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Two Trump health nominees crash and burn in tense Senate hearing

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Two Trump health nominees crash and burn in tense Senate hearing

Two nominees for high-profile health roles in the Trump administration faced scrutiny from the Senate health committee Wednesday—and both crashed and burned in their own special ways.

The Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) scrutinized Erica Schwartz, the nominee for director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and Sean Kaufman, up for the role of Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response.

Schwartz’s assignment

Public health experts were “cautiously optimistic” about Schwartz’s nomination. She is well respected and holds views in line with evidence-based medicine, including being supportive of vaccinations—in contrast to anti-vaccine Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., whom she will serve under. She is also highly qualified for the role, with a medical degree, a master’s degree in public health, and a law degree. She’s had a long career as a Navy Officer, and previously held the roles of Chief Medical Officer for the US Coast Guard and deputy surgeon general in the first Trump administration.

With her credentials checking all the boxes and then some, the obvious question looming over her confirmation was whether she would stand firm against Kennedy’s well-documented anti-vaccine agenda and political interference. Kennedy notoriously fired the last highly qualified Senate-confirmed CDC director, Susan Monarez, for refusing to rubber-stamp vaccine recommendations from a CDC advisory panel he had stacked with anti-vaccine allies.

Although Monarez only held the job for 29 days, lawmakers—as well as scientists, doctors, and health experts—praised her integrity and commitment to science and evidence-based policy.

Schwartz’s assignment going into the hearing was abundantly clear: assure senators she was equally principled and would stand up to Kennedy.

Kaufman’s assignment

Kaufman, on the other hand, went into the hearing with a less-than-rosy image that he needed to overcome. He is up for the role of leading the Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response (ASPR), which is responsible for ensuring the US is poised to swiftly respond to the next pandemic, bioterror threat, or other emergency. That preparedness includes having quick access to or the development of vaccines, tests, and treatments.

Kaufman has reasonable qualifications for the role. He holds a master’s in public health, has served in leadership roles at the CDC and Emory University, and founded a company focusing on managing risk during outbreak responses. Overall, he has three decades’ worth of experience in outbreak preparedness, biosafety, and emergency responses.

But Kaufman has espoused anti-vaccine rhetoric in line with Kennedy, raising deep concern among senators that he will fail to follow science and keep the US adequately prepared for the next health crisis. Last week, Stat News dug up past comments from Kaufman in which he raised the long-debunked claim that vaccines cause autism, promoted the benefits of “natural immunity,” opposed vaccine mandates, and suggested that people are “pedophiles” for supporting the birth dose of hepatitis B vaccine (a dose strongly supported by evidence and the medical community). He also suggested he would “rather perish than have any one of his children receive” a COVID-19 vaccine.

Early in the hearing, Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wisc.) stated clearly what Kaufman’s assignment was: “You’re going to have to do some strong work to clarify your views on” vaccines, she warned him.

Schwartz’s immediate flailing

Throughout the roughly 2.5-hour hearing, Schwartz seemed incapable or unwilling to answer almost every question directly—even the softball questions, which puzzled lawmakers on multiple occasions. She also seemed deeply uninformed about what has been going on at the CDC, including why it currently doesn’t have a director. “I was not aware” was a common response from Schwartz throughout the hearing.

These problems were immediately clear in the opening questions by ranking member Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and chair Bill Cassidy (R-La.)—a medical doctor who cast a critical vote to confirm Kennedy, which he has come to regret. Cassidy lost his primary in May, which will bring his Senate career to an end next year.

Cassidy kicked off questions asking Schwartz directly: “Will you commit to this committee and to the American people to have the same integrity as [Monarez]? That if asked to do something which is wrong for public health, that you will stand up as she did [and] object, if necessary, publicly.” But Schwartz didn’t answer the question directly, only saying that she has led by integrity and that she took the Hippocratic oath as a doctor.

He next asked whether, as CDC director, she would have the power to reassign people working at the CDC, something Monarez said she did not have the ability to do during her time in the role. Cassidy asked in the context of Kennedy assigning employees to do “counterproductive” work, such as “fishing expeditions of how vaccines may cause problems”—something Kennedy is known to have done.

Again, Schwartz failed to answer directly, prompting Cassidy to interrupt her and point out that it was a yes-or-no question. In her second attempt, she said only that “the secretary absolutely will allow me to be the CDC director.”

Cassidy quickly became frustrated. “I almost feel like I’m having to go after this question a little bit more firmly than I feel like I should.” She continued to avoid answering the question.

“Really?”

When it was Sanders’ turn to question Schwartz, he asked if she agrees that the existing scientific evidence shows vaccines do not cause autism. She began her response with a worrying: “We do not know what causes autism.” Sanders cut her off, pressing if she accepted the overwhelming evidence that vaccines do not cause autism, at which point she said she accepted the evidence.

Sanders next asked if, as CDC director, she would remove a CDC website published under Kennedy that falsely links vaccines and autism. Schwartz said she wasn’t aware of the website, and she would not say whether she would have it removed when pressed.

Sanders next asked if she would commit to reporting to Congress “if you receive directives from Secretary Kennedy or any other individual in the Trump administration to implement policies that are unscientific and could harm the health and well-being of the American people?”

