense contractors, including Lockheed Martin, RTX and Northrop Grumman, prepared slick websites and flashy sideshows for the conference to demonstrate how their work fits with the president's vision for an air and missile defense network protecting the entire U.S. Their executives were all singing the same tune: The project is so ambitious and potentially lucrative that there's a role for everyone, and plenty of opportunity for collaboration, including between startups and nontraditional defense companies. Just don't ask the government for details. "In the last six months I've walked into many, many rooms and said, 'I can't take any questions on you-know-what,' and I've never received a question other than something about you-know-what,' Air Force Lieutenant General Heath Collins, director of the Missile Defense Agency, said to laughter after delivering closing remarks at the event. Golden Dome will include existing systems, accelerated development of advanced technology, and ultimately new components such as space-based interceptors, according to Trump, who announced his plan for the program in one of his first executive orders after returning to the presidency. He also has said the project will be fully operational before the end of his term and will cost $175 billion. The Congressional Budget Office has estimated the price tag for a network of space-based interceptors could be as high as $542 billion over 20 years. Space Force General Michael Guetlein, who is leading the project, is expected to unveil its architecture by mid-September. At the conference, industry representatives showcased their hardware, including RTX's Patriot missile defense system, which uses Lockheed Martin's PAC-3 MSE interceptor, and Northrop Grumman's Integrated Battle Command System, as they sought insight from the government on how the pieces will fit together. Companies also pointed to the work they or their corporate predecessors had done on President Ronald Reagan's space-based Strategic Defense Initiative — the so-called "Star Wars' missile defense program that fizzled in the 1980s — saying they were up for the challenge of making it work 40 years later. Riki Ellison, founder and chairman of the Missile Defense Advocacy Alliance, said on the sidelines of the symposium that not being able to speak openly about an "executive order that is out in the public, that we're going to build this in three years for $175 billion — it just delays this process and puts more pressure to get this thing in play.' None of the industry or academic sources interviewed for this article knew why there were such restrictions. In a statement, the Pentagon declined to disclose further information because of operational concerns, saying only that the Defense Department is gathering information to support Golden Dome. The Pentagon has declined so far to detail which organization compiled the $175 billion estimate, how many years it covered, an annual breakdown of the costs and categories on which the money would be spent. "It would be imprudent for us to release further information at this time,' Pentagon spokesperson Kingsley Wilson told reporters last week. Space Force General Guetlein "just got in the building,' said Wilson, who pledged to be "transparent where we can be' about a "very expensive' but "very critical' program. Not all of the government speakers at the event avoided the forbidden words. A NASA representative — notably not bound by the Pentagon's strictures — spoke about the work his agency is doing that could support Golden Dome, including advanced propulsion technologies and materials science. Industry representatives say they hope to learn more soon. The restriction on what can be discussed "seems to have been partially lifted and probably will be more lifted as we keep going through this,' said Milton Carroll of Peraton, which aims to help Golden Dome systems communicate seamlessly. MDA's Collins also sounded an optimistic note, telling the defense officials, contractors and academics at the event that the program's launch presented a unique opportunity. "It's a fleeting moment,' he said. "As history has shown, this doesn't last forever, and we need to make a monster change now.'