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2026

North Korea says latest missile tests involve hypersonic weapons system

North Korea says latest missile tests involve hypersonic weapons system 150 150 admin

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — North Korea said Monday that leader Kim Jong Un observed test-flights of hypersonic missiles and underscored the need to bolster the country’s nuclear war deterrent, as the country dials up weapons displays ahead of its major political conference.

North Korea reported on the drill a day after its neighbors said they detected multiple ballistic missile launches and accused the North of carrying out provocations. The tests came just hours before South Korean President Lee Jae Myung departed for China for a summit with President Xi Jinping.

The official Korean Central News Agency said Sunday’s drill involving a hypersonic weapon system was meant to examine its readiness, enhance missile troops’ firepower operational skills and evaluate operational capabilities of the country’s war deterrent.

“Through today’s launching drill, we can confirm that a very important technology task for national defense has been carried out,” Kim said, according to KCNA. “We must continuously upgrade the military means, especially offensive weapon systems.”

The possession of a functioning hypersonic weapon would give North Korea an ability to penetrate the U.S. and South Korea’s missile defense shields. In past years, North Korea has performed a series of tests to acquire it, but many foreign experts question whether the tested missiles have achieved their desired speed and maneuverability during flights.

In recent weeks, North Korea test-fired what it called long-range strategic cruise missiles and new anti-air missiles and released photos showing apparent progress in the construction of its first nuclear-powered submarine.

Observers say North Korea aims to demonstrate or review its achievements on the weapons development sector ahead of the ruling Workers’ Party congress, the first of its kind in five years. Keen attention is on whether Kim would use the congress to set a new approach on relations with the U.S. and resume long-dormant talks.

North Korea’s nuclear program is expected to be discussed when Lee and Xi meet for a summit later Monday. Lee’s office earlier said he would call for China, North Korea’s major ally and economic pipeline take “a constructive role” in efforts to promote peace on the Korean Peninsula.

The latest launches followed Saturday’s audacious U.S. military operation that ousted Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro from power and brought him to the U.S. to face narco-terrorism conspiracy charges. North Korea slammed the operation, saying it again shows “the rogue and brutal nature of the U.S.”

Many experts say the U.S. operation likely leave Kim pushing to further expand his nuclear weapons capabilities that he thinks guarantees the survival of his government and state sovereignty in the face of U.S.-led hostilities.

During Sunday’s launch drill, Kim defended his push for a stronger nuclear program. “Why it is necessary is exemplified by the recent geopolitical crisis and complicated international events,” he said.

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Behind the scenes of "The Pitt"

Behind the scenes of "The Pitt" 150 150 admin

The HBO Max drama immerses viewers in the struggles faced by the ER staff at the fictional Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center. “Sunday Morning” visits the hyper-realistic set, and talks with star, writer, director and executive producer Noah Wyle.
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U.S. seeks to tap Venezuela's vast oil reserves after military strikes

U.S. seeks to tap Venezuela's vast oil reserves after military strikes 150 150 admin

President Trump said “we’re going to get the oil flowing the way it should be” after the surprise U.S. attack. Here’s what to know about Venezuela’s oil sector.
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Japan’s factory activity steadies as demand declines slow, PMI shows

Japan’s factory activity steadies as demand declines slow, PMI shows 150 150 admin

By Satoshi Sugiyama

TOKYO, Jan 5 (Reuters) – Japan’s manufacturing activity stalled in December as demand declined at a slower pace from the previous month, a private-sector survey showed, ending a five-month streak of deterioration.

The S&P Global Japan Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) was flat at 50.0 in December, improving from 48.7 in November and hitting the break-even point separating expansion from contraction.

“Japan’s manufacturing industry saw conditions stabilise at the end of the year,” said Annabel Fiddes, an economics associate director at S&P Global Market Intelligence.

The decline in new orders in December was the softest since May 2024, the survey showed. Although many firms noted subdued demand, some saw sales had improved, underpinned by new projects and stronger-than-expected customer spending.

While consumer and investment goods sectors reported improvement in business conditions, intermediate goods makers said they were weak.

New export orders declined at a slightly softer pace in December from November, partly affected by weaker demand in Asia, particularly for semiconductors, according to the survey. 

Looking ahead to the next 12 months, overall business sentiment eased from November but remained above the survey’s long-run average, the survey said. 

“New product releases and greater demand across key industries such as autos and semiconductors were anticipated to boost the sector’s performance in 2026,” Fiddes said.

Some downside risks mentioned by firms were sluggish global economy, an ageing population and rising costs, she said.

Staffing levels in the manufacturing sector rose for the 13th consecutive month, while the rate of input prices accelerated to its highest since April, battered by a combination of increases in raw material, labour and transportation costs as well as the weaker yen.

