Politics
US to back Ukraine with data for hitting Russia’s oil and power facilities


- First time, US to assist with strikes on energy targets in Russia: WSJ.
- US asking NATO to provide similar support to Ukraine. WSJ.
- Trump pressing European countries to stop purchases of Russian oil.
The United States has decided to give Ukraine intelligence that will help it strike Russia’s oil and power sites, the Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday, as it weighs whether to send Kyiv weapons that could put more targets within range.
Officials said the move could make it easier for Kyiv to target refineries, pipelines and power plants, aiming to cut the Kremlin’s war funds.
The United States has long been sharing intelligence with Kyiv but Wednesday’s report said the new development will make it easier for Ukraine to hit refineries, pipelines, power stations and other infrastructure with the aim of depriving the Kremlin of revenue and oil.
US officials are also asking NATO allies to provide similar support, according to the newspaper.
US President Donald Trump has been pressing European countries to stop purchases of Russian oil in exchange for his agreement to impose tough sanctions on Moscow to try to dry up funding for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Neither the White House nor Ukraine nor Russia’s missions to the United Nations immediately responded to separate requests for comment from Reuters on Wednesday.
According to US officials cited by the Wall Street Journal, approval on additional intelligence came shortly before Trump posted on social media last week suggesting that Ukraine could retake all its land occupied by Russia, in a striking rhetorical shift in Kyiv’s favour.
“After seeing the Economic trouble (the war) is causing Russia, I think Ukraine, with the support of the European Union, is in a position to fight and WIN all of Ukraine back in its original form,” Trump wrote on Truth Social last Tuesday, shortly after meeting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy.
In terms of additional military assistance, the United States is considering a Ukrainian request to obtain Tomahawks, which have a range of 2,500 km (1,550 miles) – easily enough to hit Moscow and most of European Russia if fired from Ukraine.
Ukraine has also developed its own long-range missile named the Flamingo. Quantities are unknown as the missile is in early production.
Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, calling it a “special military operation” to halt Kyiv’s Westward geopolitical drift and what it considers to be a dangerous NATO expansion to the east.
Kyiv and European allies consider the invasion to be an imperial-style land grab.
Oil
This is the first time the United States will provide assistance with Ukrainian long-range strikes deep into Russian territory on energy targets, officials told the Wall Street Journal.
Energy revenue remains the Kremlin’s single most important source of cash to finance the war effort, making oil and gas exports a central target of Western sanctions.
Trump has taken steps to impose an additional tariff on imports from India to pressure New Delhi to halt its purchases of discounted Russian crude oil, and lobbied the likes of Turkey to stop buying oil from Moscow too.
In response, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said last week: “It is a sovereign state that decides for itself in which areas to cooperate with us. And if certain types of trade in certain goods are deemed advantageous to the Turkish side, then the Turkish side will continue to do so.”
Earlier on Wednesday, the Group of Seven nations’ finance ministers said they will take joint steps to increase pressure on Russia by targeting those who are continuing to increase their purchases of Russian oil and those that are facilitating circumvention.
Politics
World reacts to ‘chimp whisperer’ Jane Goodall’s death


World leaders and environmental advocates paid tribute Wednesday to renowned British chimpanzee expert Jane Goodall after she died at the age of 91.
Here’s how her death has been received:
‘Forever celebrated’
“Jane Goodall’s legacy will be forever celebrated,” Tierra Curry, codirector of the Centre for Biological Diversity’s endangered species program, told AFP.
“She overcame obstacles, broke gender barriers, and made a career in conservation seem within reach for women and girls around the world,” Curry added.
‘Messenger of Peace’
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said on X that Goodall leaves an “extraordinary legacy for humanity & our planet.”
“I’m deeply saddened to learn about the passing of Jane Goodall, our dear Messenger of Peace,” he added, referencing the honorary position Goodall held since 2002 at the global body for her conservation work.