Schwartz responded, saying: “Senator, I do not believe that the president or the secretary would ever do what you just mentioned.”

“Really?” Sanders responded in disbelief. “Do you think that is the record?”

At other points in the hearing, Schwartz told the senators that she was unaware that DOGE cuts nearly destroyed the CDC’s National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, or that the Trump administration had scaled back a CDC food safety surveillance system and thwarted tobacco control efforts.

As for her alignment with other Trump administration policies, Schwartz said she supported Trump’s decision to withdraw the US from the World Health Organization. While being supportive of vaccines generally, she couched her support for flu vaccine mandates in the military saying she “fully supportive” of them “in certain circumstances.” (Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth recently repealed the flu vaccine mandate for the military, which quickly led to a flu outbreak in a Texas base that sickened nearly 300 and killed one recruit, spurring a restoration of the mandate.) Schwartz also refused to say whether she would allow Kennedy to kill a CDC pre-paid promotional campaign for flu shots during a deadly flu season—which Kennedy did.

At the closing, Cassidy aired his frustration. “I felt like you were always trying not to answer my question, which was disappointing,” he said, before chastising her for claiming not to know why Monarez was fired. “I’m here personally liking you, but feeling as if I’m having to represent the public health of the United States of America so that it’s not taken over by people who are ideologically inclined and looking to file a lawsuit [against vaccine makers], not looking to prevent disease.”

Kaufman on vaccines

While Cassidy was clearly disappointed and frustrated with Schwartz, he was downright angry with Kaufman. Throughout the hearing, Kaufman tried to backpedal on his comments about vaccines, but his responses were unconvincing. In questions from Sanders, Kaufman confirmed that he once wrote he would rather die than give his children a COVID-19 vaccine, but pointed out that he did once recommend the vaccine to his wife’s mom.

When senators confronted him about his false claims and attacks on the hepatitis B vaccine birth dose, he noted that all three of his children had received it.

Cassidy, a hepatologist who has treated patients with severe liver damage from hepatitis B, including some who died from the infection, didn’t let the issue drop. “Why would you repeat those damn lies?” Cassidy yelled, angrily pounding his pencil. Kaufman noted that he had deleted the LinkedIn post in which he made the claims and suggested they weren’t that bad because he had written ambiguously.

Kaufman on mRNA research

Senators also pressed Kaufman on his thoughts on mRNA vaccine technology—which is widely considered to be a promising technology for quickly developing new vaccines against novel pathogens, potentially ones with pandemic potential. But Kennedy despises the technology and has spread significant misinformation about mRNA technology. Last year, he drew intense criticism for canceling hundreds of millions of dollars in federal grants to develop mRNA vaccines, including for pandemic preparedness.

When asked about his support for mRNA technology, Kaufman bafflingly said he both supported Kennedy’s decision to cut research funding for mRNA technology and believed the US should support more research on mRNA technology. Kaufman’s odd explanation was that he didn’t want to support research for future uses of mRNA technology until there was more research into the platform on which mRNA COVID-19 vaccines were designed.

“That implies we can’t do two things at once,” Sen. John Hickenlooper (D-Colo.) said upon hearing this explanation. He later summed up his reaction to Kaufman’s argument, saying, “I’m incredulous.”

Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) was equally bewildered. “I don’t understand how you want more research, but canceling it is okay.”

Cassidy, after blasting Kaufman on the hepatitis B vaccine, said he was “flummoxed” and “flabbergasted” that Kaufman said he supported canceling mRNA research because there wasn’t enough mRNA research.

Italy battles two weather extremes: scorching heat in Sicily, deadly storms in the north

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Italy battles two weather extremes: scorching heat in Sicily, deadly storms in the north


Italy expanded its highest-level heat alerts on Thursday as a prolonged heatwave tightened its grip across much of the country, with Sicily expected to endure some of the most extreme temperatures in Europe over the coming days.

The Health Ministry increased the number of major cities under its highest “red” heat warning from seven to 15, with the total expected to rise further on Friday. A Level 3 alert signals conditions that pose a serious health risk to the entire population, including healthy adults.

Southern Italy, particularly Sicily, is forecast to experience the most severe heat. Temperatures are expected to reach 41 degrees Celsius in the central Sicilian city of Caltanissetta on Thursday before climbing to between 43C and 45C across parts of Sicily and neighboring Sardinia by Friday, according to Italian forecasters.

Palermo is among the cities placed under the maximum heat warning, while much of the island is expected to endure exceptionally hot and dry conditions through the weekend.

Meteorologists said the heatwave, the third to affect Italy this summer, is expected to peak by the weekend before a cooler air mass brings some relief beginning Sunday. Even then, temperatures across southern Italy are forecast to remain well above seasonal averages.

While southern regions bake under extreme heat, northern Italy has been dealing with a separate bout of severe weather. Thunderstorms, heavy rain, hail and strong winds caused flooding and fallen trees across parts of Emilia-Romagna, the Triveneto region and northern Lombardy.

Authorities said one person was killed near Modena after a vehicle crashed during torrential rain.