The Bank of Japan in December raised interest rates to levels unseen in 30 years and signalled its readiness to continue raising rates. 

(Reporting by Satoshi Sugiyama; Editing by Sam Holmes)

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Trump threatens military operation against Colombia, after Venezuela raid

Trump threatens military operation against Colombia, after Venezuela raid 150 150 admin

ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE, Jan 4 (Reuters) – U.S. President Donald Trump on Sunday threatened military action against Colombia’s government, telling reporters that such an operation “sounds good to me.”

“Colombia is very sick, too, run by a sick man, who likes making cocaine and selling it to the United States, and he’s not going to be doing it very long,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One, in an apparent reference to Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro.

Asked directly whether the U.S. would pursue a military operation against the country, Trump answered, “It sounds good to me.”

The comments came after the United States captured Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in an audacious raid and whisked him to New York to face drug-trafficking charges.

(Reporting by Gram Slattery and Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Tom Hogue and Christian Schmollinger)

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Maduro faces federal charges in New York after capture by U.S.

Maduro faces federal charges in New York after capture by U.S. 150 150 admin

Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, are awaiting arraignment on federal charges in the Southern District of New York after a U.S. military operation led to their capture in Venezuela. CBS News’ Natalie Brand has the latest.
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Trump political base sets aside isolationism to cheer Maduro capture

Trump political base sets aside isolationism to cheer Maduro capture 150 150 admin

By Nathan Layne

Jan 4 (Reuters) – Supporters of U.S. President Donald Trump have largely praised the capture of Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro as a swift, painless win, though political analysts warn support could wane if the operation drags on and echoes past foreign interventions.

While a handful of conservative figures criticized the attack on Venezuela and detainment of Maduro as a betrayal of Trump’s “America First” pledge to avoid foreign entanglements, most of the president’s Republican allies fell in line. 

The early support came even after Trump said the United States would temporarily “run” Venezuela and work to tap its oil reserves, raising the possibility of the kind of open-ended foreign entanglement he and the MAGA base have long opposed.

For now, the base appears willing to cheer on the removal of Maduro, seeing little risk of an escalation into a years-long quagmire like the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, political analysts said.

“This is too recent for there to be significant MAGA-base push back,” said Joshua Wilson, a professor of political science at the University of Denver. “There are many questions about how things will develop, and so this could become another test of Trump’s ability to frame events and control his base.”

The military action comes amid a slump in Trump’s approval ratings, with a Reuters/Ipsos poll last month showing that just 39% of U.S. adults approved of his job performance, largely reflecting disappointment over his handling of the economy.

Historically, presidents usually only gain a short-lived political boost from military action, according to Matthew Wilson, a political science professor at Southern Methodist University. That means the risk for Trump and Republicans is on the downside heading into November’s midterm elections, when control of Congress is at stake.

“If it goes well, it will largely be forgotten, I suspect, by the time of the midterms,” Wilson said. “If it goes poorly, it will be an albatross.”

Before Saturday’s events, the last time the United States took action to remove the ruler of a Latin American country was the 1989 invasion of Panama that ousted dictator Manuel Noriega. That was the first of two quick, relatively successful military actions under U.S. President George H.W. Bush, who also orchestrated the 1991 Gulf War, yet he still lost his re-election bid to Bill Clinton in 1992 primarily due to a weak economy.

GREENE, OWENS CRITICIZE ATTACK

Democrats have widely criticized the Trump administration’s actions in Venezuela as ill-advised and potentially unlawful given they were carried out without approval from Congress. The party’s leader in the Senate, Chuck Schumer, said Trump risked dragging the U.S. “into another costly foreign war.”

The Democrats have been joined by Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, a longtime Trump supporter who had a public falling out with the president this year. Speaking on NBC’s “Meet the Press” program on Sunday, the Republican described Maduro’s arrest as a betrayal of Trump’s pledge during the 2024 presidential campaign to steer clear of foreign conflicts.

“This is the same Washington playbook that we are so sick and tired of that doesn’t serve the American people,” she said.

Candace Owens, a right-wing podcaster known in part for spreading conspiracy theories, was also critical of Maduro’s capture, writing on X that the CIA had staged “another hostile takeover of a country at the behest of a globalist psychopaths [sic].”

Yet most of Trump’s political supporters — and even some critics — either backed the attack or declined to weigh in.

Steve Bannon, a former Trump aide and prominent voice in the Make America Great Again movement, praised the raid as “bold and brilliant” on his podcast hours after the operation, embodying the hawkish tone prevalent across the president’s base.

Trump administration officials have gone to lengths to characterize Saturday’s operation as a law enforcement action against Maduro, who has been indicted on drug-related charges and has a court hearing on Monday in New York. 

