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Maine Dems to Vote on Condemning DCCC Interference in House Primary

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Maine Dems to Vote on Condemning DCCC Interference in House Primary


Locals in Maine are bridling at the decision by a powerful Washington Democratic group to throw its weight behind one candidate in the contested primary race for the House seat in the state’s 2nd Congressional District.

On Monday, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee issued a coveted endorsement of state Sen. Joe Baldacci in the primary race, prompting angry protests from the three other candidates in the race to replace outgoing Democratic Rep. Jared Golden.

In response to the endorsement, the Penobscot County Democratic Committee — in Baldacci’s home county, which includes the city of Bangor — will vote Saturday on a measure to condemn the endorsement. The language of the proposal, which was put forward by former Maine state Senate President Charles Pray, denounces the endorsement as being in “total disregard and willfully ignoring” local party rules that bar the Democratic state and county chapters from backing a candidate in a primary.

“Let the people decide. Let the voters in the primary make that determination.”

“With the DCCC deciding to throw itself into the mix here, truthfully that just kind of aggravated me,” Pray told The Intercept. “I’m going to support whoever wins the Democratic nomination, but I just think it was an unfair position on their part of trying to dictate or trying to boost up a candidate. Point is, let the people decide. Let the voters in the primary make that determination.”

Pray, who previously worked in the Clinton and Obama administrations and described himself as “a progressive moderate with liberal tendencies but conservative perspectives,” has personally backed State Auditor Matt Dunlap in the race, but said his pique at the DCCC’s endorsement isn’t about any one candidate.

“This has nothing to do with Joe — I think all four of them have an equal chance,” Pray said. “It’s a primary, and, by the way, our state party rules and our county rules are that the party organization cannot endorse or support a candidate.”

A spokesperson for the DCCC said the group was focused on winning in the general elections and beating back President Donald Trump’s agenda.

“It’s imperative that Democrats must take back the House to hold Trump accountable and deliver on what truly matters to voters,” said the spokesperson, Viet Shelton. “That’s why we are proud to announce our latest round of Red to Blue candidates who span the ideological spectrum, are authentic voices in their districts, and are best positioned to win in November.”

Four-Way Race

The race to replace Golden — who announced in November that he would not seek reelection — is being closely watched nationwide ahead of the midterm elections. Whoever takes the Democratic primary will square off against Paul LePage, a brash, plainspoken businessman and Republican former governor whose time running Maine was marked by proto-MAGA far-right populism.

Baldacci is facing off against Dunlap, who is also a former Maine secretary of state; Jordan Wood, a longtime Democratic fundraiser; and Paige Loud, a social worker and first-time candidate. In the wake of the DCCC endorsement of Baldacci, the other candidates in the race took aim at D.C. Democrats for picking a side.

“It’s undemocratic for national establishment Democrats to put their thumb on the scale in any primary,” Dunlap said. “Just like in certain other races across Maine this year, they won’t decide this one — the people of Maine will.”

With Dunlap picking up endorsements from Our Revolution, Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., and other progressives, Baldacci — who enjoys name recognition as the brother of former Gov. John Baldacci — is widely seen as the establishment candidate in the race. Reached by phone Thursday, Baldacci declined to comment on the Penobscot County party proposal condemning the endorsement, but said he was glad to have the backing of Democrats in Washington.

“I’m pleased that they did it,” Baldacci said, referring to the endorsement. “My understanding is they based it on polling to determine who is the best candidate to run against LePage.”

Wood said the DCCC move demonstrated the problems with Washington party politics.

“The fact that the national Democratic Party would come in and try to decide this primary literally weeks before we vote is just another example of how broken our Democratic leadership is,” he said.

“It’s annoying that the DCCC thinks they know better than Mainers.”

A Pan Atlantic Omnibus poll in March put Baldacci well ahead of his opponents, but there is little in the way of recent polling to indicate a current popular favorite in the race. Following the stunning collapse of Gov. Janet Mills’s bid for the U.S. Senate — despite the backing of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee — against populist insurgent Graham Platner, not everyone in Maine sees the DCCC as the best political oracle to follow.

“It’s annoying that the DCCC thinks they know better than Mainers,” said Loud, the left-leaning social worker. “We just saw the DSCC’s endorsement of Janet Mills, and we all saw how that turned out. I don’t think they have the finger on the pulse.”

Mozilla says 271 vulnerabilities found by Mythos have “almost no false positives”

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Mozilla says 271 vulnerabilities found by Mythos have “almost no false positives”

The disbelief was palpable when Mozilla’s CTO last month declared that AI-assisted vulnerability detection meant “zero-days are numbered” and “defenders finally have a chance to win, decisively.” After all, it looked like part of an all-too-familiar pattern: Cherry-pick a handful of impressive AI-achieved results, leave out any of the fine print that might paint a more nuanced picture, and let the hype train roll on.

Mindful of the skepticism, Mozilla on Thursday provided a behind-the-scenes look into its use of Anthropic Mythos—an AI model for identifying software vulnerabilities—to ferret out 271 Firefox security flaws over two months. In a post, Mozilla engineers said the finally ready-for-prime-time breakthrough they achieved was primarily the result of two things: (1) improvement in the models themselves and (2) Mozilla’s development of a custom “harness” that supported Mythos as it analyzed Firefox source code.

“Almost no false positives”

The engineers said their earlier brushes with AI-assisted vulnerability detection were fraught with “unwanted slop.” Typically, someone would prompt a model to analyze a block of code. The model would then produce plausible-reading bug reports, and often at unprecedented scales. Invariably, however, when human developers further investigated, they’d find a large percentage of the details had been hallucinated. The humans would then need to invest significant work handling the vulnerability reports the old-fashioned way.

