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In Rare China Visit, U.S. Lawmakers Call Lack of Military Talks ‘Dangerous’

The bipartisan delegation said more conversations were necessary to avoid accidental “miscalculations and misunderstandings” that could lead to conflict.

© Pool photo by Mahesh Kumar A.

Premier Li Qiang of China, right, spoke with a bipartisan group of U.S. lawmakers at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, on Sunday.
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China Braces for the Worst as Typhoon Ragasa Barrels Toward Its Coast

Hong Kong canceled hundreds of flights, Macau shuttered casinos and the city of Shenzhen plans to evacuate 400,000 people.

© Yan Zhao/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Sandbags are prepared to hold back floodwaters, as Typhoon Ragasa was approaching Hong Kong on Tuesday.
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Why African Countries Keep Making Deals to Accept U.S. Deportees

As the Trump administration exerts pressure on countries to aid in its mass deportation efforts, some nations in Africa have agreed, prompting legal battles.

© Guerchom Ndebo for The New York Times

A view of Kigali, Rwanda.
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Trump to Address U.N. as He Jettisons Aid and Recasts U.S. Role

President Trump plans to address the U.N. General Assembly with a rebuke of global institutions, at a moment when he is increasingly isolated in his approach to crises around the world.

© Doug Mills/The New York Times

President Trump walking off Air Force One at John F. Kennedy Airport in New York, where he will attend the U.N. General Assembly meetings Tuesday.
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Defense Department Delays Cleanup of ‘Forever Chemicals’ Nationwide

The new timeline could slow cleanup in some communities by nearly a decade. The chemicals, widely used in the military, are linked to cancers and other health risks.

© Stocktrek Images, via Getty Images

Forever chemicals are used in firefighting foam. Above, a training exercise in 2012 at Cannon Air Force Base in New Mexico, one of several sites where groundwater has been contaminated.
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Elon Musk’s Father, Errol Musk, Accused of Child Sexual Abuse

Errol Musk has been accused of sexually abusing five of his children and stepchildren since 1993, a Times investigation found. Family members have appealed to Elon Musk for help.

© Gianluigi Guercia/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Errol Musk, who has at least nine children and stepchildren, at his home in South Africa in 2022.
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Drone Sightings Force Copenhagen and Oslo Airports to Close Temporarily

It was not immediately clear who was flying the drones. The airports were closed for several hours, disrupting dozens of flights.

© Sergei Gapon/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Passengers lining up to get new tickets at the Copenhagen Airport on Tuesday.
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Unification Church Leader Is Arrested on Corruption Charges in South Korea

Han Hak-ja — the widow of the church’s founder, the Rev. Sun Myung Moon — was accused of bribing a former first lady for business and political favors.

© Lee Jin-Man/Associated Press

Han Hak-ja, the leader of the Unification Church, arriving at the Central District Court in Seoul on Monday. She was arrested on corruption-related charges on Tuesday.
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Block Island’s Wind Farm Had Unexpected Benefits

Offshore turbines let Block Island shut down soot-spewing, earsplitting diesel generators. There were other benefits, too.

© Lucy Lu for The New York Times

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‘They’re Small but They’re Mighty.’ Meet the Wisconsin Sisters Healing the Land.

The women of Holy Wisdom Monastery have restored 170 acres of native prairie and oak savanna. “Humans need creation to find ourselves,” one said.

© Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York Times

From left, Sister Lynne Smith, Sister Mary David Walgenbach, Sister Everline Jeruto and Sister Joanne Kollasch, the order of Benedictine sisters of Holy Wisdom.
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World Leaders Recognize Palestinian State, in a Challenge to U.S. and Israel

At a meeting ahead of the U.N. General Assembly, France and other U.S. allies made official a breach with Washington that has been years in the making.

© Dave Sanders for The New York Times

“We must pave the way for peace,” President Emmanuel Macron of France said, to applause and a standing ovation from the Palestinian delegation, at a meeting at the United Nations in New York on Monday.
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Flights Are Temporarily Diverted From Copenhagen Airport After Drone Sightings

The airport was closed for several hours because or two or three large drones spotted in the area.

© Steven Knap/Ritzau Scanpix Denmark, via Reuters

Copenhagen’s airport was closed, and flights were being diverted, after drones were sighted there on Monday night, officials said.
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Palestinian Statehood Seems More Remote Than Ever

Even before the war in Gaza, negotiations failed to produce peace between the Israelis and the Palestinians.

© Rina Castelnuovo for The New York Times

A wall in Jerusalem separating Israeli and Palestinian areas in 2010.
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U.S. Pledges Support for Argentina’s Economy and Javier Milei

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said “all options” are under consideration to help President Javier Milei.

© Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Monday that his department was “ready to do what is needed within its mandate to support Argentina.”
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Zelensky Urges ‘Powerful Pressure on Russia’ at U.N. General Assembly

In a social media post, Ukraine’s president pushed leaders gathering in New York to strengthen their efforts to get Moscow to end the war.

© Evgeniy Maloletka/Associated Press

President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine before a news conference in Kyiv on Wednesday.
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Greenlandic Woman Wins Her Baby Back in Denmark

A young Greenlandic woman living in Denmark will regain custody of the infant girl taken from her shortly after birth. The case has become the latest flashpoint between Denmark and Greenland.

© Hilary Swift for The New York Times

Ivana Bronlund at her home with a sonogram of her child in Hedehusene, Denmark, in September.
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French Town Halls Defy Officials and Fly Palestinian Flags

© Olivier Chassignole/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

A Palestinian flag being placed over the entrance of the City Hall in Lyon, France, on Monday.
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Tech Executive Dies After Falling 2,000 Feet on Mount Shasta

While the Argentine hiker and entrepreneur, Matias Augusto Travizano, was descending the mountain, he fell down a glacier, the authorities said.

