Monday Briefing: U.S. poised to resume aid to Ukraine

Also, Iran seems to stand down after Israel’s strike
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Morning Briefing: Asia Pacific Edition

April 22, 2024

Good morning. We’re covering a U.S. House vote to restart aid to Ukraine — and potentially ban TikTok.

Plus, a Times investigation into Chinese doping.

Mike Johnson, wearing a dark gray suit with a maroon tie and white shirt, holds a leather portfolio as he walks through a crowded room.
Speaker Mike Johnson took a political risk to defy some Republicans and push through the foreign aid package. Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times

U.S. House passes foreign aid package

The House voted on Saturday in favor of $95 billion in long-stalled foreign aid for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan, resoundingly approving the funds over months of objections from Republicans on the far right. The Senate is expected to pass the legislation as early as tomorrow, and it is almost certain to become law.

As part of the package, the House also advanced a bill that would force the Chinese company ByteDance, parent of TikTok, to either sell the app or risk a nationwide ban in the U.S.

In Ukraine, the vote was met with relief as troops are swiftly running out of weapons and munitions. The Pentagon has said it could resume sending weapons to Ukraine within days.

“I really do believe the intel,” said Speaker Mike Johnson, a Republican, who marshaled bipartisan support to pass the bill. “I think that Vladimir Putin would continue to march through Europe if he were allowed.”

Details: The legislation includes $60 billion for Kyiv; $26 billion for Israel and humanitarian aid for civilians in conflict zones, including Gaza; and $8 billion for the Indo-Pacific region.

A group of people holding signs of protest against Israel and pictures of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader, with Iranian flags flying behind them.
An anti-Israeli gathering in Tehran on Friday. Arash Khamooshi for The New York Times

Iran seems to stand down after Israel’s attack

Iran appears to have chosen de-escalation after Israel’s retaliatory attack on Friday. Iranian officials and state news media downplayed the attack.

Israel also seems to have tried to skirt a broader war. Its strike — a response to Iran’s volley, which itself was a reply to Israel’s deadly strike on the Iranian embassy compound in Damascus, Syria — was notably limited. It damaged an air defense system at a military base near Isfahan, in central Iran.

“It remains to be seen whether this latest tit-for-tat will create some sort of deterrence for both sides,” Farnaz Fassihi, our U.N. bureau chief, who covers the shadow war, told my colleague Daniel E. Slotnik. “Neither side really seems to want to go into an all-out war with each other.”

Iran’s concerns: Inflation is running at an annual rate of 32 percent, a restive population has consistently challenged the government’s legitimacy and even supporters of the hijab rule have criticized its enforcement.

A soldier in camouflage gear sits with a large gun, with other soldiers sitting on either side of him
Rebel soldiers in Myanmar. Adam Ferguson for The New York Times

Myanmar’s conflict may be shifting

After years of conflict in Myanmar, rebels have scored victories over the military junta, potentially turning the tide of the war. If they push into the nation’s heartland, they could unseat the powerful military.

My colleague Hannah Beech embedded with one of the rebel groups on the front lines in Karenni State, where resistance forces said they held more than 90 percent of the territory. “This time is different,” she explains in this short video.

For more: Why has this war — which could break apart a country of 55 million people — been so internationally ignored? Here is some background and context.

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MORE TOP NEWS

Donald Trump sits at a table in front of a microphone with a pile of papers in front of his folded hands. He looks off into the distance.
The trial could brand Donald Trump a felon as he mounts another White House run. Maansi Srivastava/The New York Times
  • Donald Trump: Opening arguments will begin today in his Manhattan criminal trial. The state’s case seems strong, but a conviction is far from assured.
  • China: Torrential rains caused flooding and forced tens of thousands of evacuations yesterday in Guangdong Province, China’s most populous. More severe flooding could come.
  • India: Officials will redo voting in parts of Manipur, the troubled northeastern state, after armed men attacked polling stations and captured voting booths.
  • London Marathon: Peres Jepchirchir won the women’s race with a world-record time, 2:16:16. Alexander Mutiso Munyao, who is also from Kenya, won the men’s race in 2:04:00.
  • Apple: The company said China ordered it to remove WhatsApp and Threads from its app store in the country.
  • Europe: Countries are ending “golden visa” programs, which offered residency to wealthy foreigners who buy real estate there, but worsened local housing crises.

The Israel-Hamas War

  • Sanctions: Israeli leaders lashed out over reports that the U.S. plans to punish a unit of the Israeli military that is accused of committing human rights violations.
  • The West Bank: Palestinians went on a general strike yesterday after Israeli troops killed at least 10 people during a raid on a refugee camp on Saturday.
  • Rafah: Israeli airstrikes killed several civilians on Saturday in the city, in southern Gaza, Palestinian state media said.
  • Columbia and Barnard: More than 100 students were arrested after building a pro-Palestinian encampment on the campus. Some may not be allowed to finish the semester.

MORNING READ

Two men sitting on top of a red Jeep covered in writing wave at crowds.
Rahul Gandhi, the head of the Indian National Congress. Chinky Shukla for The New York Times

Rahul Gandhi, the scion of an Indian political dynasty, is trying to unseat the prime minister, Narendra Modi. He traveled across the country to try to pull his once-dominant party, the Indian National Congress, out of the political wilderness.

The Australia Letter: The wife and daughter of our Sydney bureau chief had been shopping just minutes before the recent mall stabbings. “Sometimes the news — and the worst news of all, involving death and tragedy — hits as close to home for us as it does for those we write about,” Damien Cave writes.

CONVERSATION STARTERS

We hope you’ve enjoyed this newsletter, which is made possible through subscriber support. Subscribe to The New York Times.

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SPORTS

A picture of a swimmer in a pool, wearing a jumper-style swimsuit, from below
Manan Vatsyayana/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

A Chinese doping investigation

On Saturday, my colleagues published a shocking revelation: Seven months before the pandemic-delayed Tokyo Olympics, 23 of China’s best swimmers tested positive for the same banned drug at a domestic meet.

Chinese officials secretly cleared them of doping. The World Anti-Doping Agency, which oversees national drug-testing programs, accepted China’s theory that a mass contamination event was to blame and allowed China to keep the results secret.

Several athletes who tested positive — including nearly half of the Chinese swimming team sent to Tokyo — went on to win medals, including three golds. Many still compete for China. Some, including the two-time gold medalist Zhang Yufei, above, are expected to compete in Paris this summer.

The investigation has shaken the swimming world. An American who won silver in Tokyo said she felt her team had been “cheated.” A British gold medalist is demanding bans. The sports minister in Germany, where a documentary on the case was broadcast Sunday, demanded an investigation. And global antidoping officials are fighting bitterly.

Recap: Read takeaways from the investigation.

RECOMMENDATIONS

A hand holds a cake spatula with a golden-brown cake covered in pistachios.
Jim Wilson/The New York Times

Bake: This moist Persian almond cake is spiced with cardamom — and good for a Seder. Here are other ideas for Passover, which starts tonight.

Read: In “New Cold Wars,” my colleague David Sanger tracks shifts in the U.S. approach to re-emerging great power competitions this century.

Listen: Our critic writes that Taylor Swift’s new album, “The Tortured Poets Department,” is “sprawling and often self-indulgent.”

Clean: Let a robot vacuum do the work.

Play Spelling Bee, the Mini Crossword, Wordle and Sudoku. Find all our games here.

That’s it for today. See you tomorrow. — Amelia

P.S. Can you place these eight events in chronological order?

Email us at briefing@nytimes.com.

Daniel E. Slotnik contributed reporting. Thanks to Farnaz Fassihi.

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