Some MAGA influencers said they also supported Trump’s stated goal of asserting U.S. dominance in the Western Hemisphere.

Right-wing activist Laura Loomer argued on social media that the United States must exploit Venezuela’s vast oil reserves rather than allow adversaries such as Iran, China, Russia and Cuba to benefit from them and finance attacks on the West.

“We will exert our power and take the oil and financially starve the axis of evil,” Loomer wrote on X, in a broadside against Representative Thomas Massie, one of the few Republicans to question the legal basis for the strikes on Venezuela.

Nikki Haley, who lost to Trump in the Republican primary of 2024, called Maduro a “brutal socialist dictator” in a post on X and said the Venezuelan people “deserve freedom”.

Republican Senator Rand Paul, a longtime opponent of overseas military interventions, did not explicitly criticize Trump’s actions in a social media post, but cautioned that “time will tell if regime change in Venezuela is successful without significant monetary or human cost.”

Matt McManus, a political science professor at Spelman College, said it would be incorrect to cast the MAGA movement as strictly isolationist, when it has long been comfortable in projecting power. He pointed to Trump backers’ support of the U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear sites in June and of Trump’s various threats against other countries during his first term.

“MAGAdom has never really been defined by a great concern for ideological consistency,” McManus said. “It very much takes its cues from the leading figures… And of course, right now, Trump is signaling very heavily that Venezuelan intervention is what’s good for America.”

But McManus and other experts agreed that a prolonged intervention in Venezuela would test Trump’s grip over his party and the MAGA movement, especially if U.S. troops are deployed – a possibility the president has not ruled out.

“I guess Venezuela will be the acid test that answers the question is MAGA whatever Donald Trump says it is,” said Dante Scala, a political science professor at the University of New Hampshire.

(reporting by Nathan Layne in Wilton, Connecticut; Editing by Sergio Non and Chizu Nomiyama )

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US sanctions policy to determine Venezuela’s oil production outlook, Goldman says

US sanctions policy to determine Venezuela’s oil production outlook, Goldman says 150 150 admin

SINGAPORE, Jan 5 (Reuters) – Venezuela’s oil production outlook this year will depend on how U.S. sanctions policy evolves, Goldman Sachs analysts said, after U.S. President Donald Trump deposed Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.

The U.S. snatched Maduro from Caracas at the weekend and Trump said Washington would take control of the oil-producing nation.

“We see ambiguous but modest risks to oil prices in the short-run from Venezuela depending on how U.S. sanctions policy evolves,” Goldman Sachs analysts led by Daan Struyven said in a January 4 note.

Goldman’s 2026 oil price forecasts remained unchanged with Brent’s average at $56 and West Texas Intermediate at $52 a barrel while Venezuela’s 2026 oil production is forecast to stay flat at 900,000 barrels per day.

However, Venezuela’s production may rise in the long run, which adds downside risks to the oil price forecast for 2027 and beyond, the analysts said.

Venezuela produced about 3 million bpd at its peak in the mid-2000s and holds about a fifth of global proven oil reserves.

“Any recovery in production would likely be gradual and require substantial investment,” the analysts said.

“We estimate $4/bbl of downside to 2030 oil prices in a scenario where Venezuela crude production rises to 2mb/d in 2030.”

(Reporting by Florence Tan; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)

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Face the Nation: Cotton, Himes, Van Hollen

Face the Nation: Cotton, Himes, Van Hollen 150 150 admin

Missed the second half of the show? Senate Intelligence Committee chairman Sen. Tom Cotton, Rep. Jim Himes and Sen. Chris Van Hollen join.
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Surprise interim leader Delcy Rodriguez emerges in Venezuela after Maduro’s capture

Surprise interim leader Delcy Rodriguez emerges in Venezuela after Maduro’s capture 150 150 admin

MEXICO CITY (AP) — As uncertainty simmers in Venezuela, interim President Delcy Rodríguez has taken the place of her ally President Nicolás Maduro, captured by the United States in a nighttime military operation.

Rodríguez served as Maduro’s vice president since 2018, overseeing much of Venezuela’s oil-dependent economy and its feared intelligence service, and was next in the presidential line of succession.

She’s part of a band of senior officials in Maduro’s administration that now appears to control Venezuela, even as U.S. President Donald Trump and other officials say they will pressure the government to fall in line with its vision for the oil-rich nation.

On Saturday, Venezuela’s high court ordered her to assume the role of interim president, and the leader was backed by Venezuela’s military. In a televised address, Rodríguez gave no indication that she would cooperate with Trump, referring to his government as “extremists.”

“The only president of Venezuela, President Nicolás Maduro,” Rodríguez said, surrounded by high-ranking civilian officials and military leaders. “What is being done to Venezuela is an atrocity that violates international law.”

