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On July 8, Transatlantic Security Initiative senior fellow Elisabeth Braw published an article in Foreign Policy discussing how European governments need to respond to Russia arming its shadow fleet. The post Braw in Foreign Policy on European response to Russia’s shadow fleet appeared first on Atla
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Ukrainian authorities say intelligence officer confessed to paying and killing Anastasia Berezovska
Japan’s weak yen is not a market anomaly. Structural capital outflows, shifting investment patterns, and dollar strength are keeping pressure on the currency—and creating potential new tensions with Washington. The post A weak yen spells trouble for Japan—at home and abroad appeared first on Atlanti
Artificial intelligence is changing how biological threats can be created, detected, and countered. The post AI is the next major biodefense tech priority appeared first on Atlantic Council.
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In a memorable quip during her campaign for election earlier this year, Japan’s Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi promised that she would smash the button marked “growth.” Her strategy now pits that instinct against those who fear the country’s finances may be what gets smashed instead.
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US technology shares declined on Tuesday after earnings from Samsung Electronics Co. failed to satisfy investors, spurring worries over the durability of this year’s red-hot artificial intelligence trade.
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The strategy might play well with the far-right leader’s core voters, but the French as a whole don’t buy it
Japan’s weak yen is not a market anomaly. Structural capital outflows, shifting investment patterns, and dollar strength are keeping pressure on the currency—and creating potential new tensions with Washington. The post A weak yen spells trouble for Japan—at home and abroad appeared first on Atlanti
Artificial intelligence is changing how biological threats can be created, detected, and countered. The post AI is the next major biodefense tech priority appeared first on Atlantic Council.
automated-news
In a memorable quip during her campaign for election earlier this year, Japan’s Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi promised that she would smash the button marked “growth.” Her strategy now pits that instinct against those who fear the country’s finances may be what gets smashed instead.