Mozilla’s work with Mythos was different, Mozilla Distinguished Engineer Brian Grinstead said in an interview. The biggest differentiating factor was the use of an agent harness, a piece of code that wraps around an LLM to guide it through a series of specific tasks. For such a harness to be useful, it requires significant resources to customize it to the project-specific semantics, tooling, and processes it will be used for.

Grinstead described the harness his team built as “the code that drives the LLM in order to accomplish a goal. It gives the model instructions (e.g., ‘find a bug in this file’), provides it tools (e.g., allowing it to read/write files and evaluate test cases), then runs it in a loop until completion.” The harness gave Mythos access to the same tools and pipeline that human Mozilla developers use, including the special Firefox build they use for testing.

He elaborated:

With these harnesses, so long as you can define a deterministic and clear success signal or task verification signal, you can just keep telling it to keep working. In our case when we’re looking for memory safety issues we have our sanitizer build of Firefox and if you make it crash you win. We point that agent off to a source file and say: “we know there’s an issue in this file, please go find it.” It will craft test cases. We have our existing fuzzing systems and tools to be able to run those tests. It will say: “I think there’s an issue here if I craft the HTML exactly so.” It sends it off to a tool, the tool says yes or no. If the tool says yes then there’s some additional verification.

The additional verification comes in the form of a second LLM that grades the output from the first LLM. A high score gives developers the same confidence they have when viewing reports generated through more traditional discovery methods.

“In terms of the bugs coming out on the other side, there are almost no false positives,” he said.

Thursday’s behind-the-scenes view includes the unhiding of full Bugzilla reports for 12 of the 271 vulnerabilities Mozilla discovered using Mythos and, to a lesser extent, Claude Opus 4.6. The test cases—meaning the HTML or other code that triggers an unsafe memory condition—are provided in each one and meet the same criteria Mozilla requires for all bugs to be considered security vulnerabilities in Firefox. At least one researcher said Thursday that a cursory look at the reports showed they were “pretty impressive.”

Unlike previous vulnerability disclosure slop, Grinstead said, the details provided by its harness-guided Mythos analysis, and confirmed by the second LLM, and ultimately included in the reports, provide a level of confidence his team didn’t have before.

“That’s the key thing that has unlocked our ability to operate at the scale we’ve been operating at now,” he said. “It gives the engineer a crank they can pull that says: ‘Yep, this has the problem,’ and then you can iterate on the code and know clearly when you’ve fixed it and eventually land the test case in the tree such that you don’t regress it.”

As noted earlier, Mozilla’s characterization of AI-assisted vulnerability discovery as a game changer has been met with massive, vocal skepticism in many quarters. Critics initially scoffed when Mozilla didn’t obtain CVE designations for any of the 271 vulnerabilities. Like many developers, however, Mozilla doesn’t obtain CVE listings for internally discovered security bugs. Instead, they are bundled into a single patch. Normally, Bugzilla reports detailing these “rollups” are hidden for several months after being fixed to protect those who are slow to patch. Now that Mozilla has revealed a dozen of them, the same critics will surely claim they too were cherry-picked and conceal less accurate results.

Of the 271 bugs found using Mythos, 180 were sec-high, Mozilla’s highest designation for internally reported vulnerabilities. These types of vulnerabilities can be exploited through normal user behavior, such as browsing to a web page. (The only higher rating, sec-critical, is reserved for zero-days.) Another 80 were sec-moderate, and 11 were sec-low.

The critics are right to keep pushing back. Hype is a key method for inflating the already high puffed-up valuations of AI companies. Given the extensive praise Mozilla has given to Mythos, it’s easy for even more trusting people to wonder: What’s it getting in return? Far from settling the debate, Thursday’s elaborations are likely to only further stoke the controversy.

To hear Grinstead tell it, however, the details are clear evidence of the usefulness of AI-assisted discovery, and Mozilla’s motivation is simple.

“People are a bit burned from the last year of these slop commits so we felt it was important to show some of our work, open up some of the bugs, and talk about it in a little more detail as a way to hopefully spur some action or continue the conversation,” he said. “There’s no sort of marketing angle here. Our team has completely bought in on this approach. We are trying to get a message out about this technique in general and not any specific model provider, company, or anything like that.”

Iran war has shown the limits of US power

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Iran war has shown the limits of US power

In his 1873 book On War, the great Prussian military strategist Carl von Clausewitz wrote that: “War is the realm of uncertainty.” He would have been at home in Washington this week where Clausewitz’s “fog of war” appears to have descended on the White House, at times obscuring reality.

On Tuesday, the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, briefed reporters that the US plan was to get the Strait of Hormuz “back to the way it was: anyone can use it, no mines in the water, nobody paying tolls”.

This was, of course, the way things were before the war actually started.

But uncertainty about what this war was actually all about has been a hallmark of the past two months. When the conflict began on the last day of February, the US said it was about preventing Iran from developing a nuclear weapon. Although the US president, Donald Trump, added a layer of complexity by saying it was also about regime change.

Trump’s closest ally, the Israeli prime minister, added another later by insisting this was also about getting rid of Iran’s ballistic missiles and launchers and neutralising its proxies in the region.

Christian Emery, an expert in international relations at University College London – who specialises in US-Iranian affairs – sees this lack of coherence about what the war is for as underscoring “that this entire enterprise has been a colossal strategic failure”.

As things stand it now appears possible that an interim deal could well open the Strait of Hormuz to allow the global economy to return to something like normal. But the main reasons the US and Israel launched the war are unlikely to be resolved any time soon and the episode has proved to Tehran – and the rest of the world – that Iran can use its geography to its strategic advantage whenever it chooses.