Forecasters said the storms were triggered by cooler air moving across the Alps colliding with hot, humid air trapped over the Po Valley, creating conditions for intense thunderstorms and large hail.

Italy’s Health Ministry has scheduled a coordination meeting on Friday to assess the impact of the heatwave, while Health Minister Orazio Schillaci urged residents to avoid outdoor activity during the hottest hours of the day.

Regional authorities have also introduced measures to protect outdoor workers. The Lazio region has banned prolonged work in direct sunlight between 12:30 p.m. and 4 p.m., while Milan has restricted food deliveries during peak afternoon heat. Delivery riders have staged demonstrations in Milan and Florence, calling for stronger labor protections and better pay during extreme weather.

Scientists say human-caused climate change is increasing the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events, including heatwaves, droughts, heavy rainfall and severe storms. They attribute the long-term warming trend primarily to greenhouse gas emissions produced by burning fossil fuels.

ICE Officers at Maine Shooting Scene Were Wearing Body Cameras. They Were Not Turned On.

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ICE Officers at Maine Shooting Scene Were Wearing Body Cameras. They Were Not Turned On.


Federal officers at the scene of a killing by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Maine were wearing body cameras, according to four ICE officials who reviewed images from the scene — but the cameras are on multi-function devices that ICE officers use as radio mics.

After an ICE officer shot and killed a 25-year-old Colombian national this week in Biddeford, Maine, Secretary of Homeland Security Markwayne Mullin reportedly told Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, that officers involved in the shooting were not wearing body cameras.

Yet the ICE officials who spoke with The Intercept, all of whom requested anonymity to protect their livelihoods, identified cameras among the equipment worn by two ICE officers nearby in the immediate aftermath of the shooting.

The body-worn devices were not designed solely to capture evidential video, and are used primarily as remote microphones for ICE officers’ radio communications. (ICE did not respond to a request for comment.)

“We are currently only using them as mics because of the AXON contract.”

ICE officials who spoke to The Intercept identified the accessories worn by ICE officers on the scene of the Maine shooting as Motorola SVX Video Remote Speaker Microphones, a wireless radio mic with one other important feature: a camera. (Motorola did not respond to a request to comment.)

Although the Motorola SVX worn by ICE officers are designed to work as body cameras, the ICE official said the function isn’t used.

“They have multiple functionalities,” one ICE official who identified the Motorola SVX at the scene in Maine told The Intercept. “However, we are currently only using them as mics because of the AXON contract.”

The Department of Homeland Security, ICE’s parent agency, purchases body-worn cameras through a contract with Axon, a law enforcement tech firm. (Axon did not respond to a request for comment.)

Another ICE official showed The Intercept where, on their own Motorola SVX, a cover can be attached to the top of the device where the camera lens is, comparing it to the tech worn by officers at the Maine shooting scene.

“This is where the cover clips over the camera lens,” the second ICE officer said. “Since the cameras don’t work they just leave the cover on.”

The SVX mics worn by ICE are designed to record internally, capable of storing over 100 hours of standard-definition video, according to Motorola promotional materials and a technical support line. The video-recording function on the SVX mic, however, requires a subscription.

No Bodycam Footage

Motorola is a giant in the world of government law enforcement and security work.

According to a document published on the Department of Homeland Security’s website, ICE alone expects to spend more than $100 million on a six-year contract for Motorola’s line of APX Next All-Band Smart Radios and accessories, which would include the SVX mic.

The deadly ICE shooting of Johan Sebastián Durán Guerrero in Maine stoked national outrage, coming on the heels of another fatal ICE shooting of Mexican immigrant Lorenzo Salgado Araujo in Houston.

Neither man, according to news reports, had been the intended targets of the ICE arrest teams. And neither man’s death was captured by federal officers’ body-worn cameras, according to official reports.

Shortly after the Maine shooting, ICE ordered its officers in the field to halt nearly all traffic stops. After reports of the order emerged and Trump complained, border czar Tom Homan pivoted to say the ICE vehicle stops would continue.

Widely known today for its body cams, Axon used to be called Taser, named for the stun gun that built its reputation and which it still carries. The company does brisk business with ICE.

Last month, presidential financial disclosures raised eyebrows over an ICE public request for a $220 million stun gun contract that appeared tailor-made for Axon’s Tasers. Only two weeks before the request for information went out, according to the disclosures, President Donald Trump purchased as much as $5 million in shares from Axon.

During Trump’s winter immigration crackdown in Minnesota, ICE announced that it would be purchasing and distributing body cameras to every arrest team in the agency.

After the deaths of Durán Guerrero and Salgado Araujo over past week, however, the Trump administration said the distribution was incomplete.

“The body cameras have been ordered,” Homan, Trump’s border czar, said in a press conference. “There’s a deployment schedule on the books.”

The Homeland Security Department said that half of ICE field offices already had body-worn cameras and the rest were expected to get them in the next two months.

The new body cameras were funded through a $20 million congressional appropriation to expand ICE’s camera program, which includes contracts with Axon for the devices.

Texas Democrats Ask for Investigation Into Ken Paxton After Our Reporting Found He May Have Violated Election Law

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Texas Democrats Ask for Investigation Into Ken Paxton After Our Reporting Found He May Have Violated Election Law

Dallas-area Democrats are demanding that Republican Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton be investigated for illegal voting after ProPublica and The Texas Tribune revealed that he has repeatedly voted while registered at an address where he appears to no longer live.