© Max Whittaker for The New York Times

Mount Shasta, at just over 14,100 feet above sea level, is the fifth-highest mountain in California and the second-highest in the Cascade Range.
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Judge Says Work on Revolution Wind Can Proceed, for Now

The Trump administration had halted construction on the $6.2 billion Revolution Wind project, prompting its developer to sue.

© CJ Gunther/EPA, via Shutterstock

Rotor blades for the Revolution Wind offshore wind farm at the State Pier in New London, Conn., last November.
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Putin Proposes One More Year of Nuclear Caps With U.S.

Mr. Putin said Russia didn’t want to provoke a strategic arms race with the United States, but his offer is limited in scope.

© Pool photo by Alexander Kazakov

In this photograph distributed by the Russian state news agency Sputnik, President Vladimir V. Putin chairs a meeting at the Kremlin in Moscow on Monday.
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Egypt Pardons Alaa Abd El Fattah, Its Most Prominent Political Prisoner

Alaa Abd El Fattah, a British-Egyptian dual citizen, was imprisoned for most of the past 12 years as a dissident. He and his mother went on hunger strike to press for his release.

© Mohamed El Raai, via Reuters

Alaa Abd El Fattah, seen here in an undated handout image, gained prominence through his biting, visionary commentary on Egypt’s 2011 Arab Spring revolution.
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For Arab Nations With Ties to Israel, Attacks on Qatar and Gaza City Raise Anxiety

The Middle Eastern states closest to Israel see the attack on Hamas officials in Qatar and the invasion of Gaza City as warning signs of potential threats to their own security.

© Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters

Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani, the emir of Qatar, on a screen at an Arab-Islamic summit in Doha, the country’s capital, convened after an Israeli strike in the city on Sept. 9.
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Trump’s Tariffs Are Damaging America’s Biggest Foreign Source of Screws

Taiwan has long been the top provider of screws to the United States. But its factories are struggling to survive under tariffs on steel and aluminum.

Screws used in backyard decking, wooden floors and railings are a big part of Sheh Fung’s business, Mr. Chen said.
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Super Typhoon Ragasa Hits the Philippines, Headed for Hong Kong

Thousands were evacuated and hundreds of flights canceled ahead of the major storm.

© Justine Mark Pillie Fajardo/Associated Press

Strong waves battering Basco in Batanes Province in the northern Philippines on Monday, as Typhoon Ragasa affects the area.
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As U.N. General Assembly Gathers, Here’s What to Expect

A look at major figures who will appear during the week and what they might talk about.

© Graham Dickie/The New York Times

The U.N. General Assembly last year. The wars in Ukraine, Gaza and Sudan will loom over the annual gathering this year in New York.
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High-Tech Greenhouse Brings Fresh Produce to Canada’s Arctic

A high-tech greenhouse brings fresh produce to Gjoa Haven, an Inuit hamlet in Canada’s Arctic whose residents have little experience growing plants.

© Renaud Philippe for The New York Times

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Russia’s Ban on I.B. Schools Deepens Its Rupture With the West

The Kremlin has infused education with nationalism and militarism. Outlawing the International Baccalaureate underlines that effort.

© Nanna Heitmann for The New York Times

A center in Kursk, Russia, last year, where schoolchildren were receiving military-style instruction.
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Kim Jong-un Open to Talks if U.S. Drops Demand to Denuclearize

The North Korean leader’s comments came days after President Trump said he would travel to South Korea in late October for a regional summit.

© Erin Schaff/The New York Times

President Trump set foot in North Korea in 2019, the last time he met Kim Jong-un.
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Europe Talks Big on Gaza but Struggles to Act

Even as criticism of Israel ramps up and a growing number of countries say they’ll recognize a Palestinian state, concrete actions remain limited.

© Marius Burgelman/Belga, via Agence France-Presse

A rally in Brussels this month in support of Palestinians. European efforts to punish the Israeli government for its actions in Gaza have stalled amid opposition, notably from Germany.
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Cyberattack Forces Brussels Airport to Cancel More Flights

Disruptions continued on Monday at major European travel hubs after a ransomware attack struck a third-party system handling check-in and boarding systems.

© Harry Nakos/Associated Press

Passengers waiting to check in for flights at Brussels Airport on Saturday.
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Nepal to Investigate Killings and Arson in Student Protests

It is a first effort by the country’s new government to understand the sequence of violent events that led to the abrupt downfall of the old one.

© Atul Loke for The New York Times

Workers cleaning government buildings in Kathmandu, Nepal, that were burned this month.
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Israel Keeps Border Crossing to Jordan Closed After Attack

The Allenby Bridge border crossing is the main gateway for Palestinians to leave the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

© Mahmoud Illean/Associated Press

Israeli police and soldiers on Thursday near the site of the attack at the Allenby Bridge crossing.
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Protesters in Manila Accuse Government of Misusing Environmental Funds

Demonstrations were set off by accusations that flood relief money was embezzled. They are part of a wave of discontent about economic inequality in several countries in Asia.

© Ezra Acayan/Getty Images

Anti-government protesters in Manila on Sunday.
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U.N. Gathers Amid Its 80th Anniversary and a ‘Free Fall’

The wars in Ukraine, Gaza and Sudan will hang over the annual gathering of the U.N. General Assembly next week in New York. So, too, will budget and identity crises.

© Spencer Platt/Getty Images

The United Nations will observe its 80th anniversary as world leaders converge this week on its headquarters in New York.
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