Read more: Trump administration claiming a ‘win’ against Iran – here’s a report card


For Bamo Nouri and Inderjeet Parmar, experts in international security at City St George’s Unversity of London – who have been regular contributors to our coverage of the conflict – the episode has been an object lesson in the limits of power. The US and Israel exercised considerable military superiority to Iran and have used it to devastating effect. But this is not how conflict works in the 21st century.

The US and Israel were chasing different outcomes so there was no strategic coherence to their war aims. And they underestimated Iran’s durability under pressure. Iran didn’t need to win, just to endure. “As the war progressed” they write, “the fantasy of decisive victory collapsed under the weight of economic, political and strategic reality”.


Read more: Iran war has become a lesson in how power really works


Interestingly, the Trump administration is now saying that Operation Epic Fury finished about a month ago. US forces are now engaged in Project Freedom, a humanitarian operation to help ships stranded in the Strait of Hormuz to transit the waterway.

As Andrew Gawthorpe, an expert in US foreign policy from Leiden University, notes, this change of emphasis appeared to emerge as Republicans in Congress were insisting that the administration was legally obliged under the War Powers Act to seek authorisation for the conflict.

Gawthorpe believes the war’s unpopularity is allowing Congress to claw back some of the influence it had over the way the US uses its military.


Read more: US declares war in Iran ‘over’ to avoid row with Congress over whether it was legal


As we’ve noted before, the main theme of the past few weeks, since the US launched its blockade of Iranian ports to match Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz, is which side can absorb more pain and pressure. US consumers are facing increased prices at the gas pumps which has fed through to a higher inflation rate generally.

But the headline US CPI increase of 3.3% last month is dwarfed by inflation in Iran which is reported to have hit 50%. It’s worth noting that it was inflation and the general economic malaise which kicked off the huge protests that wracked Iran in January.

A gas stattion in California showing high prices.

The oil price shock is feeding into fuel prices in America, undermining support for the Trump administration. EPA/John G. Mabanglo

More pressingly, Iran’s inability to export its oil thanks to the US blockade means that sooner of later it will need to close down its oil production. As engineers and oil production experts Nima Shokri and Martin J Blunt explain, this can be done, but it’s by no means easy and risks seriously damaging the wells.


Read more: Shutting Iran’s oil wells may be straightforward – but the consequences are not


Global affair

They’ll be watching this all very closely in Beijing of course. The US president is due to visit Beijing next week to meet Xi Jinping for the first time since the two met on the sidelines of the Apec conference in South Korea last October.

So it was interesting to see that Iranian foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, visited Beijing this week to meet with his Chinese counterpart, Wang Yi. In normal times, China buys between 80% and 90% of Iran’s seaborne oil exports – and it has been very clear that it wants to see the Strait of Hormuz opened and “a complete cessation of fighting…without delay”.

But China-watcher Tom Harper of the University of East London, believes that Beijing can see advantages in the US getting bogged down in a fullscale war in the Middle East and might go as far as to offer military support to Tehran if that happens. While China has denied providing shoulder-launched Manpad missiles to Iran, Tehran is using its BeiDou satellite navigational system (a sort of Chinese GPS) to aim its missiles.

If you find these expert takes on an increasingly dangerous world useful, please consider supporting us with a donation.

Wang also said that China recognises Iran’s “legitimate right to the peaceful use of nuclear energy” – something it sees as a sovereignty issue. Which should all make for an interesting encounter between Trump and the Chinese president, Xi Jinping (if the trip goes ahead, that is).


Read more: China has played a key role in the Iran war – and will continue to do so


The surprise player in all this has been Pakistan, writes Natasha Lindstaedt, an international affairs expert at the University of Essex. But as Lindstaedt points out, Pakistan has a long diplomatic track record with both the US and Iran. In 1981, two years after Washington and Tehran severed relations in the wake of the revolution that brought the Islamic Republic into being, Pakistan established a dedicated section of its Washington embassy to handling Iranian affairs in the US.

Washington and Islamabad have had their ups and downs, but things have grown closer with Trump in the White House – and Pakistan has tried to do all the right things to court Trump, including nominating him for the Nobel Peace Prize and joining his board of peace. Lindstaedt walks us through this intriguing ménage à trois.


Read more: How Pakistan became the primary mediator between the US and Iran


Russia’s pared-down Victory Day parade tells a story: Away from the pomp, war in Ukraine is not going to Putin’s plan

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Russia’s pared-down Victory Day parade tells a story: Away from the pomp, war in Ukraine is not going to Putin’s plan

Victory Day in Russia, which marks the surrender of Nazi Germany to the Soviet Union, has long held particular importance in Vladimir Putin’s Russia.

Yet this year the May 9 celebration – usually replete with extensive parades across the country and a demonstration of military hardware in Moscow – is expected to be significantly pared down. That’s due to Kyiv’s ongoing long-range military capabilities. For the first time in two decades, Russian officials have said, there will be no lavish display of tanks and missiles.

The reality for Putin is that the war in Ukraine, now in its fifth year, continues to be a grueling drain on Russian men, its economy and resources – and may continue to be for some time.

That was underscored by the European Union’s April 23 approval of a US$106 billion loan package to Ukraine. The aid, which will be a boon to Ukraine’s war-torn economy, had been stymied by EU-member Hungary under its former president, Viktor Orban, who was ousted in April 12 elections.

The resumption of EU aid and the removal of a pro-Moscow European voice at the EU represent major blows to Russia’s regional strategy. Perhaps trying to reset the narrative, Russia declared it would mark this Victory Day with a two-day ceasefire with Ukraine. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy responded by saying his country would also observe a ceasefire, starting two days earlier on May 6.

But there remain few immediate signs of a breakthrough in the conflict – and Russia appears chiefly interested in negotiating Ukraine’s future not with Kyiv but with U.S. President Donald Trump, who has been sympathetic to Russian interests.