In a complaint filed Tuesday, the Collin County Democratic Party asked the Texas secretary of state to investigate whether Paxton committed election fraud by voting in the May primary runoff. Paxton beat longtime incumbent John Cornyn in that race, securing the Republican Party’s nomination for U.S. Senate.

Read More

Mary Higbe, vice chair of the Collin County Democratic Party, noted in the complaint that Paxton’s office, as recently as February, warned voters that “it is illegal to misrepresent your residence on election records.”

“For someone who’s made a stand against voter fraud, it’s unconscionable (yet not surprising) that Paxton engages in this behavior,” Higbe wrote. She added, “I ask that he be held to the same standards he wishes to hold others to.”

ProPublica and The Texas Tribune reported last week that Paxton has voted six times in the past two years while registered at an address in Collin County where he previously lived with his wife, state Sen. Angela Paxton.

Paxton moved out of the Collin County home in June 2024 and has not returned, according to a divorce filing by his wife and a source close to the Paxton family. It is unclear where Paxton has lived for the past two years, but reporting by ProPublica and the Tribune has linked him to a home in neighboring Denton County since February.

Three election officials told ProPublica and the Tribune that Paxton may have broken state election law, which requires voters to be registered where they live. Voters may temporarily cast ballots using an address where they do not reside, so long as they intend to return. The experts said it is unclear whether Paxton could make such an argument given his ongoing public and contentious divorce.

The day after Collin County Democrats filed the complaint, the Texas Democratic Party issued a news release that accused Paxton of ignoring “bombshell voter fraud accusations.”

It’s unclear what will happen with the complaint. Under the current system, the secretary of state conducts an “initial review and, if appropriate, refers it to the Office of the Attorney General,” said Alicia Pierce, spokesperson for Secretary of State Jane Nelson, whose last day in the position is Friday. Pierce did not respond to a question about whether the office would handle a complaint against Paxton differently. She instead pointed to the state law that requires the secretary of state to “promptly” refer complaints to the attorney general if “there is reasonable cause to suspect that criminal conduct occurred.”

Paxton’s situation seems to meet that threshold, and the attorney general should seek outside help, given the conflict of interest in investigating himself, said San Antonio election lawyer Joaquin Gonzalez, who previously led the voting rights program at the Texas Civil Rights Project.

“The ethical and sort of best practice would be for the attorney general’s office to hire an independent special investigator to look into the complaint,” Gonzalez said.

Paxton did not answer questions from the newsrooms in early July about his voter registration and residency.

Neither he nor the attorney general’s office responded to questions about the complaint or how they would handle the case should the secretary of state refer it to his office.

Paxton campaign spokesperson Madison Cercy sent the newsrooms a broad statement unrelated to Paxton’s voter registration that accused the “political elite” and reporters of digging through the attorney general’s private life to “draw the most damning conclusion.” The campaign did not answer a question about Cercy’s previous statements to other news outlets that Paxton “is a lawful, registered Texas voter in full compliance with the law.”

Higbe said in an interview that the complaint tests Texas’ system of checks and balances, adding that this is “an opportunity to see if that system still works.” Still, she said she doubts the attorney general would permit a fair investigation of his own conduct.

“But pointing out hypocrisy from the state’s top cop is necessary,” Higbe said.

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Power of Siberia 2 deadlock belies Russia-China ‘no-limits’ pact

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Power of Siberia 2 deadlock belies Russia-China ‘no-limits’ pact

Power of Siberia 2, a landmark natural gas pipeline that would link Russia and China, has hit a deadlock, with a gas-price gap so vast that Beijing has told Moscow to stop raising the subject altogether. Neither side has formally walked away, but no timeline for a deal or for construction to begin is in sight.

The project, which received approval in principle from both governments last September, would carry up to 50 billion cubic meters of gas annually from Russia’s Yamal fields through Mongolia to China.

The Wall Street Journal reported that Chinese officials made clear even before Russian President Vladimir Putin’s visit to Beijing in May that an agreement was impossible under current terms, and asked the Russian delegation not to press the issue. The Kremlin says talks continue at the corporate level.

The dispute centers on the price for the gas. China is demanding that it be permitted to pay US$50 per thousand cubic meters, the heavily subsidized rate Russian households pay at home, which bears no relation to commercial export terms. Russia is asking for about US$250 per thousand cubic meters.

Public information showed that China already imports Russian gas via the Power of Siberia 1 pipeline at US$240 to US$280 per thousand cubic meters, and Central Asian gas at about US$200 per thousand cubic meters. Before the war in Ukraine broke out in February 2022, Russia sold gas to Europe and Turkey at US$275 to US$340 per thousand cubic meters.

Beijing’s ultra-low opening bid sits uneasily alongside Chinese leaders’ repeated pledges of a “no-limits” partnership with Moscow.

