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    Federalizing DC, countering Putin and paying to export

     
    Today's LAW ENFORCEMENT story

    Trump sends FBI to patrol DC, despite falling crime

    What happened
    President Donald Trump has reassigned up to 120 FBI agents to patrol the streets of Washington, D.C., at night for at least a week, The Washington Post and The New York Times said yesterday. According to Reuters, Trump is also "preparing to deploy hundreds of National Guard troops to Washington." He vowed to ramp up federal forces in D.C. and threatened a federal takeover of the capital after prominent DOGE official Edward "Big Balls" Coristine was injured in an Aug. 3 carjacking attempt.

    Who said what
    D.C. "has become one of the most dangerous cities anywhere in the world," Trump said Saturday on social media. "It will soon be one of the safest!!!" Trump has "repeatedly slammed" Washington as "unsafe, filthy and badly run," The Associated Press said, but Mayor Muriel Bowser's government can "legitimately claim to have reduced the number of homicides and carjackings, both of which spiked in 2023." 

    Violent crime in D.C. fell 35% last year, to the lowest level in three decades, and is down another 26% so far this year, according to D.C. Metropolitan Police data. If Trump's "priority is to show force in an American city, we know he can do that here," Bowser said on MSNBC yesterday. "But it won't be because there's a spike in crime."

    The reassigned FBI agents are drawn mostly from the Washington Field Office's counterintelligence, public corruption and other divisions and have "minimal training in traffic stops," the Post said, and "little expertise or training in thwarting carjackers." The "roughly 900" FBI agents redeployed for immigration enforcement in recent months have similarly found it "challenging" to "make meaningful contributions" to their assignments, the Times said.

    What next?
    Trump was expected to elaborate on his plans today at a press conference he said would be on "Crime and 'Beautification'" in the capital.

     
     
    Today's INTERNATIONAL story

    Europe counters Putin ahead of Trump summit 

    What happened
    European leaders over the weekend presented top U.S. officials with a unified framework for President Donald Trump's scheduled Ukraine peace talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska on Friday. Putin told Trump's envoy Steve Witkoff (pictured above) at the Kremlin last week that Russia would agree to a ceasefire if Kyiv withdrew from Ukraine's eastern Donetsk region. Ukraine's European allies said Russia needed to halt its fighting before any discussions of reciprocal land swaps.

    Who said what
    The European governments and Ukraine "scrambled" to "draw a common red line" after Putin's offer was clarified and Trump "let lapse his self-imposed deadline" to punish Moscow's intransigence, The Wall Street Journal said. Russian officials and commentators "crowed about landing" the Alaska summit, The Washington Post said. Trump handed Putin his first invitation to the U.S. since 2007, "apparently without the Kremlin having made any clear concessions over its war in Ukraine."

    German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said it was unacceptable for any agreements to be reached "over the heads of the Europeans, over the heads of the Ukrainians." Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy reiterated that his country would not cede any land to the Russian invaders.

    What next?
    Vice President J.D. Vance said on Fox News yesterday that the White House was working on "scheduling and things like that" for when Putin, Trump and Zelenskyy "could sit down and discuss an end to this conflict." The U.S. ambassador to NATO, Matthew Whitaker, told CNN that Trump could still invite Zelenskyy to the Alaska summit.

     
     
    Today's BuSINESS Story

    US to take 15% cut of AI chip sales to China

    What happened
    Nvidia and AMD have agreed to pay the Trump administration 15% of their revenue from selling artificial intelligence chips to China, the Financial Times and other news organizations reported yesterday. President Donald Trump in April had banned Nvidia and AMD from selling China their H20 and MI308 AI chips, respectively, and the chipmakers "agreed to the financial arrangement as a condition for obtaining export licenses" granted last week, the Times said.

    Who said what
    The "quid pro quo arrangement is unprecedented," the Times said, and followed a meeting last Wednesday between Trump and Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang (pictured above). The Trump administration announced last month that it would reverse its ban on H20 sales to China, but it did not issue the export licenses until Friday. 