As a scholar of contemporary politics in Eastern Europe, I see that as part of a pattern of Russian miscalculations and consistent denial of the will of citizens in democratic societies in Eastern Europe. Indeed, it reflects a dominant imperial mindset among Russia’s political elites, which the Kremlin has not altered since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

Losing hold of the old Soviet bloc?

While formally recognizing the independence of former Soviet republics in 1991, Moscow has continued to treat those countries as part of its sphere of influence.

For more than 25 years, Russia has pursued a hybrid approach of influencing former Soviet countries, along with others in Eastern Europe. That has included supporting electoral fraud, economic machination, media manipulation and use of force and violence.

Indeed, suspected Russian interference in politics and elections has been a frequent occurrence in Armenia, Georgia, Moldova, Romania and most recently Hungary.

A man in a suit gestures on a stage.

Hungary’s former Prime Minister Viktor Orban was Russia’s most stalwart ally in Europe. AP Photo / Petr David Josek

But Hungary and Armenia are recent and powerful examples that show the limits of Russian operations. Orban’s loss in Hungary immediately dislodged Russia’s most powerful point of leverage in European politics.

Meanwhile, in Yerevan on May 5, Armenia hosted a bilateral summit with the EU where the country established stronger economic and defense ties to the bloc. It was a stark diplomatic event for the country that has long been a junior ally of Russia’s but which has increasingly moved away from Moscow.

Ukraine: A test of Russian policy

Yet Ukraine remains the focal point of both the extent and limits of Russian external interference.

Putin has been attempting to have a loyal proxy government in the country ever since being spurned by Leonid Kuchma – the second president of Ukraine, who was in office until 2005 – who proclaimed that “Ukraine is not Russia.”

In Ukraine’s 2004 presidential elections, Putin’s Kremlin threw its substantial resources behind Kuchma’s prime minister, Viktor Yanukovich, who was seen as more friendly to Russian interests.

Since then, its relationship with the country has been one of external interference. Putin’s message throughout has been clear: The West, in its fights against Russia, has sought to colonize and destroy Ukraine by supporting nationalist forces against Moscow’s interests.

Facing consistently strong Ukrainian civil society and sovereignty movements, Russia found it difficult to fully implement its goals through political subversion or influence. So Moscow increasingly turned to military options.

In March 2014, Russia moved to annex Crimea and began a war in Ukraine’s eastern border regions of Luhansk and Donetsk.

That war in the east ground on for years, until in 2022 Putin made the decision to double down yet again, this time opting for a full invasion. The goal of the war was in Putin’s own words to “de-militarize” and “de-nazify” Ukraine. Yet, four years later, Putin’s desire for regime change has not yielded the desired results.

The human cost of Russian pursuits

Over the past year, Trump’s commitment to a peace deal between Ukraine and Russia, without first establishing a durable ceasefire, has moved the U.S. position toward Putin’s. That has included Trump’s support for Ukraine territorial concession as the grinding war continues.

Without significant territorial gains, Russia has continued and intensified its campaign of mass airstrikes and drone attacks on Ukrainian population centers. Indeed, 2025 was the deadliest year since the start of the full-scale invasion; civilian deaths were up 26% in 2025 over the previous year.

A rescue worker walks among rubble.

A rescue worker walks inside apartments destroyed by a Russian strike in Odesa, Ukraine, on April 27, 2026. AP Photo/Michael Shtekel

In the especially cold winter of 2025-26, Russia consistently targeted the energy grids vital to the millions of Ukrainians. Across Ukraine, at the record-low freezing temperatures, people endured daily attacks by drones and artillery, while trying to survive without electricity, heat and running water.

The Kremlin’s plan to put maximum pressure on Ukrainian civilians in the hope that Ukrainians would start blaming their leadership for refusing peace on Putin’s terms has not worked. For its part, the Ukrainian leadership has refused Russia’s maximalist war aims while cautiously continuing a commitment to the U.S.-mediated peace process.

Zelenskyy’s approval ratings remain steady at around 60%. The public opposition to Moscow’s demands on territorial concessions have not budged either, with a majority of Ukrainians continuing to categorically reject territorial concessions. Those numbers have not changed significantly since 2024.

Yet, war and surviving it takes a toll. And the experience of the year of negotiations has left many disillusioned, with some 70% doubting that peace talks will lead to a lasting solution.

A murky future

The last rounds of U.S.-mediated talks between Russia and Ukraine took place Feb. 16, 2026.

While Zelenskyy insists that the talks are not stalled, Russian’s top diplomat, Sergey Lavrov, has said the negotiations are not Russia’s top priority.

Buoyed by high oil prices as a result of the U.S. war in Iran, Russia has pursued a spring offensive and not relinquished its demands on Ukraine’s territories.

Yet this demand remains a nonstarter for Ukraine and Zelenskyy. As the Trump administration embraces the Russian “land for security” plan, Russia and its allies are likely to continue to put pressure on Zelenskyy, portraying him as an obstacle to peace talks.

But especially given Moscow’s recent woes, from losing a reliable ally in Hungary to the related EU loan guarantee, it’s unlikely that a continued grinding war will convince Ukrainians to abandon their sovereignty – or serve Russia’s own security.

UN warns foot, mouth disease increasing in occupied West Bank amid Israeli restrictions

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UN warns foot, mouth disease increasing in occupied West Bank amid Israeli restrictions

Cases of foot and mouth disease are on the rise in the occupied West Bank amid increasing Israeli restrictions on movement, jeopardizing public health in nomadic communities, the UN said Thursday, Anadolu Agency reports.

“Our humanitarian colleagues warn that foot and mouth disease is now increasing concerns for vulnerable Bedouin and herding communities whose livestock is their primary source of income and food,” spokesperson Stephane Dujarric told reporters at the UN’s New York headquarters.

