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China Wants Countries to Unite Against Trump, but Is Met With Wariness

Xi Jinping, China’s top leader, during his visit to Vietnam on Monday. In Hanoi, he urged Vietnam to join China in opposing “unilateral bullying.”

South Korea Shipbuilding Strength Could Help in Tariff Talks With US

A shipyard of Hyundai Heavy Industries in Ulsan, South Korea, in 2013.

Europe Seeks a Direct Line to Trump, Skeptical That Aides Speak for Him

In President Trump’s White House, he is the ultimate decision maker, and is far from a predictable one.

A U.S.-China Trade War With Students and Tourists as Potential Pawns

Tourists in central Shanghai taking photos of a historic building.

Keith Siegel, a Former Hostage, Recounts Captivity in Gaza

Iran Says Despite Shifting U.S. Messages, It Plans to Keep Participating in Nuclear Talks

Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi has been Iran’s envoy in the talks with the United States. He and President Trump’s special envoy, Steve Witkoff, planned to hold a second round of talks on Saturday.

UK Supreme Court Says Trans Women Are Not Legally Women Under Equality Act

Trump Waved Off Israeli Strike After Divisions Emerged in His Administration

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel during a meeting with President Trump this month.

Its Journalism Challenged Autocrats. Trump Wants to Silence It.

Andrei Kuznechyk, a journalist with the Belarus service of Radio Free Europe, this month. He was released in February after three years in a Belarus prison.

Italy’s Meloni Heads to Washington to Meet Trump. Will It Pay Off for Europe?

Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni of Italy has built a reputation as a collaborative player on the European stage.

Israel Threatens Further Escalation in Gaza War

Inspecting the site of a strike in Jabaliya in northern Gaza on Wednesday.

How Brazil’s Rare Earths Mine Illustrates China’s Grip Over Minerals

A photograph provided by the company shows the facilities of Serra Verde, a rare earths mine in Minaçu, Brazil, that is under contract to sell nearly all its product to China.

R.S.F. in Sudan Declare Parallel Government Amid Assault on Zamzam Camp

People who fled the Zamzam camp resting in a makeshift encampment in Tawila in western Darfur on Sunday.

Bukele Has Power to Return Deportee in El Salvador to U.S., Experts Say

During a meeting with President Trump at the White House on Monday, President Nayib Bukele of El Salvador said he would not return a Maryland man who had been deported.

Thursday Briefing: A Judge’s Pushback Against Trump

Judge James Boasberg.

Astronomers Detect a Signature of Life on a Distant Planet

Trump Administration Aims to Redefine ‘Harm’ for Endangered Species

A loggerhead sea turtle hatchling on Ossawbaw Island, Ga.

Climate Change Is Stressing the World’s Blood Supplies

A home in Los Angeles burning on Jan. 9. Thousands of blood donations were canceled during the fires.

WHO Member Countries Agree to Pandemic Treaty

Anne-Claire Amprou, the French ambassador for global health, and Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the director general of the World Health Organization, at negotiations for the new pandemic treaty in Geneva on Wednesday.

Thursday Briefing: A Judge’s Pushback Against Trump

Judge James Boasberg.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford Orders Review of Therme’s Toronto Waterfront Lease

West Island, just off the coast of Toronto, has been cleared of trees for development by a European spa company.

Russia Arrests Former Governor of Kursk Region

This photo released by the Russian government showed Aleksei B. Smirnov in Kursk in 2024.

U.S. Pastor Josh Sullivan, Kidnapped in South Africa, Is Rescued After Police Shootout

A U.S. pastor, Josh Sullivan, was kidnapped while giving a sermon at a church in Motherwell.

Peru’s Former First Lady Flees as She and Ex-President Are Sentenced to Prison

Peru’s former first lady, Nadine Heredia, in Lima, Peru, in 2018. Ms. Heredia fled to the Brazilian Embassy in Lima on Tuesday, seeking asylum as she and her husband were sentenced to 15 years in prison.

Trump Aides Close State Dept. Office on Foreign Disinformation

Secretary of State Marco Rubio at the White House on Monday. Diplomats are bracing for a series of deep cuts at the State Department.

Latvia Exits Land Mine Convention Amid Fears of Russian Aggression

The border of Latvia with Russia in 2024. A vote in Parliament made Latvia the first country in the region to act on a decision taken last month by three Baltic States and Poland to quit the 1997 Ottawa Treaty.

2 Judges Order Federal Agencies to Unfreeze Climate Money

U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan in January.

Palliative Care Doctor Is Charged With Serial Murder of 15 Patients in Germany

Moabit Prison in Berlin, where the palliative care doctor is being held.

Pope Francis Thanks Doctors and Nurses for His Recovery

A photograph released by the Vatican shows Pope Francis during an audience on Wednesday with personnel from Policlinico A. Gemelli, where he was recently hospitalized, and with Vatican medical staff.

Europeans Show Less Stock Market Panic as Tariffs Cause Turmoil

The London Stock Exchange Group office in Canary Wharf, London.

Russia Jails 4 Journalists for Working With Navalny’s Organization

From left, Sergei Karelin, Konstantin Gabov, Antonina Favorskaya, and Artyom Kriger in court in Moscow on Tuesday. The journalists had pleaded not guilty to charges of extremism.

