The Top 5

1. U.S. Sends Ukraine Seized Iranian-Made Weapons

2. Thousands Continue To Flee Sudan Every Day as Conflict Rages

3. Zelenskyy Warns Russia Has Penetrated US Politics, Invites Trump to Ukraine

4. Expect More Joint South China Sea Patrols, US Says Ahead of Summits With Allies

5. Biden Criticizes Netanyahu’s Approach to War With Hamas as Mistake

The Must Read

 

Sickened by U.S. Nuclear Program, Communities Turn to Congress for Aid

 

By Catie Edmondson

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U.S. Sends Ukraine Seized Iranian-Made Weapons

"The Pentagon has provided Ukraine with thousands of Iranian-origin weapons seized en route to Houthi militants in Yemen, U.S. officials said Tuesday, marking the Biden administration’s latest infusion of emergency support for Kyiv while a multibillion-dollar aid package remains stalled in Congress.

 

The weapons include 5,000 Kalashnikov rifles, machine guns, sniper rifles and rocket-propelled grenades, along with a half-million rounds of ammunition. They were discovered aboard four 'stateless vessels' between 2021 and 2023 and made available for Ukraine through a Justice Department civil forfeiture program targeting Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, according to U.S. Central Command, which oversees military operations in the Middle East.

 

The arms transfer on April 4 is a striking development, underscoring the administration’s scramble to sustain a once-robust pipeline of U.S. assistance to Ukraine while officials warn that political gridlock in the Republican-led House is costing Kyiv on the battlefield. That the weapons were effectively sourced from Iran also is significant, as Russia has relied on the regime to bolster its military capacity, and with Washington’s long-running feud with Tehran having once more neared a boiling point in recent days."

 

- Read more at The Washington Post -

 

Thousands Continue To Flee Sudan Every Day as Conflict Rages

"The United Nations refugee agency says thousands of people are still fleeing Sudan every day as clashes between two warring army factions, raging for nearly a year, show no signs of abating.

 

The latest UNHCR figures show that more than 8.5 million people in Sudan have been forced to flee their homes since war erupted on April 15, 2023, making this one of the largest displacement and humanitarian crises in the world.

 

The number includes 1.8 million Sudanese who have fled to neighboring countries seeking refuge.

 

The UNHCR says fighting between the Sudanese Armed Forces and paramilitary Rapid Support Forces has shattered peoples’ lives. It says attacks on civilians are escalating, human rights violations are widespread and rampant, conflict-related sexual and gender-based violence continues without stop, and the economy has collapsed."
 

- Read more at Voice of America -

 

Zelenskyy Warns Russia Has Penetrated US Politics, Invites Trump to Ukraine

"President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine warned in an interview that Russian influence had pierced the American political system and rejected the idea, backed by allies of Donald Trump, that Ukraine could swiftly end the war just by making massive territorial concessions.

 

But Zelenskyy said Tuesday that he had privately urged Trump through intermediaries to travel to Ukraine and that Trump had expressed interest but had not yet committed to making a trip. Zelenskyy said he was open to hearing Trump’s proposals for the war, while making clear he was highly skeptical.

 

'If the deal is that we just give up our territories, and that’s the idea behind it, then it’s a very primitive idea,' Zelenskyy said in an interview with Axel Springer media outlets. POLITICO is owned by Axel Springer."

 

- Read more at Politico -

 

Expect More Joint South China Sea Patrols, US Says Ahead of Summits With Allies

"More joint patrols can be expected in the South China Sea after drills by the United States, Australia, the Philippines and Japan last weekend, U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan said on Tuesday, ahead of U.S. summits this week with the Japanese and Philippine leaders.

 

Warships from the four nations staged the exercises on Sunday following stepped up Chinese pressure on the Philippines in the disputed strategic waterway.

 

U.S. President Joe Biden hosts Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida in Washington on Wednesday and the two and Philippines President Ferdinand Marcos will meet on Thursday for talks that will include ways to push back against China."

 

- Read more at Reuters -

 

Biden Criticizes Netanyahu’s Approach to War With Hamas as Mistake

"President Joe Biden offered one of his sharpest rebukes of Israel’s handling of the war in Gaza during an interview airing Tuesday, describing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s approach to the conflict as a 'mistake' and calling for a halt to the fighting.

 

'Well, I will tell you, I think what he’s doing is a mistake. I don’t agree with his approach,' Biden told Univision, in an interview taped just days after Israeli military strikes killed seven World Central Kitchen aid workers, sparking anger and frustration throughout the White House.

 

'I think it’s outrageous that those four, three vehicles were hit by drones and taken out on a highway where it wasn’t like it was along the shore, it wasn’t like there was a convoy moving there,' he continued, according to a Univision transcript of the interview."

 

- Read more at CNN -

 

The Must Read

 

Sickened by U.S. Nuclear Program, Communities Turn to Congress for Aid

 

By Catie Edmondson

"When Diane Scheig’s father, Bill, came home from work at the Mallinckrodt factory in St. Louis, he would strip down in their garage and hand his clothes to her mother to immediately wash, not daring to contaminate the house with the residue of his labors.

 

Mr. Scheig, an ironworker who helped build the city’s famous arch, never told their family exactly what he was doing at the plant, where scientists first began processing uranium for the Manhattan Project in 1942. But by the age of 49, he had developed kidney cancer, lost his ability to walk, and died.

 

(...) 

 

The Mallinckrodt plant processed the uranium that allowed scientists at the University of Chicago to produce the first man-made controlled nuclear reaction, paving the way for the first atomic bomb.

 

But the factory — and the program it served — left another legacy: A plague of cancer, autoimmune diseases and other mysterious illnesses has ripped through generations of families like Ms. Scheig’s in St. Louis, and other communities across the country that were exposed to the materials used to power the nuclear arms race.

 

Now Congress is working on legislation that would allow people harmed by the program but so far shut out of a federal law enacted to aid its victims — including in New Mexico, Arizona, Tennessee and Washington state — to receive federal compensation.

 

(...) 

 

In the 1940s, as workers churned out 50,000 tons of uranium to feed the nation’s nascent atomic arsenal, the factory was also spitting out heaps of nuclear waste.

 

Over the next several decades, hundreds of thousands of tons of radioactive waste stored in open steel drums were hauled and dumped across the city. The waste seeped into large swaths of soil, including on land that later became ball fields.

 

And it drained into Coldwater Creek, a tributary that snakes through the metropolitan area for 19 miles through backyards and public parks where children play and catch crayfish. In heavy storms, the creek routinely floods.

 

(...) 

 

None of those communities qualify for aid under the only federal law to compensate civilians who sustained serious illnesses from the nation’s nuclear weapons program. Passed in 1990, that statute was narrowly constructed to help some uranium miners and a handful of communities who were present for aboveground testing. Claimants, who can include children or grandchildren of those who would have benefited from the program but have since died, receive a one-time payment of $50,000 to $100,000.

 

The Senate last month passed legislation led by Senator Josh Hawley, Republican of Missouri, and Senator Ben Ray Luján, Democrat of New Mexico, that would update and dramatically expand the law to include thousands of new participants, including Missouri families like the Scheigs.

 

If Congress does not pass the bill before June, the law will expire altogether, shuttering the fund for those who are currently eligible and cutting off access to cancer screening clinics in neighborhoods that have been hit hard by radioactive exposure and rely on federal money to continue operating.

 

(...)"

 

- Read more at The New York Times - 

 

Post of the Day

 

This morning's DNB was compiled by Daniel Salaru

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