“Partners say that movement restrictions and insecurity are complicating timely vaccination, and [the] veterinary response that is needed to treat this disease,” he added.

The occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem have seen a surge in Israeli restrictions and attacks on Palestinians, including raids, arrests, shootings and the excessive use of force, alongside rising settler assaults on Palestinian civilians and their property.

According to the Palestinian Commission Against the Wall and Settlements, Israeli forces and occupiers carried out 1,637 attacks in April alone.

READ: Several Palestinian students suffer suffocation in Israeli military raid in occupied West Bank

Attacks have killed at least 1,155 Palestinians, wounded about 11,750 and led to the arrest of nearly 22,000 since October 2023, according to official Palestinian figures.

Turning to the Gaza Strip, Dujarric said the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs has demanded that sanitation workers be allowed to remove waste from storage sites to landfills due to the risk of fire.

Last Friday, a UN team mobilized to extinguish a fire at a market that has been used as a waste storage site in Gaza City that threatened to envelope nearby shelters.

“With designated landfills becoming inaccessible during hostilities, the market has been used as a major solid waste dump, with trash now covering an entire city block and exceeding four flights in height. It’s hard to imagine,” he said.

“Our sanitation partners report that Gaza’s two sanitary landfills are near the perimeter fence surrounding the strip where access needs to be enabled by Israeli authorities. They also stress the need for permission to bring into Gaza the machinery to remove the waste, the rubble and the unexploded ordnance,” he said.

Those permissions, said Dujarric, are “critical” to address the health risks from pests and rodents in Gaza.

READ: EU lawmakers urge bloc to pressure Israel for media access to Gaza

How controlled burns can help save taxpayers billions

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How controlled burns can help save taxpayers billions

For decades, the U.S. Forest Service has actively managed public lands to reduce wildfire risks by clearing underbrush and trees, or employing prescribed burns — something Indigenous nations have practiced for centuries. Scientists have generally lauded the ecological benefits of what is also known as “fuel treatment.” Now, they say there’s another reason to support this approach: It saves money. 

According to a study published today in the journal Science, every dollar that the agency spent on such tactics avoided $3.73 in smoke, property and emissions harm. “A lot of people have suggested that there could be potential economic benefits,” said Frederik Strabo, the lead author of the paper and an economist with University of California, Davis. “But it’s been a pretty understudied area.”

The study analyzed high-resolution data from 285 wildfires across 11 Western states between 2017 and 2023 that burned through areas where the Forest Service had reduced the fuel load. On average, the treatments decreased the total area burned by 36 percent and cut the amount of land burned at moderate to high severity by 26 percent. Researchers then modeled the economic benefits of those reductions. 

The paper estimated that fuel treatments prevented $1.39 billion in health and workforce productivity losses tied to wildfire smoke, $895 million in structural damage, and $503 million in carbon dioxide emissions. Overall, that amounted to an average savings of about $3.73 for every dollar the government spent. The research also found that larger treatments — those covering more than 2,400 acres — were the most cost effective. 

“It’s a significant number, but when you compare it to the total cost of wildfires it’s small,” caveated Strabo, noting that the cost of the worst disasters can reach hundreds of billions of dollars. But he also said the boon could be even greater than calculated. The research didn’t, for example, examine any savings or benefits for the multi-billion dollar outdoor recreation industry. “We’re only capturing a specific subset of benefits.”

Morgan Varner, the director of fire research at the conservation non-profit Tall Timbers, called the work “the missing link for a lot of fuels treatment research” and said that data like this can be extremely helpful in guiding decision makers. “Studies like this round out the story and provide more evidence for the benefits of these treatments.” 

David Calkin, who until last year was a Forest Service research scientist, also applauded the analysis, calling it “novel.” But he does not find the math entirely convincing, and questions the notion that such an intangible public good can, or should, be assigned a monetary worth. “A lot of the values of fuel management are non-market,” said Calkin, who wasn’t involved in the study. Ecological benefits, for instance, can be hard to quantify, as can things like public recreation access. 

“I’m not trying to reduce the importance of fuel management and the value of it. It’s just highly uncertain,” he said. “I worry about trying to monetize the value of treatments on public lands.”

One issue Calkin notes is that such work on federal lands may not significantly mitigate the costliest fires, which ignite near communities and destroy homes and buildings. “The best way to protect a structure is at the structure itself,” he explained. That means the study could be over-estimating the amount of property damage that clearing and prescribed burns avoid.

Strabo disagrees, saying that an unpublished portion of the analysis found that fires which interacted with fuel treatments accounted for a disproportionately large share of structure losses and suppression costs. “That suggests [those fires] were often among the more economically consequential wildfires,” he said, pointing to the 2021 Caldor Fire near Lake Tahoe as an example. “The fire still caused substantial damages, but treatments helped prevent it from becoming even more catastrophic.”

One thing that the paper explicitly didn’t account for was the smoke and carbon dioxide emissions that intentional fires produce. “We’re finding that’s not a non-trivial amount in our research,” said Mark Kreider, a Forest Service researcher. Because wildfire is unpredictable, he explained, you inherently have to treat more of the landscape than will actually encounter flames. How to best factor those emissions in is part of Kreider’s ongoing work, but he says it could potentially even flip an analysis like the one in Strabo’s paper. Still, he said, that doesn’t undermine the core point that fuel treatments are effective.

“It’s very clear,” he said, “that on the whole they are very beneficial.”

Not everyone supports such tactics. Critics argue they can harm ecosystems, disproportionately target larger trees, and open forests to logging under the guise of fire prevention. Some opponents also contend that this approach is less effective against extreme fires, while others question whether public funds would be better spent hardening homes and communities.

