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  • The Week Evening Review
    Trump’s Nobel Peace Prize campaign, NATO’s Putin dilemma, and Interpol’s cybercrime crackdown

     
    The Explainer

    Why Trump is so focused on getting a Nobel Peace Prize 

    The winner of the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize will be announced on Oct. 10, and while President Donald Trump may not be the first name that comes to mind for most people, he has very much looked to place himself in the running. The president has long opined that he deserves it, going back to his first term. 

    In recent months, Trump has renewed efforts to earn the award. (He has been nominated for the prize several times but has never won.) He has previously hinted that he deserves the award for his work regarding the wars in Ukraine and Gaza, but most political analysts say he has not done enough. 

    Why does he want it?
    The president seems to want the prize because he believes in his “singular capacity to end some of the world’s toughest conflicts, all largely without the help” of any organization like the United Nations or “any other country,” said Politico. This comes even as the wars in Ukraine and Gaza are “grinding on without any clear end, despite his promises to quickly end both.” 

    Trump’s “public jockeying for the prize reflects his focus on accolades, praise and acceptance — and a burning desire to best his predecessors,” said The New York Times. Former President Barack Obama received the Nobel Peace Prize nine months into his first term. Trump has “repeatedly invoked” Obama’s prize, “complaining that he did not deserve the award.”

    Could he get it? 
    Most insiders say it’s extremely unlikely. Instead of choosing Trump, the five-person committee that decides the prize recipient will probably “wish to highlight a humanitarian organization working in an environment that has become more challenging, partly due to Trump’s U.S. aid cuts,” said Reuters. The Nobel committee also “cherishes” the international world order that Trump is “dismantling.”

    The fact that Trump is so open about his desire for the prize may work against him. The award-giving committee “prefers to work independently, sheltering from outside pressures,” one of its members said to Reuters. Trump has “no chance to get the Peace Prize at all,” said Asle Sveen, a Nobel Peace Prize historian, to Reuters, citing his support for Israel in the Gaza war and his attempts at rapprochement with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    ‘He knows about rigged elections better than anybody. But when I was in exile, we were still friends.’

    Trump to the press in the Oval Office about Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Trump has long been an admirer of the Turkish leader, who has been accused of pushing Turkey farther toward authoritarianism. 

     
     
    TODAY'S BIG QUESTION

    How should NATO respond to Putin’s incursions?

    The NATO alliance is facing “difficult questions,” said Politico, following incursions by Russian drones and fighter jets into the airspace of Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Finland, Poland and Romania in recent weeks. Unidentified drone sightings have also disrupted airports in Denmark, but Moscow “insists it has done nothing wrong.” Poland has shot down some of the drones that flew over its skies, and several other NATO nations are warning they are “ready to shoot down Russian aircraft entering their airspace.” 

    What did the commentators say?
    The central question is whether it was Russia’s deliberate intention to breach NATO airspace. There’s “no consensus view” on this among member states after speaking to “a dozen senior U.S. and Western military, intelligence and diplomatic” officials, said CNN. That puts the alliance in an “uncomfortable position.” 

    There’s a “fundamental difference” between Moscow’s and NATO’s rules of engagement, Charly Salonius-Pasternak, of Helsinki’s Nordic West Office think tank, said to Politico. Russia thinks they are “in a military conflict” with the West, but “we do not see it that way.” 

    NATO’s parameters do not require the immediate use of force in response to an assumed incursion during peacetime. And nobody would “start World War III because of this,” said Ukrainian military analyst Mykola Bielieskov. 

    What next?
    NATO’s response to Russia’s “reckless acts will continue to be robust,” said the North Atlantic Council. The option of “shooting down a Russian jet that’s intruding on our airspace is on the table,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said on Wednesday. On the sidelines of this week’s U.N. General Assembly in New York, President Donald Trump said he believed it was an option that NATO countries should take. 