    "We follow rules the U.S. government sets for our participation in worldwide markets," Nvidia said in a statement yesterday. The deal is attracting criticism both because companies don't usually "essentially pay for export licenses" in the U.S. and over concerns the chip "will boost China’s AI ecosystem and military," The Wall Street Journal said. "It's wild," Geoff Gertz at the Center for New American Security told Reuters. "Either selling H20 chips to China is a national security risk, in which case we shouldn't be doing it to begin with, or it's not a national security risk, in which case, why are we putting this extra penalty on the sale?"

    What next?
    The "highly unusual financial agreement" could "funnel more than $2 billion to the U.S. government," The New York Times said. The administration has "not yet determined how to use the money," the Financial Times said, citing sources.

     
     

    It's not all bad

    People with myalgic encephalomyelitis or chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) have eight significantly different genetic regions compared with those who do not, new research has found. This discovery, made during the University of Edinburgh's landmark DecodeME genetic study, is "huge for the patient population," co-investigator Andy Devereux-Cooke told The Guardian. ME/CFS is an often misunderstood ailment, and the finding will hopefully "turn the tide" toward more research.

     
     
    Under the radar

    Here comes the acid rain again

    Just when you thought it was safe to go out in wet weather, acid rain "may have a sequel," said Popular Mechanics, and "like most sequels, it's arguably worse." It also might not have a happy ending because tackling a "forever chemical," which is now coming down in rain and being found in "everything from drinking water to human blood," may be an "impossible task". 

    Scientists started studying acid rain in the 1960s, and by the 1980s it had become the most discussed environmental issue of the time, in both news media and popular culture. "At its worst," the first era of acid rain "stripped forests bare in Europe, wiped lakes clear of life in parts of Canada and the U.S." and damaged human health and crops in China, said the BBC. 

    It came from rising concentrations of sulphuric acid produced mostly by gas-driven cars and coal-fired power stations. Acid rain became less of a problem as power sources evolved, but now there's a "new anthropogenic source" that is "possibly more pervasive, more persistent and more sinister," Popular Mechanics said: When rain, or snow, falls, a human-made chemical called trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) is falling with it. 

    And TFA's aren't the only pollutant raining from the skies. "Plastic rain" is the "new acid rain," according to Wired. In 2020, researchers found that more than 1,100 tons of microplastic fell on 11 national parks and protected areas in the western U.S. each year — the equivalent of more than 120 million plastic water bottles. Expanded worldwide, this plastic rain "could prove to be a more insidious problem than acid rain."

     
     
    On this day

    August 11, 3114 B.C.

    This is considered the traditional starting date of the Mesoamerican Long Count calendar. The most well-known version of the calendar was adopted by the Mayans and became highly publicized due to its prophecy of a world-ending event in 2012. Several other Central American civilizations also used this calendar.

     
     
    TODAY'S newspaperS

    'Anti-vax chickens are home to roost'

    "Russians see Alaska summit as early win," The Washington Post says on Monday's front page. "Ukraine and Europe counter Russia's ceasefire proposal," The Wall Street Journal says. "After almost losing Trump, Putin gets his ideal summit," The New York Times says, while in the U.S., "CDC shooting followed years of demonization." Employees from the health agency "speak about lingering fears" as "vaccine distrust 'has escalated past Covid,'" The Atlanta Journal-Constitution says, running a front-page op-ed: "Anti-vax chickens are home to roost." In Wisconsin, "flash flooding pummels area," with "State Fair, triathlon disrupted," says the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

    ► See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    Tall tale

    A truck by any other name...

    An Estonian theater group replaced actors with vehicles in an unorthodox take on "Romeo and Juliet." The performance took place in an old lime quarry, with a rally truck playing Romeo, a red Ford pickup portraying Juliet and fire trucks, city buses and excavators rounding out the cast. There was no dialogue, just music and fireworks. The vehicles actually "captured" the "energy" of the material "really well," audience member Maia Pussim told Reuters.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Nadia Croes, Catherine Garcia, Scott Hocker, Anya Jaremko-Greenwold, Justin Klawans, Rafi Schwartz, Peter Weber and Kari Wilkin, with illustrations by Stephen Kelly and Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Andrew Leyden / Getty Images; Gavriil Grigorov / Pool / AFP via Getty Images; Ken Cedeno / UPI / Bloomberg via Getty Images; Illustration by Julia Wytrazek / Getty Images
     

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