The federal government’s approach to forest management has shifted since President Donald Trump returned to office. In 2022, the Forest Service released a 10-year wildfire plan that increased forest management and prescribed burns. The Trump administration, which has announced plans to radically remake the agency, has placed greater emphasis on fighting wildfires than preventing them. According the Forest Service, in 2025 the agency reduced vegetation on about 1 million fewer acres than in 2024.

A Forest Service spokesperson attributed most of that decline to elevated wildfire activity in the Southeast. The agency also called 2025 “one the most successful wildfire years in recent history.” But critics worry it is moving away from proactive forest management.

“The takeaway that I really got from this article was that it provides further evidence that the administration’s current policy of full suppression in Western wildfire situations is misguided,” said Heather Stricker, a climate & lands analyst with the Sierra Club. While that approach might sound protective, she said a large body of research shows that it can often backfire. “This paper reiterated a lot of that previous research, but then took it a step further to quantify the cost savings.” 

The Trump administration has also announced plans to increase logging on federal lands. This has added to long-standing fears from environmental groups that instead of thoughtful, well-managed fuel treatment, the government could resort to clear-cutting. Even the paper notes this resistance. “Public pressure and risk aversion,” it reads, “skew wildfire management resources toward fire suppression rather than prevention.”

Strabo is hopeful that by adding to the range of evidence supporting forest management, his paper could help guide policymakers. “We could have these economic and ecological benefits if we scaled it up,” he said. “It’s a critically underfunded public good.”

This story was updated to include a response from the U.S. Forest Service.


Coach Suffers Horrifying Injury After Freak Shot Put Accident During Track Meet

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Coach Suffers Horrifying Injury After Freak Shot Put Accident During Track Meet


A Texas high school coach is continuing to fight through a terrifying brain injury after he was accidentally struck in the head by a shot put during a track meet in what his family is calling a devastating “freak accident.”

Blake Crutsinger, an assistant football and track coach at Ponder High School, suffered a skull fracture and brain swelling after being hit by the approximately 12-pound metal shot put during a regional competition on Saturday, May 2.

The frightening accident happened around 2 p.m. during the Region II-3A University Interscholastic League track meet at Whitehouse High School near Tyler.

According to updates shared by his wife, Leslie Crutsinger, Blake remains hospitalized but is showing encouraging signs of progress several days after the accident.

In a Facebook update shared Wednesday, Leslie revealed doctors had completed an EEG test that brought some much-needed good news.

“The EEG only shows general slowing which is normal for a head injury, but doesn’t show seizure activity,” she wrote. “Great news!”

She also said swelling in Blake’s face and left eye had gone down significantly.

Doctors were reportedly preparing to perform an MRI as long as the swelling continued improving.

Medical staff also hoped to begin slowly waking Blake up with the eventual goal of removing the breathing tube keeping him stabilized.

The shocking accident deeply rattled the Ponder community, with students, parents, and fellow coaches rallying around the beloved educator and father of two.

The school district publicly asked the community to keep Coach Crutsinger and his family in their prayers following the horrifying incident.

Leslie also urged people not to blame the student athlete involved in the accident, saying the young man has been struggling emotionally since the terrifying moment unfolded.

“Please pray for the young man from the other school who is taking this accident very hard,” she wrote in an earlier update.

While details about exactly how the shot put struck Blake have not been fully released, officials have described the incident as a tragic accident during the competition.

Support for the Crutsinger family has continued pouring in online as the coach begins what doctors say could be a long recovery process.

Drones and ancient revolutions in military affairs

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Drones and ancient revolutions in military affairs

When we look at the military landscape today we cannot help but be impressed by the significance of drones on the battlefield. Drones represent an unexpected revolution in military affairs that has dramatically changed the balance of forces on the battlefield and beyond.

The rise of the drone as a potent technology for warfare is not the first time that technology emerged to shake up great and small powers alike. Here are two examples from the ancient Near East that were revolutionary.

The chariot dramatically changed warfare, particularly as chariot design improved to make its cabin more secure and stable. Because of its war fighting utility, the chariot remained a factor in warfare for a thousand years or more. It enabled war fighters to flank their enemy, disrupting their foot soldier formations, forcing them to turn their ground divisions to face the mobile attackers. Later, as the chariot itself was hardened and became an assault weapon, chariots could spearhead charges against infantry, breaking up lines and paving the way for ground assaults.

A chariot typically had a crew of two or three warriors. One was responsible for driving the chariot. Another carried a heavy axe, a spear or both; the third was armed with a bow and arrow.

The bow and arrow is a very ancient weapon, known for more than 10,000 years. It was essential for hunting as well as for war. But, as archers surely knew, there were problems that plagued this weapon.

The bow was subject to breakage, either snapping or cracking – which made it worthless. So too was the bow string, made of animal gut, likely to fail at the most inopportune moment.

Fighting range was limited and accuracy was poor because of the shock to the structure when the bow string was pulled back hard and released. The “snap” was moderated by transversal forces on the string, creating twist in the released arrow that would throw it off course unless compensated by an experienced archer.

The composite bow

The invention of the composite bow improved archery and was a key to giving the chariot archers greater range, better accuracy, and more killing power since an arrow launched from a composite bow at a target could penetrate a hard target up to three inches.

There is debate about the origin of the composite bow; whether it initially was a Sumerian or Akkadian invention, or whether it was Canaanite. It was surely a vital weapon for the Hyksos which, along with their chariots, overpowered Egypt’s military forces.

The composite bow is made from wood, horn sinew and fish bladder. The secret is the fish bladder which, when prepared and cooked down, forms durable glue, the epoxy of the ancient war fighter.

The fish bladder is how a fish raises and lowers himself in water, by holding or releasing water. The bladder itself is primarily a collagen material, and the best fish bladders for the collagen glue are found in carp, sturgeon, catfish and cod.