Chinese commentators say that Russia is under mounting pressure on multiple fronts:

  • Ukraine has intensified drone strikes on Russian territory;
  • The European Union has committed to phasing out all Russian liquefied natural gas (LNG) imports by the end of 2026, with a full ban on pipeline gas from October 2027;
  • Beijing has resumed buying American LNG.

Reuters reported Thursday that the first United States LNG cargo in a year had arrived at a Chinese terminal last week, following a resumption of purchases after President Xi Jinping and US President Donald Trump met in mid-May.

“In 2025, China paid an average of around US$258 per thousand cubic meters for Russian pipeline gas, already well below what Europe once paid,” writes a Hebei-based columnist using the pen name Riyue Xhige. “Beijing’s new demand pushes the discount much farther. Even Belarus has never been offered terms this close to Russia’s domestic price.”

The columnist adds: “This is no longer ordinary commercial bargaining. It reflects a fundamental shift in who holds the power at the negotiating table.”

The columnist says Russia once enjoyed a seller’s market with Europe, where buyers had little choice but to pay – but that now that dynamic has reversed entirely, with China sitting firmly in a buyer’s market.

He points to China’s diversified energy sources as the foundation of its bargaining strength:

  • China’s domestic gas output reached 262 billion cubic meters in 2025, up 6.2% year on year, marking the ninth consecutive year of growth exceeding 10 billion cubic meters.
  • On land, the four gas pipelines in Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Tajikistan in Central Asia have a combined annual capacity of over 85 billion cubic meters, with additional routes under planning;
  • At sea, LNG tankers from Qatar, Australia and Malaysia arrive at Chinese terminals in a steady stream. Russia is one option among many.

“China wants to expand energy imports from Russia as part of a diversified supply strategy, but that does not mean Russian gas is irreplaceable,” he says. “This strategic composure gives Beijing unprecedented leverage at the negotiating table. No matter how Russia adjusts its position, it will have to come back to meet Chinese terms.”

“Russia is like a cat on a hot tin roof because of the war in Ukraine, while China has no shortage of gas sources,” writes a Jiangsu-based commentator using the pen name New Day Student. “If Russia does not want to sell, we will simply keep buying from Central Asia, Australia and Qatar.”

Its true, he says, that “some of Russia’s supporters may feel it is unfair that China asks Moscow to sell gas at its domestic price and pay all the infrastructure costs. But what does that have to do with us? Nobody is forcing Russia to sell. That is just how markets work.”

He adds that the suggested price of US$50 per thousand cubic meters is just an opening anchor for negotiations, not a final offer; in any case, the gas price of Power of Siberia 2 must be lower than that of Power of Siberia 1.

Pipeline’s rocky road

The Power of Siberia 2 project has been in the works for years. Russia’s Gazprom approved a feasibility study in 2021, and both governments reached an agreement in principle last September. But the path to that point was far from smooth.

Moscow had long pushed for the pipeline to pass through Mongolia, citing lower infrastructure costs compared to a direct route. Beijing resisted.

After Mongolia signed an open skies agreement with the United States and proposed a rare-earth partnership with Washington in August 2023, China’s concerns deepened. Beijing worried that a gas supply routed through the landlocked nation could one day be blocked, undermining China’s energy security. 

China eventually relented last September and accepted the Mongolia route, but only on the condition that Russia agreed to significantly lower gas prices.

The broader energy picture has since shifted in Beijing’s favor. In May, China agreed to resume purchases of United States LNG. On June 21, the US Treasury issued a 60-day exemption allowing Iran to produce and sell oil and petroleum products in US dollars. Together, the moves helped China replenish energy reserves depleted by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

Putin met Xi in Beijing on May 20, only to find China’s pricing terms unchanged. He then traveled to Kazakhstan on May 28 to explore a Central Asian transit route for Russian gas to enter China, sidestepping Mongolia altogether.  

“Switching the pipeline route will not solve anything,” says another Hebei-based columnist. “This is fundamentally a question of price and cost. It is true that Russia needs the Chinese market, and China needs a stable energy supply. But China has plenty of options and no reason to rush. We simply hold the stronger hand.”

He adds: “It is Russia, not China, that is running out of time, with the EU’s ban on Russian pipeline gas taking effect in autumn 2027. Whether the Kazakhstan route can actually be realized depends on whether Russia is willing to show good faith on price and financing to China. If Moscow still clings to the old thinking of selling its energy high and passing costs onto others, this detour will lead nowhere either.”

Shan Hai, a Shandong-based columnist, says that since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Moscow has relied on selling energy at a high price, importing whatever it needs and ignoring the development of its industrial ecosystem.

He says Russia should reform its economic system by selling energy to China at competitive prices and by opening its doors to Chinese manufacturers to build factories. He also points out that some Russian regions have begun importing refined petroleum products from China after their oil refinery facilities were attacked by Ukrainian drones, meaning that the scope of energy cooperation between the two countries is expanding and becoming reciprocal.

Read: China-Russia gas pact heightens Western sanctions risks

Follow Jeff Pao on X at @jeffpao3

T-Mobile bungled forced plan migration, canceling some users’ free lines

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T-Mobile bungled forced plan migration, canceling some users’ free lines

T-Mobile canceled some longtime subscribers’ free-line promotions as part of a forced migration to new rate plans, spurring complaints from customers yesterday. T-Mobile admitted the problem and blamed it on technical errors that it is trying to fix.