‘Enduring legacy’
“A powerful voice for the natural world and a tireless humanitarian, Jane’s groundbreaking discovery that chimpanzees make and use tools fundamentally redefined what it means to be human,” National Geographic said in a statement.
“Her work left an enduring legacy worldwide, encouraging people to choose hope over despair.”
‘Conservation giant’
Greenpeace UK’s co-executive director Will McCallum described Goodall as “one of the true conservation giants of our time.”
“It’s now incumbent upon all of us to honour her legacy by continuing the fight to protect the world’s forests.”
‘Pioneering work’
The president of Tanzania, where Goodall studied chimpanzees, said her “pioneering work at Gombe National Park transformed wildlife conservation.”
That research “placed our country at the heart of global efforts to protect chimpanzees and nature,” President Samia Suluhu wrote on X.
‘Visionary humanitarian’
UK Prince Harry and wife Meghan hailed Goodall as a “visionary humanitarian, scientist, friend to the planet, and friend to us.”
“Her commitment to changing lives extends beyond what the world saw, and also to what we personally felt.”
‘Immeasurable influence’
Kitty Block, president and CEO of Humane World for Animals, said that Goodall “made history by inspiring generations of people to love animals and to care deeply about their welfare.”
“Goodall’s influence on the animal protection community is immeasurable, and her work on behalf of primates and all animals will never be forgotten.”
‘Trailblazer’
“A long and fine life led. Jane Goodall was a gifted scientist and trailblazer who forever changed the way we view our fellow animals,” said PETA Founder Ingrid Newkirk.
“She leaves behind an extraordinary legacy, and we encourage everyone to follow in her animal-respecting footsteps, starting with going vegan.”
‘Fruitful research’
“Dr Jane Goodall was able to share the fruits of her research with everyone, especially the youngest, and to change our view of great apes,” Audrey Azoulay, director general of UNESCO, told AFP.
Politics
Over 150,000 US federal workers quit in mass exit


WASHINGTON: More than 150,000 US federal workers are leaving their jobs this week in what experts are calling the biggest single-year loss of government talent in decades.
The mass exit, triggered by a buyout scheme, has raised fears of a serious “brain drain” as thousands of experienced staff walk away, taking with them years of knowledge and expertise that kept vital services running.
The official resignations begin on Tuesday for workers who opted into a deferred exit programme that kept them on the payroll through September. The buyouts are a cornerstone of President Donald Trump’s push to shrink the federal workforce, combining financial incentives with threats of dismissal for those who declined the offer.
Many left their agencies months ago, according to the federal government’s HR office, and have effectively been on paid leave.
Don Moynihan, a professor at the Ford School of Public Policy at the University of Michigan, said the biggest impact of this week’s exodus will be the brain drain of so many experienced civil servants, a loss of talent he says will be hard to reverse.
“It takes years to develop deep knowledge and expertise to deliver the government programmes that these people run. Now much of the knowledge is walking out the door,” Moynihan said.
The loss of expertise is making it harder for many agencies to carry out their work and serve the American public, according to interviews with a dozen current and former government employees and union officials.
The buyouts have adversely impacted a wide range of government activities, including weather forecasting, food safety, health programmes and space projects, according to the people who spoke to Reuters.
At the National Weather Service, nearly 200 people took buyouts, causing a loss of technical staff who maintain forecasting equipment and many experienced meteorologists.
“It has caused massive disruption in offices throughout the country,” said Tom Fahy, legislative director of the National Weather Service Employees Organisation.
Jasmine Blackwell, a spokesperson for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which oversees the weather service, said jobs were being offered as needed “to ensure both the safety of Americans and the responsible use of taxpayer dollars.”
Democratic former President Bill Clinton holds the post-World War Two record for government employment reduction, but that was over the full eight years of his two-term presidency. Clinton oversaw a federal workforce reduction of more than 430,000, or about 20%.