Today fish bladders are processed into isinglass (essentially the concentrated collagen of the bladder), which is used for clarifying beer and wine.

Isinglass also was used during the Renaissance in “Court Plaster” which was a sticky material that could be used on walls and ceilings.

More recently, isinglass is used to treat wounds without the need for additional dressing. Thus an ancient material is playing a new role in the rapid treatment of wounded soldiers.

The advantage of glue based on the fish bladder is that it is stronger and can stand more torsion effects than glue made from beef sinew scrapings either from an animal’s gut or from the surface of leather. We don’t know whether bow makers in the Middle East produced their own isinglass, or if it was imported.

Certainly many of the woods needed to manufacture the bow had to be imported. The production of a composite bow was a slow process.

Wealthy property owners paid by tribal chiefs managed bow and arrow production and used slave labor to do the manufacturing. Some believe that the production of a good composite bow could take a year’s work. This suggests there were many hands involved in bow and arrow making and that production was a vital part of a well organized and disciplined community that was hierarchically organized.

Iron for weapons

The period that historians call the Bronze Age began around 3,300 BCE and ended with the collapse and disintegration of trading networks and some of the major powers of the time around 1200 BCE.

Ancient Bronze swords (Hermann et al. 2020, Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory)

Bronze is a durable alloy made from copper and – during much of the Bronze Age – arsenic.

It was revolutionary because it turned copper, a soft material, into a metal that could be used for spear tips, arrow heads, swords, axes, pikes and armor (helmets and body armor).

In the ancient Near East, the most significant source of copper was Cyprus, although copper was also extracted elsewhere, especially in the Arabah Valley (Timna/Faynan), and in the Sinai Peninsula.

Alloying copper with arsenic had two major drawbacks: it was not effective for longer weapons, especially swords, and arsenic fumes were poisonous, resulting in the death or impairment of workers making bronze and shaping bronze weapons. The full transition to copper-and-tin bronze came about roughly in 1500 BCE thanks to an overland and overseas trade network that could import tin from Kazakhstan and Afghanistan or (later) from Britain (Cardiff).

Bronze military hardware and agricultural tools were affordable by rich nations and helped define great power relations especially in the late Bronze period.

But between 1200 and 1000 BCE the trade system that supplied copper and tin fell apart, although not all the reasons for the collapse are known. With that collapse, other forces emerged. Among the great challengers were the Sea Peoples who raided many of the trading centers and eventually controlled what today is modern Israel. Among the Sea People were the Philistines.

The Philistine coalition was made up of five city states: Ashkelon, Ashdod, Gaza, Ekron and Gath, situated on the southern coastal plain of ancient Canaan (modern-day Israel/Gaza), from about 1200 BCE to 700 BCE.

There were dozens of other settlements in ancient Canaan, including the Hebrew tribes that were mainly concentrated in the hilly areas of the region. (The hills inhibited the use of chariots by the Philistines.) The Biblical story of Samuel, Saul and David takes place at this time and it centers on Philistine control of bronze and iron making.

Book 1 of Samuel (the Hebrew Torah does not separate Samuel into two books) Chapter 13 says:

There were no blacksmiths in the land of Israel in those days. The Philistines wouldn’t allow them for fear they would make swords and spears for the Hebrews. So whenever the Israelites needed to sharpen their plowshares, picks, axes, or sickles, they had to take them to a Philistine blacksmith. The charges were as follows: a quarter of an ounce of silver for sharpening a plowshare or a pick, and an eighth of an ounce for sharpening an ax or making the point of an ox goad. So on the day of the battle none of the people of Israel had a sword or spear, except for Saul and Jonathan.”

In a nutshell the Philistines controlled the Hebrew tribes by denying them weapons. This forced the tribes to rely on a thriving black market that was trading mostly bronze and copper weapons in exchange for agricultural products and slaves. But Philistine arms makers were also smelting and forging iron, a metal that was far cheaper than bronze that did not need external trade networks. It was the renegade David from the tribe of Judah who allied with the Philistine King Achish in Gath, giving him access to the secrets of iron making.

While David’s access to Philistine iron making is still debated by experts, archeology tends to confirm that once he was king of Israel, perhaps even during the five-year period when he was king only of Judah, iron making nearby was likely under David’s control. This is found in the site known as Khirbet Qeiyafa.

A rich collection of metal objects has been found at Khirbet Qeiyafa, including various weapons: iron daggers, iron swords, a bronze axe, and bronze arrowheads.

Khirbet Qeiyafa, a fortified 10th-century BCE city in the Elah Valley, provides significant evidence of early iron technology, with 47% of its metal assemblage being iron alongside bronze. The excavators of the site identified Khirbet Qeiyafa as a Judahite settlement built on the border of the Kingdom of Judah. The excavators of the site suggest that Khirbet Qeiyafa manufactured “typical Judean curved swords.”

Like drones today, Iron making know-how made it possible for David, as the head of the Hebrew tribes, to challenge Philistine control, eventually leading to a political settlement between the Israelites and Philistines. One element of this settlement was that the elite palace guard protecting David consisted of 600 Gittites from Gath.

Iron for armaments was a revolution in military affairs. Without iron for weapons, David might well have lost his struggle with Saul and failed to build a consolidated monarchy based in Jerusalem.

These ancient revolutions in military affairs suggest that massive changes can be brought about by new and innovative technology, just as the drone today appears to be changing the nature of modern warfare.

Stephen Bryen is a former US deputy under secretary of defense. This article and many others can be found on his Substack newsletter Weapons and Strategy.

Argentina Investigates Possible Source of Hantavirus Outbreak Aboard Cruise Ship

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Argentina Investigates Possible Source of Hantavirus Outbreak Aboard Cruise Ship


Argentine health experts are investigating whether the country was the source of a hantavirus outbreak linked to the MV Hondius after multiple passengers became ill during a month-long Atlantic voyage, including several confirmed cases of the potentially fatal Andes virus strain. 