The forced plan changes were controversial to begin with, particularly as many longtime users are being hit with price hikes of $6 per line. The unexpected loss of free lines for some of those users could raise prices by a much higher amount if the change isn’t reversed.

There is good news, though. T-Mobile told Ars today that it was a mistake and that the company is working to fix the problem. Of course, it’s not always easy for telecom customers to get the proper resolution even after a company admits to an error publicly. But given T-Mobile’s statement today, we hope the firm will fix the problem for all impacted customers with as little hassle as possible.

“Our priority is to ensure customers keep the promotions, credits and benefits of their current plan,” T-Mobile told Ars today. “We’ve identified technical issues affecting a very small number of customers and are working quickly to correct them. For some of those customers, free line promotions were not reflected correctly following migration due to a delay in applying promotional discounts. Those free lines remain free, and we’re restoring the discounts, backdating them where needed, and reprocessing accounts to ensure customers receive the benefits they were promised.”

T-Mobile acknowledged that this isn’t the only billing problem related to its mass migration of plans. “We’re also investigating reports that some people were incorrectly billed for Hulu following migration and are actively working to identify the cause. We apologize for the confusion and will make it right for our customers,” T-Mobile said.

T-Mobile recently announced it would eliminate its older plans and automatically move customers to different rate plans that are more or less equivalent in price and features. “Some customers will see no change to their monthly bill, while some will see a modest adjustment,” T-Mobile told media outlets in late June. “Every customer moved to a new plan will keep their current benefits while gaining improvements in network and service experiences.”

Free lines lost in transition

The promise that customers would “keep their current benefits” was broken, according to people who say free lines were removed from their accounts. In addition to complaints on Reddit, the Mobile Report news site wrote today that it heard directly from a few users who said their free lines were not migrated to the new plans.

Besides the elimination of free lines, another problem “that some customers are seeing is a mysterious extra hotspot data add-on on their new plans,” adding as much as $15 to monthly bills, The Mobile Report wrote.

T-Mobile handed out free lines at various times through promotions that let paying customers add another phone line to their accounts at no additional charge. During a March 2025 promotion, for example, customers who had kept their accounts active for at least 10 years could obtain a free line if they already had at least two paid lines.

Some users apparently accumulated a bunch of the free lines during their long tenures as T-Mobile customers. In a Reddit post yesterday, one said they previously had three paid lines and six free ones for about $50 a month.

“Just received my first bill today after being migrated to Experience Signature and bill is >$300. The bill breakdown did not include any free lines carried over,” the post said. Experience Signature is one of the plans that T-Mobile is automatically applying to the accounts of customers on retired plans.

Another person who reported losing free line promotions said it resulted in a $200 increase in the bill. One person said they contacted T-Mobile support about the loss of a free line, and the support rep was unable to restore it.

“One free line was invalidated because it was apparently ‘ineligible’ with the current plan. They gave me a year’s worth of credit for that one line and said sorry they couldn’t do anything else,” the person wrote.

T-Mobile ended lifetime price guarantee in 2024

Given the 10-year condition on last year’s free-line promotion, it seemed to be a way to reward T-Mobile’s most loyal customers, those who stuck with the company since its days as the smaller “Un-carrier” fighting the AT&T and Verizon duopoly. But since T-Mobile completed an acquisition of Sprint in 2020, the US has had three major nationwide wireless carriers of roughly equal size.

While T-Mobile says the loss of free lines is unintentional and will be fixed, the carrier refused to reverse another change that unexpectedly raised customer bills two years ago. Specifically, T-Mobile abandoned one of its key Un-carrier promises in 2024 when it announced price hikes for customers who signed up for plans during promotions that promised their price would never change.

Customers were irate and expressed outrage by filing complaints with the Federal Communications Commission and a class action lawsuit. The class action is still pending, and T-Mobile is trying to force the plaintiffs into arbitration.

This year’s price hike for longtime customers is bound to impact some of the same customers who felt betrayed by the 2024 end of the lifetime price lock. Kathleen Odean, a T-Mobile customer who we interviewed in 2024, told us this week that she received a text message from T-Mobile stating that her plan is being retired and that prices would rise “up to $6 per line per month.”

Odean and her husband switched from Verizon to get the lifetime T-Mobile price lock in 2017, signing up for a two-line plan specifically marketed to people ages 55 and over. They are now set to receive their second price increase since 2024.

Odean, who is in her early 70s, told us she is furious about the latest price change. She said she complained to the company and “just got a generic email in reply.”

T-Mobile trying to simplify back-end system

T-Mobile COO Jon Freier told staff in a leaked email last month that the carrier is removing about 1,100 legacy billing codes from its systems in the process of eliminating old plans.

“Nearly half of these customers won’t see their price change at all by the time this migration is complete,” Freier wrote. “For those who do, It’s up to $6 per line. We’re reaching out to anyone—including employees—whose new plan includes a price adjustment.”

Freier’s email said plans originally sold in the 3G and 4G eras had stricter restrictions on smartphone and hotspot data, little or no international roaming, and a video resolution cap of 480p. Customers being moved to new plans will “get more premium data, more high-speed hotspot [data], and better international coverage,” plus a five-year price guarantee, the Freier email said.