    But even shooting down Russian drones could be a challenge, said Yasir Atalan at Foreign Policy. The West will find it hard to do so at a “sustainable cost.” The price of scrambling fighter jets or deploying expensive missiles is far higher than what Russia is spending on each drone. NATO countries will need to follow Ukraine in finding “cheaper options, such as interceptor drones and energy lasers,” if they hope to withstand “large-scale drone attacks.”

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    5,000: The number of new words that Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary has added, according to the company. The latest edition will be released on Nov. 18 and include terms like “dumbphone” (mobile devices that predate smartphones), “petrichor” (the smell of rain) and “rizz” (charisma).

     
     
    IN THE SPOTLIGHT

    Interpol arrests hundreds in cybercrime crackdown

    More than 250 suspected cybercriminals and digital scammers have been arrested across 14 different African nations in a mass operation conducted across the continent by Interpol, the international investigative agency announced today. The arrests, executed in late July through early August, come during a “sharp rise in digital-enabled crime.” Interpol analysts identified nearly 1,500 victims of the targeted cybercrime operations, with estimated financial losses nearing $3 million.

    ‘Deepest human vulnerabilities’
    Interpol’s continent-wide operation identified “IP addresses, digital infrastructure, domains and social media profiles” associated with “members of the scam syndicates,” said the BBC. These organizations “extract money from victims in romance scams” as well as through “so-called sextortion” schemes wherein targets are “blackmailed using explicit imagery.” Romance and sextortion scammers “deliberately exploit” some of the “deepest human vulnerabilities, such as trust and emotional attachment,” said Dmitry Volkov, the CEO of cybersecurity firm Group-IB, which partnered with Interpol. 

    The probe comes on the heels of Operation Serengeti 2.0, which disrupted thousands of “malicious infrastructures” this summer, said Interpol. It recovered nearly $100 million from victims targeted by ransomware and other online scams.

    Interpol claims that the sweeping scale of these operations “illustrates both the scope of cybercrime in Africa” and the “critical role of international collaboration in tackling it,” said Business Insider. Of the nations involved, Ghana “accounted for the largest haul” of the crackdown, with nearly 70 arrests and hundreds of devices seized during the operation. In Senegal, 22 suspects were arrested for “operating a network that impersonated celebrities on social media and dating platforms,” while authorities in Côte d’Ivoire “dismantled a sextortion ring” with more than 809 victims.

    ‘Pillar of stability, peace’
    The focus on cybercrime crackdowns across Africa comes as more Interpol partner nations raise the alarm about digital criminals operating within their borders. For a majority of those nations, “cyber-related offenses” account for a “medium-to-high share of all crimes, rising to 30% in Western and Eastern Africa,” said Interpol.

    Cybersecurity has become a “fundamental pillar of stability, peace and sustainable development in Africa,” said Jalel Chelba, the executive director of the African Union Mechanism for Police Cooperation. Protection against cybercrime assures “digital sovereignty of states, the resilience of our institutions, citizen trust, and the proper functioning of our economies.”

     
     

    Good day 🏥

    … for medical progress. Doctors have treated Huntington’s disease for the first time with a gene therapy that slows the disease by 75%. Huntington’s has no cure or currently approved treatments, but the company uniQure has developed and tested a new drug known as AMT-130 that’s delivered via brain surgery.

     
     

    Bad day 🏈

    … for Swifties. The NFL has refused Taylor Swift’s demands for performing at next year’s Super Bowl halftime show, according to a Substack report from columnist Rob Shuter. Talks about having the superstar perform fell apart when she “asked for terms that matched her influence,” he said.

     
     
    Picture of the day

    Gathering among the ruins

    Hezbollah supporters gather in an abandoned building in Beirut, Lebanon, to mark the first anniversary of Hassan Nasrallah’s killing. The party’s leader was assassinated in September 2024 when an Israeli airstrike targeted Hezbollah’s headquarters.
    Anwar Amro / Getty Images

     
     
    Puzzles

    Daily crossword

    Test your general knowledge with The Week's daily crossword, part of our puzzles section, which also includes sudoku and codewords

    Play here

     
     
    The Week recommends

    Road trips to see the changing landscape

    Autumn is the perfect time for a road trip. Roll down those windows, let in that cooler air and soak up the views of fiery foliage and falling leaves.

