Friday Briefing: Biden’s make-or-break moment

Plus, U.S. plans to deploy missiles in Germany
Morning Briefing: Asia Pacific Edition

July 12, 2024

Good morning. We’re covering a high-stakes moment for President Biden and U.S. plans to deploy long-range missiles in Germany.

Plus, Elon Musk’s dream of colonizing Mars.

President Biden walking in a suit.
President Biden at the NATO Summit in Washington yesterday. Doug Mills/The New York Times

Biden faces a key test in his campaign

President Biden is ending the three-day NATO summit with a high-stakes news conference that could help rejuvenate his presidential campaign or provide more proof for those calling for him to step aside.

Biden’s allies, doubters and enemies will watch for any verbal stumbles, lost trains of thought or blank stares like the ones that millions of people saw during his debate performance. The news conference is scheduled to start at 6:30 p.m. Eastern. Here’s how to watch it, and you can follow our live coverage here.

Biden has defied growing calls to end his race, even as polls show him falling further behind Donald Trump. Some of his longtime advisers are working on ways to get him to drop out — including by trying to convince him that he can’t beat Trump and that another candidate would have a better chance, those familiar with the plans said. The White House and Biden’s campaign both denied any such internal division.

The Biden campaign is also quietly testing Vice President Kamala Harris’s strength against Trump, in a survey believed to be the first since the debate to measure her viability as a presidential candidate.

Related: An examination of more than two dozen interviews with Biden revealed a pattern of easy questions, that his staff had suggested ahead of time.

A missile is launched into the sky at nighttime.
A U.S. ship in 2014 in the Middle East launching a Tomahawk cruise missile, in a photo released by the U.S. Navy. U.S. Navy, via Reuters

A U.S. plan to send missiles to Germany angered Russia

Russia is preparing military countermeasures to a planned American deployment of longer-range missiles in Germany, the Russian deputy foreign minister said yesterday.

The U.S. and Germany announced Wednesday that Washington would begin “episodic deployments” of the missiles in 2026, in preparation for installing the weapons more permanently.

The Russian deputy minister told a state news agency: “Without nerves, without emotions, we will develop a military response, first of all, to this new game.”

Background: The missile deployment has echoes of the Cold War, when Moscow and Washington competed to position missiles in Europe. A 1987 arms treaty put an end to the buildup, but the Trump administration pulled out of the treaty in 2019, citing violations by Russia.

Off the battlefield: U.S. intelligence agencies uncovered a Russian plan to kill the head of a German weapons maker in order to hurt Ukraine’s war effort, Western officials said.

China: NATO accused China of propping up Russia’s war in Ukraine by sending Moscow technology to replenish its military.

A soldier wearing green fatigue pants and a long-sleeve shirt surveys debris and wreckage.
The Israeli village of Be’eri, where over 100 Israeli civilians were killed on Oct. 7. Avishag Shaar-Yashuv for The New York Times

Israel cleared a general who oversaw fighting on Oct. 7

An Israeli general was cleared of wrongdoing for authorizing a tank to fire at a house in the Israeli village of Be’eri, where Hamas fighters were holding hostages during the Oct. 7 attack. The strike is likely to have killed at least one captive and wounded another.

The decision is the beginning of a national reckoning for Israel. This was the first of dozens of investigations into Israel’s errors during Hamas’s devastating assault. In a statement, Israel’s military said it had “failed in its mission” to protect Be’eri, but it praised the general’s actions as “professional and responsible” given the chaotic and challenging battle.

Gaza: Many residents of Gaza City are ignoring an Israeli warning to flee south. “People are being killed wherever we are,” one of them said.

MORE TOP NEWS

An Elvis impersonator, wearing sunglasses with a white sequined jacket and a lei, drinks deeply from a black metal water bottle.
An Elvis impersonator trying to stay cool in Las Vegas yesterday. Mikayla Whitmore for The New York Times

Technology

Sports

MORNING READ

An illustration of Elon Musk gazing up toward planets from within a glass dome. A group of laborers is stooped with shovels in hand behind him.
Gica Tam

Elon Musk’s dream of colonizing Mars has propelled most of his businesses. SpaceX has built a reusable rocket to reach Mars, he has asked employees to design a domed Martian city and he has volunteered his sperm to help sire a colony.

Here’s a look inside his ambitious — some say absurd — plans.

Lives lived: Shelley Duvall, the 1970s film star known for starring opposite Jack Nicholson in “The Shining,” died at 75.

CONVERSATION STARTERS

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

ARTS AND IDEAS

A pile of photos made to look like snapshots shows famous literary figures including Jonathan Franzen, Amanda Gorman, Doris Lessing, Ursula K. Le Guin, Paul Beatty, Prince Harry and Colleen Hoover.
The New York Times

25 years of memorable literary moments

The New York Times Book Review looked back on moments that made news in the book world this century. Here’s a selection.

2007: Amazon released its first Kindle. It cost $399 and sold out in five and a half hours.

2013: E L James’s “Fifty Shades of Grey” series, which brought erotica into the mainstream, reached more than 100 million copies sold.

2022: More than 30 years after Iran’s ayatollah called for Salman Rushdie’s death over the novel “The Satanic Verses,” a knife-wielding man stabbed Rushdie at a literary event.

2024: Before he died in 2014, Gabriel García Márquez asked that his final novel, “Until August,” be destroyed. His family decided to publish it anyway.

(Read the full list, and catch up with our ranking of the best books.)

RECOMMENDATIONS

A white Dutch oven holds shrimp pasta with burst cherry tomatoes and a sprinkling of chopped parsley.
Christopher Testani for The New York Times

Cook: This bright pasta is studded with shrimp and cherry tomatoes.

Watch: A new documentary about Brian Eno is a different film every time you watch it. Here’s how.

Read: Jaroslav Kalfar, the author of “Spaceman of Bohemia,” recommends books about Prague.

Listen: Catch up with our playlist of this year’s No. 1 songs.

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

That’s it for today. Have a great weekend. — Dan

We welcome your feedback. Send us your suggestions at briefing@nytimes.com.

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