Tuesday, July 7, 2026
The $2 Trillion Race for Control of Future Battlefields (Bloomberg) Cold War-sized nuclear stockpiles are out. Emergent technologies like hypersonic missiles, AI, space weapons and drones are in. These weapons are at the center of a new arms race, as countries pour billions into attempts to be the first to master drones, hypersonic weapons, AI and other emerging technologies that may dominate future battlefields. The spending spreeâamounting to more than $2 trillion across three continentsâmirrors the nuclear buildups of the Cold War, where the US and Soviet Union amassed huge stockpiles of ever-more-dangerous nuclear warheads. This time around there are more players, yet less certainty of the impact these new weapons may haveâonly the sense that getting left behind could be catastrophic. Russia has an edge in proven hypersonic missiles; Chinaâs military is deeply enmeshed with AI labs but the US used the technology for the first time in combat; all three are capable of destroying satellites. Europe has the resources to catch up but struggles to work collectively. âAn arms race is sort of happeningâeven though we havenât called it thatâand itâs a multidimensional arms race,â said former US Assistant Secretary of Defense Celeste Wallander. Major military powers âhave to figure out where they will put their emphasis.â
Shootings in Nine States Mar Fourth of July Celebrations (NYT) The Fourth of July brought celebrations from coast to coast, as millions watched fireworks, parades, tall ships and more in celebration of the 250th anniversary of the United States. But the holiday weekend was also marked by spasms of gunfire, with shootings occurring in New York, Florida, Texas, Illinois, Arizona, Indiana, Tennessee, Michigan and South Carolina. At least five people were killed out of at least 52 gunshot victims, authorities said. Large gatherings with heavy alcohol consumption and hot weather create the conditions for violent outbursts, according to researchers. Gun Violence Archive data from 2013 to 2025, analyzed by the criminologist James Alan Fox, shows that July 4 and July 5 rank as the most violent days of the year, followed only by Jan. 1.
Trump won big spending promises from NATO last year. This week in Turkey, heâll try to enforce them (AP) President Donald Trump got what he wanted from NATO at last yearâs summit: an alliance whose members had largely acceded to his demands to step up their defense spending. This week when he meets leaders in Turkey, his mission is to enforce that pledge. The speed with which most NATO countries have tried to heed Trumpâs call to spend 5% of their annual gross domestic product on defense over the next decade underscores how the U.S. president has reshaped the alliance and bent it to his willâeven as he continues to spar with its members over the Iran war, his flirtation with annexing Greenland, and various personal tiffs. Trump leaves Monday evening for the summit, and for days leading up to the trip has been airing grievances about how much the U.S. spends on defense compared with other countries.
Trump administrationâs $46 billion âsmart wallâ races ahead on the US-Mexico border (AP) For decades, all that separated the U.S. from Mexico was barbed wire. Now, after a massive infusion of cash from Congress, President Donald Trumpâs administration is swiftly building what it has dubbed a âsmart wall,â a combination of 30-foot-tall (9-meter-tall) steel fencing and an array of sophisticated technology like sensors, cameras and towers allowing Border Patrol to surveil the territory. The wall is under heavy scrutiny for the billions of dollars being dedicated to it when border crossings are at their lowest in decades.
Islandwide blackout hits Cuba as its fuel reserve dwindles and aging grid crumbles (AP) An islandwide blackout hit Cuba on Monday as the countryâs fuel reserves dwindle and its electric grid continues to crumble. The blackout in the country of nearly 10 million people was reported by the state-run Electric Union, which said on X that the cause is under investigation. Fuel has been running out across Cuba since January, when U.S. President Donald Trump threatened tariffs on any country that sells or provides oil to the island, deepening the islandâs ongoing economic and financial crisis. Public transportation has largely been halted, and officials have canceled tens of thousands of surgeries.
Death toll from Venezuelan earthquakes rises to 3,342, more than 40,000 still missing (Drop Site News) Venezuelaâs official death toll from the June 24 twin earthquakes has risen to 3,342, National Assembly President Jorge RodrĂguez announced on Saturday. The UN estimates between 41,000 and 50,000 people remain unaccounted for, and Venezuelan authorities say more than 16,740 have been injured, and another 16,000 have been displaced from their homes.
With poor ventilation and children packed in, UKâs outdated schoolhouses swelter in the heat (AP) Like hundreds of other schools across the U.K., the Welsh school where Mark Morris teaches was forced to close its gates during Europeâs latest record-smashing heat wave. With no air conditioning or fans, and intense sunlight coming in from windows that donât open very farâsome donât even open at allâMorris said it would have been impossible to conduct his design and technology classes when the mercury hit a record 35.9 degrees Celsius (96.6 Fahrenheit) in Wales. âEven in a normal summer, the heat on those south-facing windows becomes unbearable,â said Morris, who teaches high school children things like woodworking and food preparation. âIf thereâs anything that you need to turn the oven on, you can forget about it. Thereâs no way anybody could carry on.â More than 1,000 U.K. schools closed for days or sent children home early in late June, when temperature records were toppled across Europe, disrupting learning and impacting the wider economy as working parents scrambled to find childcare.