A Fierce Network report said the elimination of 1,100 billing codes will leave fewer than 100 codes in T-Mobile’s system. With a smaller number of codes that reference various products and rate plans, T-Mobile is attempting to greatly simplify its back-end system.

“These are not 1,100 different price plans; they’re codes in the billing system that tell the network what to allow and not allow,” Fierce Network wrote. When T-Mobile adds a feature or capability to its website or mobile app, “it has to run it through all these codes to make sure it’s backwards compatible.”

It’s clear that in this mass migration of plans and reduction in billing codes, old service offerings weren’t always replaced with close equivalents. If T-Mobile lives up to the promise it made today, customers should at least get the missing free lines back and have their bills cleared of any erroneous charges. But the $6 per-line price increases are here to stay.

Qatar categorically rejects Israeli reports of military action against Iran

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Qatar categorically rejects Israeli reports of military action against Iran

Qatar on Thursday categorically rejected Israeli media reports claiming that Doha had agreed to participate in military action against Iran.

“These allegations have been circulated by individuals seeking to draw the State of Qatar into the conflict, to undermine its pivotal role in mediation, and to push the region towards further escalation and chaos,” the International Media Office said in a statement.

Doha stressed that it has repeatedly affirmed since the start of the US-Iran conflict that it “has not participated and will not participate” in any military action against any neighboring country.

READ: Volkswagen’s planned defence deal with Israel blocked by Qatari investors

“Qatar will not allow such misleading allegations to undermine its active diplomatic efforts to bring the conflict to an end, and that it will continue its good offices in coordination with its regional and international partners to reach a comprehensive and sustainable agreement that addresses the concerns of all parties,” the statement said.

The office did not identify the Israeli media outlets that published the reports, nor did it provide any further details.

Regional escalation flared up in February when the US and Israel launched a joint offensive against Iran, while Tehran retaliated with missile and drone strikes targeting Gulf nations hosting US assets.

Iran and the US reached a Pakistan-mediated memorandum of understanding last month aimed at ending their conflict and reaching a lasting peace agreement. Tensions, however, escalated in recent days over the Strait of Hormuz, with the two sides exchanging attacks.

READ: US launches 5th consecutive night of strikes against Iran: Central Command

Israel Detains Senior HWC Officials as Security Agencies Report Terror, Influence Threats 

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Israel Detains Senior HWC Officials as Security Agencies Report Terror, Influence Threats 


Israeli authorities have arrested senior officials from the Health Work Committees (HWC), an organization Israel designated as a terrorist group in 2020 over its alleged ties to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), as the country’s security establishment reports confronting both terrorist threats and foreign influence operations. 

The arrests come as Channel 12 reported Thursday that the Shin Bet recently thwarted multiple alleged plots targeting Israel’s political and security leadership. The broadcaster also said the agency dismantled several foreign-run social media operations that it believes were intended to influence Israeli public opinion. 

Among the networks identified was a Telegram channel known as Bnei Eretz, which allegedly presented itself as an Israeli platform while being operated by what Channel 12 described as a “hostile foreign actor.” According to the report, Israeli security officials expect such campaigns to become more frequent ahead of the country’s upcoming legislative elections as foreign actors seek to capitalize on political divisions and social tensions. 

The detention of HWC officials prompted a renewed warning from NGO Monitor founder and president Prof. Gerald M. Steinberg, who argued that the arrests highlight what he described as the organization’s longstanding links to the PFLP. 

Steinberg noted that Israel designated HWC as a terrorist organization in 2020, yet the group has continued operating in the West Bank. He said several senior officials and employees—including the organization’s former general director, former fundraiser and at least three people who held financial positions—have been convicted of terror-related offenses. 

He also criticized continued European support for the organization, singling out Belgium as a donor despite Israel’s designation of HWC. 

“This is yet another example of how terror groups like the PFLP repeatedly exploit the NGO facade,” Steinberg said. “We call on donor states to immediately halt any remaining funding to HWC based on its leaders’ ongoing ties with the PFLP.” 

Channel 12 did not identify the foreign actor allegedly behind the online influence campaigns or provide additional details about the alleged terror plots or the arrests of the HWC officials. 

 

 

Bodybuilder Dies at 35 After Posting Gym Photos Ahead of Major Competition

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Bodybuilder Dies at 35 After Posting Gym Photos Ahead of Major Competition


Brazilian bodybuilder Mailson Araújo has died suddenly after collapsing at home just hours after sharing workout photos with his followers. He was 35.

Araújo fell ill late Monday at his home in Alagoinhas, Brazil, just days before he was set to compete at this weekend’s Musclecontest event in Curitiba, according to Globo.

His mother, who is a nurse, tried desperately to save him after he collapsed. First responders also rushed to the scene, but Araújo could not be revived.

He was pronounced dead soon after. His cause of death has not yet been released.

The news stunned fans and fellow athletes, especially because Araújo had posted gym photos only hours before his death.

In the images, the bodybuilder was seen flexing and showing off his physique as he continued preparing for competition.