Canada Reschedules Political Debate That Conflicted With a Hockey Game

The Canadiens, in red, lost to the Chicago Blackhawks in Montreal on Monday, hurting their playoff hopes.

The Grand Egyptian Museum Is Finally Open. (Well, Mostly.)

Visitors taking in the ancient pyramids of Giza, framed through a set of windows at the Grand Egyptian Museum.

European Spa Company Therme Misrepresented Itself in an Effort to Expand Into Canada

The West Island of Ontario Place in Toronto.

Mexico’s Reliance on U.S. Natural Gas Could Be Its Achilles’ Heel

Children playing soccer during a power outage in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, in 2023. Mexico relies heavily on natural gas imported from the United States to produce electricity.

In Toronto, the Fight to Preserve Ontario Place Turns Into a Farewell

The West Island of Ontario Place in Toronto, Canada, is being developed by a European spa company.

Wednesday Briefing: A Trump-Harvard Showdown

Harvard University is 140 years older than the U.S.

Trump Joins Japan Trade Talks, Says ‘Big Progress’ Made

Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba of Japan received a book from Mr. Trump during a visit to the White House in February. Mr. Ishiba has tried to build a relationship with the U.S. president akin to that developed by Shinzo Abe, the former prime minister.

Wednesday Briefing: A Trump-Harvard Showdown

Harvard University is 140 years older than the U.S.

19 Big Cats Rescued in Spain as Police Raid Animal Smuggling Ring

The Spanish authorities released this image of a Caracal, right, confiscated with 18 other exotic felines during a police operation on Majorca.

Sperm Donors Fathered More Than 25 Children Each, Netherlands Data Reveals

The industry has come under increased scrutiny after two scandals in the Netherlands involving sperm donors who purposely fathered hundreds of children. Jonathan Jacob Meijer, at The Hague in January, fathered more than 500 children around the world.

Colossal Squid Caught on Video During First Ever Sighting

How Trump Might Unwittingly Cut Emissions From Online Shopping

Shein packages ready to be shipped from a factory in Guangzhou, China, in February.

Autopsies of Slain Gaza Medics Show Some Were Shot in the Head

Members of the Palestine Red Crescent and other emergency services carrying the bodies of fellow rescuers killed by Israeli forces in March.

The ‘Great Moose Migration’ Livestream Captivates Sweden

American Airlines Will Offer Free Wi-Fi on Most Flights Next Year

American Airlines said it will partner with AT&T to offer internet access at no cost. Other major airlines already offer free Wi-Fi on their flights.

Jordan Says It Foiled a Plot Against the Kingdom

King Abdullah II of Jordan. In 2021, he faced an attempted palace coup.

Palm Sunday Attack Leaves Sumy Residents Doubtful of a Ukraine-Russia Cease-Fire

France Says It Will Expel 12 Algerian Officials

Jean-Noël Barrot, France’s foreign minister, said he was “ready to act” in response to the expulsions.

Santa Lives in Rovaniemi, Finland. Some of His Neighbors Are Not Thrilled.

Attackers Target Prisons in France, Burning Vehicles and Firing Shots

The Toulon-La Farlède prison near Toulon, France, which was targeted by attackers overnight Monday to Tuesday.

Sandstorm Turns Iraq’s Skies Orange and Sends Thousands to Hospitals

Head of Kuwait Specialty Field Hospital in Gaza Says Israeli Strike Killed a Guard

Palestinians inspect the damage after Israel’s attack on the Ahli Arab Hospital in Gaza City on Sunday.

Van Gogh’s Last Painting Poses a Problem for an Idyllic French Village

Auvers-sur-Oise, long famous as an artist’s paradise, is embroiled in a dispute over “Tree Roots,” lately determined to be the final work of Vincent Van Gogh.

Inside Trump’s Rushed Effort to Deport 238 Migrants

Nathali Sánchez, the wife of Arturo Suárez, a migrant sent to prison in El Salvador, with her daughter in Santiago, Chile.

In Argentina, a Boom in Antarctic Cruises Is Straining the ‘End of the World’

About 90 percent of Antarctic cruises depart from Ushuaia, Argentina. Many of those passengers will spend a night or two in town, where they may take day trips to see penguins in places like nearby Martillo Island.

Tuesday Briefing: El Salvador Will Not Return Deportee

President Trump greeted President Nayib Bukele of El Salvador.

Airport Warned Repeatedly on Bird Strikes Before Fatal Jeju Air Plane Crash

A flock of birds flying near the airport at the scene of the Jeju Air plane crash in Muan International Airport in Muan, South Korea, in December.

A Crisis at a British Steel Mill Has Cast a Shadow Over U.K.-China Relations

A view of the blast furnaces in Scunthorpe, Lincolnshire, on Monday. They are the last working blast furnaces in Britain, producing crude steel which is vital for major construction projects.

Trump’s Dilemma: A Trade War That Threatens Every Other Negotiation With China

President Trump may be entering any eventual negotiations alone because he has alienated the allies who in recent years had come to a common approach to countering Chinese power.

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