    Covered Bridge Loop Trail, Indiana
    Covered bridges add charm to country roads, and Indiana has plenty dotting the landscape. The 216-mile Covered Bridge Loop crosses through six foliage-filled counties, with stops at nine historic bridges. And if that’s not enough to scratch your itch, head to Parke County in western Indiana, known as the Covered Bridge Capital of the World. This rustic region is home to 31 covered bridges that were primarily “built in the 1800s and still in use,” said Midwest Living.

    Green Mountain Byway, Vermont
    Once autumn hits, the Green Mountains “erupt in color,” and some of the most “picturesque” sights can be seen from the Green Mountain Byway, said Travel and Leisure. On the journey through towns like Waterbury and Stowe, the road passes farmland and “rolling hills interrupted by church steeples,” guaranteeing a bucolic drive.

    Needles Highway, South Dakota
    The Needles Highway has enough twists, turns and surprises to rival any roller coaster. This “jaw-dropping” drive starts in Custer State Park, and while it is only 14 miles, the highway is not “meant to be traveled quickly,” said Thrillist. Instead, go slowly through the narrow openings and snap photos of your car “barely clearing the granite walls.”

    Read more

     
     
    WORD OF THE DAY

    thermokarst

    The melting of ground ice in permafrost (ground that’s completely frozen year-round). Thermokarst is the result of rising temperatures and profoundly affects arctic landscapes and ecosystems. At least three major thermokarst events from 1990 to 2023 are related to global warming, according to the journal Geoscience Frontiers. 

     
     
    INSTANT OPINION

    Today's best commentary

    ‘Congress should help air innovation take flight’
    Sen. Peter Welch (D-Vt.) and Sen. Ted Budd (R-N.C.) at Newsweek
    It’s time for Congress to “build on a proud American legacy by spearheading the newest revolution in flight: advanced air mobility, or AAM,” say Peter Welch and Ted Budd. This “isn’t a single technology — it’s a collection of technologies that will allow innovative aircraft, including electric, to integrate into our airspace system.” It’s a “new way to think about air transportation, from private and recreational aircraft to public services to large cargo delivery.”

    ‘My sons have autism, and the stigma of blame must end’
    Maura Sullivan at The Boston Globe
    Parents “often search for clear black-and-white answers on how to raise their children,” but “life, especially life with autism, is mostly lived in a gray area,” says Maura Sullivan. The “gray area of raising children with autism is not a place of division but of shared purpose.” Society can “acknowledge the experiences and fears of families by continuing to keep a wide lens on research” but must “ensure that crucial federal funding for research and services continues.”

    ‘Sports are more than entertainment’
    Danette Leighton at Time
    Sports “build not only champions on the field“ but also “leaders in business, government and society,” says Danette Leighton. “Decades of evidence and lived experience make clear that when girls and women have access to sport, they gain invaluable skills and opportunities that ripple across all sectors.” The U.N. “should prioritize harnessing sport for equality worldwide.” That means “adopting policies that ensure equal access to sport, elevate women in leadership roles, and fund inclusive programs.”

     
     

    Poll watch

    Three-quarters of Americans (75%) have streamed a movie at home in the past year instead of watching it in theaters, according to an AP-NORC survey. But 65% of the 1,182 adults polled have gone to see at least one film in theaters in the same period. 

     
     

    Evening Review was written and edited by Keumars Afifi-Sabet, Nadia Croes, Catherine Garcia, Scott Hocker, Justin Klawans, Summer Meza, Rafi Schwartz and Anahi Valenzuela, with illustrations by Stephen Kelly and Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Jonathan Nackstrand / AFP / Getty Images; Valery Sharifulin / Pool / AFP / Getty Images; Oliver Chassignole / AFP / Getty Images; Ryan Herron / Getty Images
     

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