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Israel and Hezbollah step up their attacks, a stunning election result in Romania, and global talks ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌ 
 
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November 25, 2024
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The World Today

  1. Israel, Hezbollah ramp up
  2. Romania’s stunning result
  3. Plastics talks open
  4. Trump’s slow transition
  5. Uruguay’s calm transition
  6. A ‘Saudi first’ foreign policy
  7. Israeli rabbi dead in UAE
  8. Security risks in Africa
  9. Stability risks in China
  10. F1 eyes US growth

The London Review of Substacks and a long-unseen Caravaggio is on display.

1

Israel, Hezbollah step up attacks

A photo showing the aftermath of a strike in Beirut
Haider Kadhim/Reuters

Israel and the Lebanese group Hezbollah ramped up attacks on each other as ceasefire talks over the war in Lebanon appeared to languish. Israel bombed Beirut’s suburbs and Hezbollah launched its heaviest rocket attack on the country in months, but while Israeli media reported Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government had “agreed in principle” to a US-brokered ceasefire, Washington has warned that if a deal is not reached soon, further mediation efforts will have to wait for US President-elect Donald Trump to take office. The war has had a calamitous effect on Lebanon: The EU’s foreign policy chief warned over the weekend that the country was “on the brink of collapse.”

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2

Shocking Romania election

A photo showing Calin Georgescu.
Inquam Photos/Octav Ganea via Reuters

A pro-Russia candidate with no party backing and who campaigned largely over TikTok won the first round of Romania’s presidential election, stunning political observers. Calin Georgescu’s surprise victory means the pre-election favorite, the pro-West prime minister, will likely not make it to an election runoff, the BBC said. Though Romania’s presidency is largely titular, the office holds some sway over foreign policy, and Georgescu’s anti-NATO views have major implications for Europe: His pledges to end support for Ukraine, with which Romania shares a 400-mile (650-kilometer) border, represent a growing — albeit still minority — opinion in the continent’s politics in which once unified support for Kyiv is being eroded.

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3

Plastic talks downbeat

A bar chart showing share of global plastics emitted to the world’s oceans

Global talks aimed at ending plastic pollution opened in South Korea, though delegates questioned whether a deal would be agreed. The talks came on the heels of the COP29 summit in which world leaders agreed to raise at least $300 billion per year by 2035 to help developing nations adapt to climate change, a figure lambasted by poorer countries as insufficient. The latest negotiations have their own disagreements, AFP reported, centering around questions of whether to cap plastic production, if chemicals tied to their output should be banned, and how to pay for any eventual deal. Whereas many African, Asian, and European nations want an ambitious agreement, they are reportedly opposed by oil producers whose output leads to plastic creation.

For more on the energy transition, subscribe to Semafor’s Net Zero newsletter. →

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4

Trump’s transition hurdle

Scott Bessent, Donald Trump’s pick for Treasury Secretary.
Scott Bessent, Donald Trump’s pick for Treasury Secretary. Jonathan Drake/Reuters.

US President-elect Donald Trump’s failure so far to sign ethics and transparency agreements is reportedly hampering his transition. The delay in signing the documents means Trump and his nominees cannot gain access to the federal bureaucracy to help prepare for office, sparking bipartisan alarm, Politico reported: Analysts and officials told the outlet the foot-dragging could have national-security implications, noting that the 9/11 Commission said in 2004 that the legal battle over the 2000 election was a factor in President George W. Bush’s team being caught off-guard by the Sep. 11 attacks. Trump’s decision so far to not sign the documents means, however, he can “raise unlimited amounts of money from unknown donors,” The New York Times noted.

For more on the Trump transition, subscribe to Semafor’s daily US politics newsletter. →

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5

Uruguay’s center-left wins

A photo of Yamandú Orsi during his victory speech.
Mariana Greif/Reuters

Uruguay’s center-left opposition candidate Yamandú Orsi won the country’s presidential election. The ruling party vowed to work with Orsi to ease his transition to power. Uruguay’s “relatively tension-free” election contrasts with heated recent ones in Argentina, Brazil, and Mexico that ramped up polarization among voters, Reuters reported. However the result in Montevideo does follow a regional trend of victories for anti-incumbency candidates, as well as the region’s recent leftward turn. “The country of freedom, equality and also fraternity triumphs once again… Let’s continue on that path,” Orsi said after his victory.

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6

Riyadh’s ‘Saudi first’ outlook

A photo showing Saudi crown prince Mohammed bin Salman.
Saudi Press Agency/Handout via Reuters

Saudi Arabia is increasingly exercising a foreign policy that is leaving it out of step with Washington, analysts said. Talks with Iran, rapprochement with Qatar, and a growing willingness to wield its economic clout all point to a “Saudi first” foreign policy, a chronicler of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman wrote for Bloomberg. Riyadh’s willingness to hold discussions with Iran and Israel also means it can play a “new and useful role in moderating Middle East tensions,” two experts wrote for Foreign Affairs. Still, according to the president of the Council on Foreign Relations, Saudi officials are focused inward, “determined to prevent the distractions of their dangerous neighborhood from getting in the way” of economic development.

For more on the Gulf, subscribe to Semafor’s thrice-weekly newsletter on the region. →

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7

Rabbi death ups Israel-UAE tensions

A photo of rabbi Zvi Kogan
@dudikepler via Reuters

Emirati authorities arrested three people over an Israeli rabbi’s death, an incident that threatened gradually improving relations between the Gulf and Israel. Zvi Kogan — who ran a kosher grocery store in Dubai — was confirmed dead on Sunday in what Israel labeled an “antisemitic act of terror.” The UAE and Israel have seen ties deepen since establishing full diplomatic relations in 2020, but Israel’s response to the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks has had an impact: Though the two countries have maintained ties, the UAE has upped its calls for a Palestinian state while a long-discussed deal for Israel and regional behemoth Saudi Arabia has stalled.