Rodríguez, a 56-year-old lawyer and politician has had a lengthy career representing the revolution started by the late Hugo Chávez on the world stage.

Her rise to become interim leader of the South American country came as a surprise on Saturday morning, when Trump announced that Secretary of State Marco Rubio had been in communication with Rodríguez and that the Venezuelan leader was “gracious” and would work with the American government. Rubio said Rodríguez was someone the administration could work with, unlike Maduro.

In doing so, observers said the government was effectively turning its back on the opposition movement it maintained was the winner of Venezuela’s 2024 elections just weeks before.

On Sunday, Trump’s tone shifted as Rodríguez and other Venezuelan officials continued to rail against the Trump administration and assert that they were in control of the country.

“If she doesn’t do what’s right, she is going to pay a very big price, probably bigger than Maduro,” Trump said of Rodríguez in an interview with The Atlantic.

In comments later Sunday night, Trump said Rodriguez is “cooperating.”

He added that he wanted her to provide “total access,” from oil facilities to basic infrastructure like roads, so they can be rebuilt. But Trump also reiterated his threat that she could “face a situation probably worse than Maduro” if she doesn’t cooperate with the U.S.

Asked as he flew on Air Force One back from Florida to Washington about Rodriguez’s comments in which she said she stands by Maduro, Trump said, “I don’t think it’s pushback,” noting that “you hear a different person than I hear.” When a reporter told Trump that Rodriguez had called the operation a kidnapping of Maduro, Trump responded, “It’s all right, it’s not a bad term.”

But Trump’s comments followed Rubio having asserted in TV interviews on Sunday that he didn’t see Rodríguez and her government as “legitimate” because he said the country never held free and fair elections.

A lawyer educated in Britain and France, the interim president and her brother, Jorge Rodríguez, head of the Maduro-controlled National Assembly, have sterling leftist credentials born from tragedy. Their father was a socialist leader who was arrested for his involvement in the kidnapping of American business owner William Niehous in 1976, and later died in police custody.

Unlike many in Maduro’s inner circle, the Rodríguez siblings have avoided criminal indictment in the U.S., though the interim president did face U.S. sanctions during Trump’s first term for her role in undermining Venezuelan democracy.

Rodríguez held a number of lower level positions under Chávez’s government, but gained prominence working under Maduro to the point of being seen as his successor. She served the economic minister, foreign affairs minister, petroleum minister and others help stabilize Venezuela’s endemically crisis-stricken economy after years of rampant inflation and turmoil.

Rodríguez developed strong ties with Republicans in the oil industry and on Wall Street who balked at the notion of U.S.-led regime change. The interim president also presided over an assembly promoted by Maduro in response to street protests in 2017 meant to neutralize the opposition-majority legislature.

She enjoys a close relationship with the military, which has long acted as the arbiter of political disputes in Venezuela, said Ronal Rodríguez, a spokesperson for the Venezuela Observatory of Rosario University in Bogota, Colombia.

“She has a very particular relationship with power,” he said. “She has developed very strong ties with elements of the armed forces and has managed to establish lines of dialogue with them, largely on a transactional basis.”

It’s unclear how long Rodríguez will hold power, or how closely she will work with the Trump administration.

Geoff Ramsey, a senior nonresident fellow at the Atlantic Council, a Washington research institute, said Rodríguez’s firm tone with the Trump administration may be an attempt to “save face.” Others have noted that Maduro’s capture required some level of collaboration within the Venezuelan government.

“She can’t exactly expect to score points with her revolutionary peers if she presents herself as a patsy for U.S. interests,” Ramsey said.

Venezuela’s constitution requires an election within 30 days whenever the president becomes “permanently unavailable” to serve. Reasons listed include death, resignation, removal from office or “abandonment” of duties as declared by the National Assembly.

That electoral timeline was rigorously followed when Maduro’s predecessor, Chavez, died of cancer in 2013. However, the loyalist Supreme Court, in its decision Saturday, cited another provision of the charter in declaring Maduro’s absence a “temporary” one.

In such a scenario, there is no election requirement. Instead, the vice president, an unelected position, takes over for up to 90 days — a period that can be extended to six months with a vote of the National Assembly.

In handing temporary power to Rodríguez, the Supreme Court made no mention of the 180-day time limit, leading some to speculate she could try to remain in power even longer as she seeks to unite the disparate factions of the ruling socialist party while shielding it from what would certainly be a stiff electoral challenge.

—— Janetsky reported from Mexico City and Debre reported from Buenos Aires, Argentina. Associated Press writers Joshua Goodman in Miami, Darlene Superville aboard Air Force One and Jorge Rueda in Caracas, Venezuela contributed to this report.

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