A Wargame Simulated a 2nd Trump Presidency. It Found NATO Would Collapse. – Business Insider

  1. A Wargame Simulated a 2nd Trump Presidency. It Found NATO Would Collapse.  Business Insider
  2. Wargame Simulation Predicts NATO Collapse if Trump Is Elected Again  Rolling Stone
  3. Trump, NATO and Anglo-American Relations | Royal United Services Institute  RUSI Analysis
  4. Ukraine Funding Debate Persuaded Allies To Increase Defense  The Federalist
  5. Is NATO still relevant?  Daily Tribune (Philippines)
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The Betrayal of Israel by the US Administration Is Almost Complete – Gatestone Institute

  1. The Betrayal of Israel by the US Administration Is Almost Complete  Gatestone Institute
  2. Biden's sudden betrayal of Israel is a terrible miscalculation  The Telegraph
  3. Biden Breaks a 2004 Promise to Israel - WSJ  The Wall Street Journal
  4. Biden's Israel red line, and the Democratic Party's shift away from Israel  The Washington Post
  5. TradWives, TradLives - by Jonathan V. Last  The Bulwark
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Lithuania election: Anxieties rise over Russia-Ukraine war as voters head to polls – The Associated Press

  1. Lithuania election: Anxieties rise over Russia-Ukraine war as voters head to polls  The Associated Press
  2. Lithuanians vote in presidential election amid security fears in Baltic region  The Guardian
  3. Lithuanian presidential hopefuls vow to stand up to Russian threat  Reuters
  4. Lithuania holds presidential election amid concerns over Russia-Ukraine war  Al Jazeera English
  5. Lithuania: Security issues dominate presidential election  DW (English)
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Thousands of Canadians have been forced to evacuate from raging wildfires. Now the smoke is making air quality dangerous – CNN

  1. Thousands of Canadians have been forced to evacuate from raging wildfires. Now the smoke is making air quality dangerous  CNN
  2. Smoke from wildfires in B.C., Alberta prompts air quality statements in Sask.  CBC.ca
  3. Wildfire evacuation notice issued for major Canada oil town Fort McMurray  Reuters Canada
  4. Edmonton weather: Widespread wildfire smoke prompts air quality advisory  Edmonton Journal
  5. Wildfire south of Fort McMurray grows in size as residents told to be ready to evacuate  The Globe and Mail
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Melbourne Victory and Wellington Phoenix grind out draw in A-League Men semi-final

  • Victory and Phoenix locked on 0-0 after first leg at AAMI Park
  • Hosts had 20 shots to the Nix’s six but could not break deadlock

Melbourne Victory and Wellington Phoenix have it all to play for after a cagey 0-0 draw in the first leg of their A-League Men semi-final at AAMI Park. In a clash of two styles, the Victory were allowed to control the tempo and territory for much of the contest but were unable to create enough clear-cut chances to unlock a determined Phoenix defence on Sunday.

The hosts were the more positive throughout with 20 to six attempts, and five shots on target, while the Nix were content to sit back and play on the counter without managing a single shot on goal. The Victory pushed hard in the dying stages to find a goal to take to Sky Stadium as the Phoenix all but settled for a stalemate from halfway through the second half, with the return leg to be played in New Zealand on Saturday 18 May.

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Starmer has laid out his plan to tackle asylum. Will it actually work? | Sunder Katwala

The Labour leader confirmed he would scrap the Rwanda scheme in his Dover speech, then confusingly blurred his own argument

Could Keir Starmer “Make Asylum Boring Again”? That would be the ultimate test of success for his claim that he can grip the issue that has caused Rishi Sunak more trouble than any other. Starmer’s message is that he is no less committed to securing the borders and stopping the small boats crossing the Channel, but that achieving this requires a serious plan to tackle smuggling gangs and fix the asylum system in Britain too. So how different is Labour’s plan – and would it work?

Labour’s analysis should be that making asylum work depends on blending control and compassion. The Dover speech was a political exercise in asymmetric triangulation. Robust messages about control were loudly proclaimed. More liberal ideas about a rules-based system could be found, but mostly by reading between the lines.

Starmer did confirm that Labour would scrap the Rwanda scheme. Labour had seemed to wobble in the face of premature Conservative confidence that Rwanda is already working to deter. Ironically, the biggest risk for Sunak’s deterrent argument would come if he finally gets to test it practically. Send the first flights to Rwanda this summer and further arrivals across the Channel will surely outpace any removals 10 times over.

There is a clash of principle over asylum. Labour would process the asylum claims of those who arrived without permission. The Conservatives have now passed several laws vowing they will not. Yet ministers are in denial. Whether or not up to 500 people go to Rwanda does not give the government any plan for the next 50,000 people it still claims it intends to remove. So flagship new duties on the home secretary to refuse these claims for ever have not been given legal force – as the courts would strike that out in all those cases where the government has no realistic alternative. Yet the government has ceased to process asylum cases, reversing last year’s success in clearing the historic backlog.

Starmer is right to deny the charge that Labour’s policy is an “amnesty”, since processing the backlog would see some asylum claims granted and others refused. But he confusingly blurs his own argument with a tit-for-tat labelling of government policy as a “Travelodge amnesty”.

