Friday Briefing: Islamic State claims the Iran bombing
Good morning. We’re covering the Islamic State saying it was behind the Iran bombing and Chinese balloons floating over Taiwan. Plus the seven keys to longevity.
The Islamic State said it was behind the Iran bombingThe Islamic State claimed responsibility for a bombing attack that killed at least 84 people in Kerman, Iran, on Wednesday, according to a post on the extremist group’s official Telegram account. The group called the attack a “dual martyrdom operation,” and described how two militants had detonated explosive belts strapped to their bodies during a commemoration ceremony at the tomb of Maj. Gen. Qassim Suleimani. The general, a widely revered and feared Iranian military leader, was assassinated four years ago in a U.S. drone attack. The Islamic State was probably seizing an opportunity to hit an enemy, U.S. officials said. The Sunni Muslim group has claimed responsibility for several previous attacks on Iran, which has a Shiite Islamic government and runs an alliance of Shiite groups across the Middle East. The bombing in Iran, and the killing of Saleh al-Arouri, a senior Hamas leader, in Beirut, Lebanon, on Tuesday, has heightened fears of a regional war that could draw in the U.S. Just hours after the bombs went off in Iran, the U.S. and 12 of its allies issued a written warning to the Houthis of Yemen, who have been mounting near-daily attacks on commercial vessels in the Red Sea. The U.S. has held back from retaliating against Houthi bases in Yemen, in large part because it does not want to undermine a fragile truce in the country’s civil war. But on Wednesday it accused Iran, which has supplied weapons and intelligence to the Houthis, of involvement in the Red Sea attacks. In the war in Gaza:
Balloons float over Taiwan as an election approachesA surge in sightings of balloons from China flying over Taiwan has drawn the attention of the island’s military and struck some experts as a calculatedly ambiguous warning. On Jan. 13, Taiwanese voters will choose a president and a legislature, and Beijing has made no secret of wanting the governing Democratic Progressive Party to lose power. China may be using the flights to warn Taiwan of its military strength without tipping into baldfaced confrontation. Instead of planes and ships, the country has “shifted to balloons that can be used for a certain kind of lower-intensity intimidation and harassment,” said Ko Yong-Sen, a research fellow at the Taipei-based Institute for National Defense and Security Research. But so far Taiwan has experienced none of the alarm that many Americans felt last year when a Chinese surveillance balloon floated across the U.S. Taiwanese people, accustomed to Chinese military flights near the island, have generally reacted to the balloons with calm, if not indifference.
Kim Jong-un’s daughter is his likely successor, South Korea saidSouth Korea’s intelligence agency told lawmakers yesterday that Kim Ju-ae, as South Korean officials have identified her, “is seen as the most likely successor” to her father, Kim Jong-un, as North Korea’s leader. North Korea has not revealed any personal details about the daughter, including her name or age, but she is believed to be about 10 years old. State media has referred to her as a “most beloved” or “respected” child of Kim and has shown military generals and other high-ranking officials kneeling before her. She made her first public appearance in November 2022, when she watched a long-range missile test with her father. If Ju-ae replaces Kim as leader, she would be the first female ruler of the deeply patriarchal and male-dominant North.
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Juno, a NASA mission designed to study Jupiter’s origins, sent back new images of Io, one of the planet’s largest moons and the most volcanically active world in our solar system. The snapshots show sharp cliffs, edgy mountain peaks, lakes of pooled lava and even a volcanic plume. Studying these features could help scientists figure out what drives Io’s volcanoes, some of which shoot lava dozens of miles into space, and might offer clues to how Jupiter and its satellites formed. We hope you’ve enjoyed this newsletter, which is made possible through subscriber support. Subscribe to The New York Times.
The seven keys to longevitySleeping in a hyperbaric chamber, experimenting with cryotherapy or blasting oneself with infrared light are modern techniques for those chasing a longer life. But most aging experts are skeptical they’ll deliver on the claims surrounding them. “People are looking for the magic pill,” said Dr. Luigi Ferrucci, the scientific director of the National Institute on Aging, “and the magic pill is already here.” So here are seven methods, backed by actual evidence, to help you live longer and better. Here’s a preview: Make sure to move around and eat more vegetables.
Cook: Vietnamese-style spring rolls are refreshing and light. Health: Quit believing these fitness myths. Read: Here are nine new books we recommend this week. Watch: In “Mayhem!,” an ultraviolent revenge thriller, a former convict struggles to go straight. Play Spelling Bee, the Mini Crossword, Wordle and Sudoku. Find all our games here. That’s it for today’s briefing. See you tomorrow. — Justin P.S. These were our favorite facts from 2023. We welcome your feedback. Send us your suggestions at briefing@nytimes.com.
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Plus China shakes up its military View in browser|nytimes.com Continue reading the main story Ad Morning Briefing: Asia Pacific Edition January 4, 2024 Author Headshot By Justin Porter Good morning. We
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Plus the great winter festivals of Asia. View in browser|nytimes.com Continue reading the main story Ad Morning Briefing: Asia Pacific Edition January 3, 2024 Author Headshot By Justin Porter Good
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