Passengers died aboard the vessel, and at least eight people were identified as suspected hantavirus cases during the voyage. Laboratory tests confirmed two infections, while three people were medically evacuated from the ship on Wednesday. 

Authorities are attempting to determine where the infected passengers may have contracted the virus. Investigators are examining passenger itineraries and timelines to determine whether exposure occurred before the ship departed Argentina for Antarctica on April 1, during a stop at a remote South Atlantic island, or aboard the vessel itself. 

The World Health Organization has identified Argentina as having the world’s highest incidence of hantavirus, which spreads through contact with rodent saliva, urine, and feces. 

Argentina’s Health Ministry reported 101 hantavirus infections since June 2025, roughly double the number recorded during the previous year. 

The Andes virus strain identified in passengers aboard the MV Hondius can cause hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, a severe respiratory disease that is often fatal. 

Experts in Argentina said environmental changes may be contributing to the spread of the disease. 

“Argentina has become more tropical because of climate change, and that has brought disruptions, like dengue and yellow fever, but also new tropical plants that produce seeds for mice to proliferate,” infectious disease specialist Hugo Pizzi told the Associated Press. 

“There is no doubt that as time goes by, the hantavirus is spreading more and more,” he said. 

Health authorities in multiple countries are monitoring passengers and crew connected to the outbreak. 

The Netherlands received three evacuees for treatment, while Switzerland confirmed that a passenger tested positive after returning home. South Africa is treating a British patient in intensive care. 

Britain, the United States, and Singapore are monitoring additional passengers in isolation, most of whom remain asymptomatic. Dutch officials are also testing a KLM crew member who may have been exposed through contact with a passenger who died last month in South Africa. 

 

 

Elon Musk tried to hire OpenAI founders to start AI unit inside Tesla

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Elon Musk tried to hire OpenAI founders to start AI unit inside Tesla

Elon Musk tried to hire OpenAI’s founding team, including Sam Altman, to lead a new AI lab within Tesla in 2018, as the AI start-up’s leaders grappled over who should control the company and its direction.

Musk, a co-founder of the AI group, proposed bringing Altman, Greg Brockman, and Ilya Sutskever to his carmaker, appointing Altman to the board or making OpenAI a Tesla subsidiary, according to evidence in a high-stakes trial between the billionaire and the ChatGPT maker on Wednesday.

The disclosures shed light on a crucial issue in the case, in which Musk has claimed that Altman “stole a charity” by converting the company into a for-profit. OpenAI’s lawyers have argued the Tesla chief executive was happy to commercialize the lab, provided that he remained in charge.

Emails, texts, and testimony on Wednesday showed that by late 2017 Musk had lost confidence in the non-profit OpenAI’s ability to build artificial general intelligence, a powerful form of AI—and was exploring building his own AI lab within Tesla.

“There is little chance of OpenAI being a successful force if I focus on TeslaAI,” Musk wrote in a message at the time to Shivon Zilis, who testified in court on Wednesday.

Zilis, an OpenAI adviser from 2016 and board member from 2020 until 2023, is the mother of four of Musk’s children and was an important interlocutor between the billionaire and the AI lab’s other founders during the six-month period on which much of the case hinges.

In late 2017, Zilis sketched out plans for an event to “share that Tesla is building a world-leading AI lab (?) which will rival the likes of Google / DeepMind and Facebook AI Research.”

By early 2018, she laid out nine possible scenarios for achieving AGI. The bulk of those centered on Tesla and included bringing Altman in to run AI at the carmaker. Another proposal was to poach DeepMind founder Demis Hassabis for the same role.

These were among the options explored by OpenAI’s founders as they weighed the best structure to enable the company to raise enough capital to take on Google while retaining its non-profit mission.

Ultimately, OpenAI’s executives were not persuaded by Musk’s proposals. Zilis told Musk’s then-chief of staff Sam Teller in a February 2018 email: “They all think Elon is an incredible human being but that he really hasn’t done his homework AI/AGI and that really concerns them about working with him.”

Musk left OpenAI’s board in early 2018, and OpenAI went on to restructure as a for-profit entity with a charitable arm.

The world’s richest man is suing the company in a case that could alter the fate of OpenAI, which has grown to be an $852 billion behemoth with aspirations for a public listing as early as this year.

Musk claims Altman, Brockman, and OpenAI unjustly enriched themselves by converting the start-up into a for-profit company.

William Savitt, OpenAI’s lead attorney in the case, said he believed Zilis’ testimony showed Musk was “prepared to do the for-profit, provided he would get control.”

Speaking after Wednesday’s court hearing, Savitt said Musk sought to control governance and “fold OpenAI into Tesla… when neither option was available to him he picked up his marbles and went home.”

Brockman, OpenAI’s president, on Tuesday told the jury in Oakland that Musk was seeking “unilateral control over AGI,” which he and other founders could not accept.

Zilis, a technology expert who has also worked as an executive at Tesla and Musk’s brain-implant company Neuralink, told the court on Wednesday that her “allegiance [is] to the best outcome of AI for humanity.”

She and Musk first had a romantic relationship roughly a decade ago and decided to have children via IVF in 2020. “I… really wanted to be a mum. [Musk] was encouraging everyone around him to have children… he said if that was ever interesting he’d be able to make a donation,” she said.

In 2020, two years after the pair had fought over the direction of OpenAI, Altman texted Zilis to ask advice on approaching Musk. She was encouraging, but warned him: “the only thing I wonder is if he’ll pull the ‘you should have gone with Tesla’ card on you.”

© 2026 The Financial Times Ltd. All rights reserved. Not to be redistributed, copied, or modified in any way.

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