Wildfires rage in Portugal, Greece and Spain while Greek authorities warn of toxic smoke (AP) Hundreds of firefighters battled wildfires in Portugal, Greece and Spain on Sunday, with Spain and Italy sending reinforcements to Portugal to help with a massive blaze burning for more than three days. Authorities urged residents in parts of Thessaloniki, Greeceâs second largest city, to remain indoors and shut their windows and doors due to toxic smoke from a burning recycling plant that was engulfed by a wildfire. Another major wildfire broke out Sunday afternoon west of the Greek capital, Athens.
Deadly Russian Strikes Hit Kyiv on Eve of NATO Summit (NYT) Explosions rocked the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv early on Monday, the eve of a NATO summit, as Russia mounted its second major attack on the city in days. President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine, who is expected to attend the NATO summit in Turkey, had warned that Russia was preparing âa new massive strikeâ against the capital. Loud blasts shook the city hours later. The regional military administration said ballistic missiles were flying, and Mayor Vitali Klitschko urged residents to stay in shelters. Tymur Tkachenko, the head of Kyivâs military administration, said that at least seven people had been killed. At least two dozen others were wounded.
Ukrainian midrange drones reshape the battlefield by targeting Russian supply lines (AP) Through the grainy gray-and-white haze of thermal images streamed from a drone, Ukrainian pilots watch the roads that keep Russian forces supplied, hunting for targets with a fleet of midrange drones that is reshaping the battlefield. In a basement command post in Ukraineâs Kharkiv region, hundreds of kilometers from the drone over Russian-held territory, pilots wait for movement. When a vehicle appears, they will nudge the controller, sending the aircraft diving toward its target to disrupt Russian supplies deep behind the front. âOur mission is to cut logistics,â said Kat, commander of Ukraineâs K-2 brigade, which fires midrange drones. âCut off their supply lines, and the infantry on the front line have no food, no ammunition, no night vision, no batteries. Nothing. Thatâs how weâre wearing them down in every sense.â
Philippine Senate opens the politically volatile impeachment trial of Vice President Sara Duterte (AP) The Philippine Senate, acting as an impeachment court, opened the trial of Vice President Sara Duterte on Monday in a politically volatile event that will unfold with the backdrop of her bitter political feud with President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. More than 6,000 police officers, including anti-riot squads, were deployed to secure the Senate.
China Test Fires Long-Range Ballistic Missile in the Pacific, Angering Neighbors (NYT) China test fired a long-range ballistic missile with a dummy warhead in the Pacific Ocean on Monday, the first such launch in almost two years, which set off alarm from countries in the region that criticized the move as âdestabilizing.â The missile was launched from a Chinese nuclear-powered submarine and sent a âmock warheadâ into the Pacific Ocean, according to a report from Xinhua, Chinaâs official news agency. The launch came as the leaders of Australia and Fiji announced a mutual defense treaty and a regional security alliance, the latest in a string of agreements Canberra has been striking with Pacific Island nations widely viewed as efforts to push back against Chinaâs encroachment in the region.
At Site Where Iranâs Slain Leader Lies, Some See a Symbol of His Failures (NYT) The masses of mourners who came to bid a final farewell to Iranâs former supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, this weekend in Tehran did so at a mosque and prayer complex with unfinished minarets, cracked and missing tiles, and a crumbling parking lot. Nearly 40 years after planning and construction for the complex, the Grand Mosalla, began in earnest, it is still incomplete, and has even become shabby, with parts of it in obvious need of repair. The status of the site is in stark contrast with how Iranâs government was hoping to present itself during Ayatollah Khameneiâs weeklong funeral servicesâas a strong, capable state that has endured through the U.S.-Israeli war. Instead, the saga of the Mosalla, a sprawling mega-project in the works for almost as long as the Islamic Republic of Iran has existed, symbolizes, to the slain supreme leaderâs critics, the unfulfilled promises of the state he ruled.
Life of imprisoned Palestinian physician is in danger, report says (Drop Site News) Dr. Hussam Abu Safiyaâs life is in immediate danger, Physicians for Human Rights Israel and his lawyer warned Saturday, after a prison visit. The director of Kamal Adwan Hospital had fresh, severe injuries to his head, eyes, ears, and neck, they said, leaving him so disfigured his own attorney initially struggled to recognize him. Attorney Nasser Odeh, who saw Abu Safiya Thursday at the underground Rakefet interrogation facility in Nitzan Prison, said he arrived shackled hand and foot, escorted by masked guards, struggling to breathe and speak, unable to sit upright, and repeatedly on the verge of losing consciousness. Abu Safiya told him that after his Supreme Court appeal was heard June 10, four or five guards entered his solitary cell at Ganot Prison and beat him with a hammer and batons, and that since his June 24 transfer to Rakefet he has been beaten daily, losing consciousness several times and receiving no medical treatment. âThis is the last time you will see me,â he told his lawyer. âThey brought me here to kill me. I donât see myself surviving. This is the end.â He has been held without charge since December 27, 2024.
More than 300 children killed or injured in Sudan war in 6 months, UNICEF says (AP) More than 300 children have been killed or injured in the last six months in the war in Sudan, mostly from drone strikes, the U.N. childrenâs agency said Monday. Sudan has been mired in a war between the Sudanese military and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces since April 2023. The war is now concentrated in the Kordofan, Darfur and Blue Niles states, with drone warfare causing 60% of casualties, according to UNICEF. The conflict has killed at least 59,000 people, displaced some 13 million and pushed many parts of Sudan into famine. More than 30 million people are in need of humanitarian assistance.