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Foreign Office investigates Hamas claim British-Israeli hostage killed in Gaza – BBC.com

  1. Foreign Office investigates Hamas claim British-Israeli hostage killed in Gaza  BBC.com
  2. Hamas publishes propaganda video of hostage Nadav Popplewell  The Times of Israel
  3. David Cameron urges BBC to describe Hamas as terrorist organisation  The Guardian
  4. Hamas says a captive has died of wounds sustained in Israeli air strike  Al Jazeera English
  5. Israel Isn't Leaving Hostage Negotiations Despite Disagreements With Hamas Over Deal - Israel News  Haaretz
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Aurora australis offers second chance of ‘bloody awesome’ southern lights display on Sunday

Solar storm effects delight stargazers in Victoria, Tasmania and South Australia but most in NSW miss out

Australians should have a second chance to see the aurora australis on Sunday night, experts say, after a Saturday southern lights display so spectacular it left at least one astronomer in tears.

Social media users posted pictures of brightly coloured skies in Victoria, Tasmania, South Australia, and around the world.

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At least 28 dead, several missing in Indonesia flash floods, cold lava flow – Al Jazeera English

  1. At least 28 dead, several missing in Indonesia flash floods, cold lava flow  Al Jazeera English
  2. Flash floods and cold lava flow hit Indonesia’s Sumatra island. At least 37 people were killed  ABC News
  3. Indonesia floods, landslides kill 28, four missing  Reuters
  4. 34 dead in floods, cold lava from Indonesia's Mount Marapi; 16 missing  CNA
  5. 'God, have mercy!': Survivors recount horror of Indonesia flood  The Elkhart Truth
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Forbes honours Molly Ticehurst with Mother’s Day walk around lake

About 400 people gather to pay tribute to early childhood educator, wearing bright T-shirts with the slogans ‘#HernameisMolly’ and ‘#Speakup’

A small community in the New South Wales central west has marked Mother’s Day with a walk in memory of Molly Ticehurst, who was allegedly killed by a former partner last month.

Pushing prams and flanked by puppies, families followed the path around Lake Forbes on Sunday. About 400 people gathered, many wearing bright T-shirts with the slogans “#HernameisMolly” and “#Speakup”. They included close friends and family of the 28-year-old.

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‘A lot of asbestos in the streets’: WA declares ‘hazmat emergency’ after tornado hits Bunbury

More than 100 homes damaged when tornado ripped off roofs, collapsed walls and sucked up debris in state’s south-west

Asbestos scattered over residential streets has prompted a “hazmat emergency” response in Western Australia’s south-west, with specialist crews urgently working to contain any possible exposure aftter a devastating tornado.

More than 100 homes were damaged when the tornado ripped off roofs, collapsed walls and sucked up debris into the sky at Bunbury on Friday afternoon.

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Could new US sanctions threaten future of West Bank settlements? | Emma Graham-Harrison and Quique Kierszenbaum

Joe Biden’s latest executive order gives scope to target the finances of Israeli politicians and businesses linked to extremists

Escalating US sanctions on violent settlers, initially taken as a mostly political rebuke to extremists, are now seen by some inside Israel as a potential threat to the financial viability of all Israeli settlements and companies in the occupied West Bank.

The Biden administration’s new controls on a handful of men and organisations linked to attacks on Palestinian civilians, first announced in February then expanded twice in March and April, have generally been treated in Israel and beyond more as a humiliating public censure of a close ally than as a major political shift.

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Sake takes UK by storm as Japan’s national drink goes mainstream

No longer just drunk for courage at karaoke clubs, the ‘food-friendly’ rice spirit is becoming a first choice of connoisseurs

When sommelier Erika Haigh opened the UK’s first independent sake bar, in London’s West End in 2019, passersby would wander in and try to order milkshakes, bewildered by the unfamiliar drink advertised in the window.

“Today, that confusion has largely disappeared,” said Haigh, who has since opened Mai Sake, a shop offering tasting events and meals. “You can now go on a sake bar crawl across London, and you’ll find it featured on the beverage lists of many restaurants – including non-Japanese establishments.”

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‘You say you are a musician, they beat you more’: the Ukrainian sax player who survived Putin’s torture prisons

Yuriy Merkotan played in a military band and, after being caught up in the Mariupol siege, spent nearly two years in various jails

When Yuriy Merkotan enlisted in Ukraine’s national guard in 2020, it was not because he wanted to fight. A saxophonist living in the southern port city of Mariupol, there were few opportunities to play music professionally. So when a spot became free in a 16-person band attached to a national guard brigade, he jumped at the chance.

But when Russian forces put Mariupol under siege in February 2022, the band members were called to duty. They ended up inside Azovstal, the sprawling factory that became the last bastion of Ukrainian defence as the Russian occupation proceeded to its grim conclusion.

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NSW weather: Warragamba dam spills over as heavy rainfall warning issued for south coast

SES issues minor flood warnings for the Hawkesbury River at North Richmond and the Colo River

Sydney’s Warragamba dam began spilling over for the second time in a month on Sunday after heavy downpours across New South Wales.

WaterNSW has confirmed the dam began spilling at 7.30am after widespread rain across the city’s catchments.

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Afghanistan flash floods kill more than 300 as torrents of water and mud crash through villages

Survivors pick through debris-littered streets and damaged buildings as rescue workers dispatched amid warning some areas cut off by flooding

More than 300 people were killed in flash floods that ripped through multiple provinces in Afghanistan, the UN’s World Food Programme said, as authorities declared a state of emergency and rushed to rescue the injured.

Many people remained missing after heavy rains on Friday sent roaring rivers of water and mud crashing through villages and across agricultural land in several provinces, causing what one aid group described as a “major humanitarian emergency”.

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