For more from the Gulf, subscribe to Semafor’s thrice-weekly newsletter. →

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8

Armed conflict growing in Africa

A line chart showing deaths from conflict in Africa

Around 10% of Africa’s territory is enduring armed conflict, with fighting having spread and intensified in the past three years, new research showed. Although the civil war in Sudan — which has displaced over 14 million people — stands as the continent’s worst conflict, security has also deteriorated in swaths of West Africa, where coup leaders have struggled to rein in Islamist insurgencies after seizing power. Violence has in turn worsened poverty, notably in Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country. Experts forecast the situation will worsen. “All indicators point towards a further intensification of violence in 2025,” a risk consultant told Bloomberg.

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9

China stability worries grow

A line chart showing flagging domestic sales growth in China

Chinese authorities are voicing growing public concern about social instability driven by slowing economic growth, following a spate of violent attacks. The worst of the incidents involved a man ramming his car into a crowd near a stadium two weeks ago, killing 35 people, but mass stabbings have also been reported. The China watcher Bill Bishop noted in his Sinocism newsletter that in recent days, a Politburo member led talks seeking to “further safeguard social stability,” while the ministry of justice ran its own meeting on the subject. Local governments across China also stepped up police patrols and other public security measures in response to the attacks, Reuters said.

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10

Verstappen wins fourth F1 title

Max Verstappen celebrates
Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters

Max Verstappen clinched his fourth Formula 1 world championship in yesterday’s Las Vegas Grand Prix, cementing him as one of the sport’s greatest ever drivers. Unlike in his previous victories, Verstappen has not had the dominant car for much of the season, underscoring his prowess — and aggressiveness — behind the wheel. The championship makes him one of just six drivers with four or more titles. Las Vegas’ setting as the title-decider also underscores F1’s bid to grow its audience in the US. The mostly Europe-based competition now hosts three races in the country, up from just one in 2021.

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Flagging
  • Georgia’s new Parliament meets for its first session despite an opposition boycott over the disputed election result.
  • The annual Mediterranean Dialogues Conference begins in Rome.
  • The International Emmy Awards are held in New York.
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LRS
London Review of Substacks

Publish and be bombed

It’s 40 years since the release of The Hunt for Red October. Tom Clancy’s novel about a rogue Soviet captain of a high-tech submarine attempting to defect to the US was one of the first “techno-thrillers,” fiction involving detailed descriptions of military systems and tactics: Dale Brown and Stephen Coonts were among those who followed suit. But military fiction has a long history and has often shaped military fact, writes the former Australian general Mick Ryan in Engelsberg Ideas.

Fiction is “a speculative tool for contemplating the future of conflict,” examining not just technological changes but geopolitical ones: Clancy’s Red Storm Rising, for instance, imagines a conventional clash between NATO and the Warsaw Pact, as does the British General John Hackett’s 1980 novel The Third World War: August 1985. More recent works draw pictures of potential clashes with China and Russia — Ryan’s own White Sun War depicts a Chinese invasion of Taiwan. The Hunt for Red October, though, “set a new standard [for authors] who hope to use fiction to plan for the future of war.”

Superb owl

Duolingo is the most downloaded language-learning app in the world. The little green owl who threatens you, in a cheerful sort of way, for failing to do your Mandarin lessons each day is famous. But does it actually help you speak new languages? Imogen West-Knights used it with four: The last was Swedish. She’d moved to Sweden and wanted to gain some control over her new life, she writes in The Dial: “If I could understand what was going on at the post office, that was at least one thing I wouldn’t have to worry about.” But despite all the effort, when she arrived, “I had a rude awakening. I could not speak Swedish.”

Lots of people find similar things. Duolingo is, West-Knights says, good for a beginner’s grasp of a language, for listening and reading, grammar and vocab. But “the speaking element is trash,” one user told her, and that was a common experience: “Practically everyone I spoke to told me that speaking was far and away their weakest suit.” The app is introducing artificial intelligence-based conversation bots, but they don’t work brilliantly yet. Still, users remain obsessed: One “forced herself to complete her daily lesson while in labor with her son,” to maintain her 1,738-day streak.

Reading between the lines

A meme is going around about US literacy: That in 1979, fewer than 1% of US adults were illiterate, and that now it is upwards of 16%. It is, says the economist Maxwell Tabarrok, false: The two numbers measure different things. The 1979 figure was people who literally could not write their name; the modern figure, people who passed a comprehension test. In reality, the long-term trend on literacy rates is flat.

But you don’t have to make stuff up if you want to criticize US education policy, Tabarrok writes in Maximum Progress. Inflation-adjusted spending per pupil has tripled since 1970, with no improvement in reading scores. The average number of years people spend in school has gone up by three years, but performance is stagnant. One explanation could be that the extra schooling is not about building human capital, but “a socially inefficient zero-sum competition,” an arms race of signaling that it would be best if we abandoned.

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Caravaggio — The Portrait Unveiled. The exhibition at Rome’s Barberini Palace showcases what is widely believed to be one of the Italian artist’s paintings of a future pope, which had been hidden from public view for decades. “The portrait may not boast the bold flair of Caravaggio’s broader oeuvre,” Artnet reported, “but the mastery of light is certainly evident.” Caravaggio — The Portrait Unveiled is open to the public until Feb. 23, 2025.

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