“In the process, enjoying every day,” he captioned one of the now-heartbreaking posts.

Araújo had been a professional athlete for only three years, but he had already made a name for himself in the bodybuilding world.

He earned his professional tour card in 2023 after winning the Arnold Classic South America title in São Paulo.

He also had several strong finishes during his career, including a third-place finish at the 2023 Muscleman competition.

Araújo had been expected to appear at the Musclecontest competition, which begins Friday in Curitiba. The event is considered an important stop for some athletes hoping to move closer to the prestigious Mr. Olympia stage later in the year.

After news of his death spread, tributes began pouring in from the bodybuilding community.

Professional bodybuilder Maiki Ono wrote online that Araújo would be “greatly missed.”

Brazilian bodybuilder Lucas Moraes also paid tribute, describing the late athlete as a “giant.”

Araújo’s final post has now taken on a heartbreaking meaning for fans, who watched him celebrate the discipline and daily grind of his sport just hours before his sudden death.

Political turmoil follows Ukraine defense minister’s dismissal

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Political turmoil follows Ukraine defense minister’s dismissal

Protest in Kyiv July 16. Photo: Luke Johnson

KYIV – The dismissal of popular reform-minded Defense Minister Mykhailo Fedorov has sent shockwaves through Ukrainian politics and society, leading to impromptu protests in Kyiv and other cities across Ukraine on July 16.

On the evening of July 15, Fedorov announced on Facebook that it had been a “great honor” to serve as Ukraine’s minister of defense. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has yet to comment, but the move comes after Fedorov spent just six months in office and clashed with Commander-in-Chief Oleksandr Syrskyi.

Fedorov, 35, who had not served in the military and was previously Ukraine’s minister of digital transformation, advocated for the broader adoption of drones and unmanned systems to bridge dire manpower shortages on the frontline. Syrskyi, 60, a career Soviet military veteran and four-star general, had emphasized the need to recruit more people to serve on the frontlines.

Fedorov had also been the brainchild behind Ukraine’s mid-strike campaign against Russia hitting Moscow’s supply lines, which he dubbed a “logistics lockdown.” Possessing close ties with Silicon Valley executives – his youthful appearance and casual attire made him easily mistakable for one of them – he worked with SpaceX CEO Elon Musk to shut down Russia’s Starlink terminals.

He had also angered traditional defense contractors with moves to make defense procurement more open and transparent – notably allowing soldiers to buy their own weapons directly from the website Brave1, dubbed the “Amazon of Weapons.”

The dismissal was met with shock and anger across Ukraine’s civil society. A July 15 social media post by Dmytro Koziatynskyi, a veteran and former combat medic, called for protests the next morning. In Kyiv and other cities including Lviv, Dnipro, and Odessa, the protests began at 9:01 – one minute after the daily moment of silence for Ukrainians who have lost their lives in Russia’s invasion.

After a ballistic missile strike killed two and injured six in Kyiv the night before, I made my way to the protests in front of the Ivan Franko Theater, not too far from Zelenskyy’s office. There, the crowd chanted “Shame!” and “FE-DOR-OV!” and “No personal interests!”

The news had only broken a little over 12 hours before, and yet there were at least 1,000 people there during the workday. There were neither speeches nor really much organization behind the protests, but there was a lot of anger – and fear – over Fedorov’s dismissal.

I caught up with Inna Sovsun, an opposition lawmaker from the party Holos, who said that while she sometimes disagreed with Fedorov’s decisions, his dismissal was “very wrong.” “At this point, there at least has to be a clear communication from the president about what the hell is happening,” she told me.

She noted that it was unusual for Ukrainians to protest a minister’s dismissal – there were no protests when Zelenskyy dismissed Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko on July 12, for example – but in this case “the personality and the issue” coincided.

Protesters tended to be younger Ukrainians in their 30s and 40s, and they were anxious and outraged over what the dismissal meant for the trajectory of the war, in which Ukraine has been recently gaining momentum by striking Russia’s energy infrastructure.

“We’re fighting a stronger country and we need to fight with new technologies,” said Andrei Rusan, 42, who works in the IT sector. “When Fedorov came, we felt hope. After yesterday, I am disappointed.”

Maria Vynogradova, 40, who also works in IT, told me that she was partly there for the soldiers who couldn’t be there. “What are we doing? Why are we taking away this person?” she said. “I want to have my country; I don’t want to leave Kyiv; I don’t want to leave Ukraine.”

Among the protesters, the hope was that Zelenskyy would change course, as he did on a controversial anti-corruption law in July 2025 following mass protests in Kyiv and other cities.

However, the political crisis was only deepening as the deputy commander of Ukraine’s Air Force, Pavlo Yelizarov, announced his resignation on July 16, citing Fedorov’s dismissal, saying that it would cause more casualties and destruction from Russian missile and drone attacks. He wrote on Facebook that Fedorov’s dismissal was a “great evil for the country’s defense capability.”

Update: Zelenskyy has announced an acting defense minister, Yevhen Khmara, whom he wants lawmakers to approve for the permanent role.

Berlin-based journalist and author Luke Johnson is publisher of the Public Sphere newsletter, from which this article is republished with permission.

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