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Tuesday Briefing: New options for Ukraine

Plus, when pregnancy still shocks.
Morning Briefing: Europe Edition

November 19, 2024

Good morning. We're covering Ukraine's new military powers and the looting of aid trucks in Gaza.

Plus: When pregnancy still shocks.

Troops seen atop a tank.
Ukrainian soldiers heading toward the Kursk region of Russia. David Guttenfelder for The New York Times

Ukraine's shrinking window to strike inside Russia

For at least the next two months, Ukraine will be able to try long-range strikes inside Russia using missiles provided by the U.S.

President Biden this week relented after months of pleas from Kyiv saying that it needed to fire deeper inside Russia to more effectively degrade Moscow's forces. Ukrainian politicians have suggested that the first launches were imminent.

But hanging over that newfound freedom is the impending ascent of Trump to the White House in January. It is unclear how much of the Biden administration's approach to Ukraine will survive once Donald Trump takes office. The president-elect has said he wants to bring about a quick resolution to the war — without saying how.

American officials said the weapon, known as the Army Tactical Missile System, was likely to be deployed, at least initially, against Russian and North Korean troops in the Kursk region of western Russia. While Biden's decision may help Ukrainian troops under fire in the short term, it is unlikely to change the trajectory of the war, experts said.

Response: In Moscow, the Kremlin said the Biden administration's decision was a major step toward a direct confrontation between Russia and NATO.

A parting message: At the start of the G20 summit in Brazil yesterday, Biden used one of his final moments on the global stage to encourage more world leaders to assist Ukraine.

Several people marching in a protest as they hold a banner. One person holds up a sign that says,
A protest over immigration in New York. Victor J. Blue for The New York Times

Trump would use 'military assets' for deportations

President-elect Donald Trump confirmed today that he intended to declare a national emergency and use the U.S. military to assist in deporting millions of undocumented immigrants. He responded "TRUE!!!" to a post by a conservative activist summarizing the strategy.

Stephen Miller, Trump's top immigration policy adviser, described similar plans during the campaign. He said the military would be used to build "vast holding facilities" for migrants as their cases progressed, and suggested that Trump might invoke a public health emergency power to curtail the hearing of asylum claims. The president-elect's team also shared plans to stop issuing passports to the newborn children of undocumented immigrants in a bid to end birthright citizenship.

Trump's team said it had aimed to significantly increase the number of deportations without new legislation from Congress. It anticipates legal challenges, but presidents have broad power to declare national emergencies.

Economy: Economists are trying to guess how Trump policies could affect growth and inflation. Here are four crucial wild cards.

For more: Read about Trump's appointments and transition plans.

In other politics news:

A row of trucks with pallets of supplies.
Aid trucks waiting last week to cross into the Gaza Strip. Amir Cohen/Reuters

Nearly 100 aid trucks were looted in Gaza

A large convoy of trucks carrying aid was "violently looted" in the Gaza Strip over the weekend, UNRWA, the U.N. agency that helps Palestinians, said. Drivers were forced at gunpoint to unload supplies, and nearly 100 of the 109 trucks in the convoy were lost in one of the worst such incidents of the war, UNRWA said.

The agency said that the episode had highlighted the challenges of bringing aid into southern and central Gaza. Earlier this month, a panel backed by the U.N. said that all of Gaza faced a possible of famine from now until April, with the north at particular risk.

In Beirut: Israeli strikes in Lebanon's capital, the first in weeks, forced residents to come to grips with another escalation of fighting between Israel and Hezbollah.

In Gaza: Most people in the enclave are struggling to survive Israel's assault on Hamas. Yet a few pockets of ordinary life have bloomed in defiance of the war.

MORE TOP NEWS

Two men and three women, standing together in a circle, one looking grim.
Manon Cruz/Reuters

SPORTS NEWS

MORNING READ

Rory Smith huddles with a group of young soccer players on the field.
Mary Turner for The New York Times

Rory Smith, our global sports correspondent, has spent decades reporting on soccer. Yet he never particularly yearned to coach the sport — until he was asked to help out with his son's under-7 soccer team.

The three months he spent on the field came with revelations. Here's what he learned.

Lives lived: Bela Karolyi, a charismatic taskmaster of a gymnastics coach who developed generations of leading athletes, but whose reputation was tainted by accusations of an abusive style, has died at 82.

CONVERSATION STARTERS

ARTS AND IDEAS

On a Times Square billboard, a pregnant woman in underwear presents an exposed belly and a pair of oatmeal cookies centered with drops of cherry jam, with the words
PEDEN+MUNK/Bobbie

A provocative, erotic pregnancy shoot

Molly Baz, an influential cook and food writer, in May starred in an ad campaign for the breastfeeding startup Swehl, serving up a new recipe for lactation cookies.

In one shot, displayed on a 45-foot digital billboard in Times Square, she wore underwear and a rhinestone bikini, presenting an exposed pregnant belly and holding a pair of oatmeal cookies over her chest. The ad copy said: "Just Add Milk." Then the billboard vanished.

"I wonder if the most provocative thing about Baz's billboard was not her pregnancy, or her outfit, but her hands," Amanda Hess, a critic for The Times, writes, adding: "Baz isn't holding her breasts or her baby; she's holding her cookies. She is selling her pregnancy, sure, but she's also selling a recipe. She has her hands full with her career."

We hope you've enjoyed this newsletter, which is made possible through subscriber support. Subscribe to The New York Times.

RECOMMENDATIONS

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Linda Xiao for The New York Times

Bake: Sweet pears and tart cranberries are a perfect pairing in this easy dessert.

Read: Haruki Murakami's "The City and Its Uncertain Walls" features all the author's signature elements.

Watch: "Vaazhai" is one of the best international films to stream right now.

Wear: Our critic has some advice for styling your socks.

Compete: Take this week's Flashback history quiz.

Play the Spelling Bee. And here are today's Mini Crossword and Wordle. You can find all our puzzles here.

That's it for today's briefing. See you tomorrow. — Natasha

Reach Natasha and the team at briefing@nytimes.com.

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