At the same time, though, a red-hot economy and tech boom produced more than 22 million private-sector jobs during Clinton’s term, and his federal workforce cuts left no visible imprint on the overall job market.
NASA brain drain
Nearly 4,000 NASA employees took the two buyouts the Trump administration offered in January and April, said Matt Biggs, president of the International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers, a union that represents 8,000 NASA employees.
“The agency is losing some of the most brilliant engineers and aeronautic scientists in the world, and they are not being replaced,” Biggs said.
Cheryl Warner, a NASA spokesperson, said the agency is pursuing a “golden age” of exploration and innovation, including to the moon and Mars.
“The agency will continue to assess the types of skills and roles needed to meet our priorities,” she said.
The buyouts, which have been taken by 154,000 workers, were part of a broader push by Trump, a Republican, and his billionaire former adviser Elon Musk, who argued that the federal workforce had become too big and too inefficient. Opposition Democrats say the cuts have been indiscriminate.
The US government spent $359 billion on civilian employee pay and benefits in the 2023 budget year, according to the most recently available published figures.
Through a combination of buyouts, firings and other incentives for workers to quit, the Trump administration will likely shed around 300,000 workers by the end of this year, its human resources chief said in August, which would amount to a 12.5% decrease in the federal workforce since January.
The buyouts will produce an estimated $28 billion in savings annually, said McLaurine Pinover, a spokeswoman at the Office of Personnel and Management, which handles federal human resources matters. Reuters could not independently verify whether that figure is accurate.
“The Deferred Resignation Programme delivered incredible relief to the American taxpayer,” Pinover said.
The exit of so many workers from the federal payroll at once is unlikely to affect the national unemployment rate, as the federal workforce accounts for less than 1.5% of all payroll employment, according to the Bureau of Labour Statistics.
Buyouts take toll on health agencies
At the Department of Agriculture’s Agricultural Research Service, roughly 1,200 employees took resignation offers, about 17% of the agency’s staff.
One of those was a scientist who specialised in rapid detection of fungal toxins in grain elevators, which helps farmers and grain processors assess whether crops are contaminated, said Ethan Roberts, president of the American Federation of Government Employees Local 3247, a union which represents some ARS employees.
Without the scientist’s highly specialised knowledge, there is no one to carry forward that work, Roberts said. Contaminated grains can severely sicken or even kill people and livestock, according to the World Health Organisation.
A USDA spokesperson said the agency will maintain all its critical functions despite the departure of more than 15,000 workers through the resignation programmes.
The buyouts have also taken a toll on health agencies, including the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administration.
Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F Kennedy Jr announced in March that the department would cut 10,000 employees through a combination of layoffs and buyouts. He said they would include 3,500 at the FDA and 2,400 at the CDC.
A federal employee, granted anonymity for fear of retribution, said the FDA was struggling to update its National Youth Tobacco Survey, which collects data on tobacco use among US middle and high-school students, because of buyouts and layoffs at the tobacco prevention and control unit of the CDC.
Andrew G Nixon, an HHS spokesman, said suggestions of a “brain drain” were misplaced and that the CDC and FDA remain deeply committed to tobacco prevention and control.
Politics
Israel raids Global Sumud Flotilla; detains crew members

Israeli forces have raided the Global Resistance Flotilla, an international aid convoy headed towards Gaza, and detained several crew members.
The flotilla, which aimed to deliver aid to Gaza under Israeli blockade, has lost contact with a number of its vessels. Live feeds from several ships have also gone offline.
Earlier, the flotilla reported an increase in drone activity above its vessels as it moved closer to its destination on Wednesday morning.
The Global Resistance Flotilla comprises over 40 boats carrying more than 500 individuals, including parliamentarians, lawyers and Swedish environmental activist Greta Thunberg. The mission seeks to break the blockade imposed on the Palestinian territory.
Organisers previously reported that several unidentified ships approached the flotilla, some sailing without lights. These ships later departed, and the flotilla participants implemented precautionary security measures.
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