Russia's elites are growing frustrated with Putin's efforts to wage war in Ukraine, per Meduza.
Sources told the outlet they're also concerned about the long-term impact of Western sanctions.
But Russian security officials appear to want Putin to intensify the war, a DC think tank said.
Russia's elites are growing tired of waiting for the war to end and are concerned about the long-term impact of Western sanctions on Russia's economy, according to a report by Meduza.
High-ranking sources told the independent Russian outlet that Russia's "elites" are disappointed that the war with Ukraine didn't end in 2024.
The sources included people close to and in the Russian presidential administration, two State Duma deputies, a senator, and three high-ranking officials in Russian regional governments.
One government source told the outlet that the overall emotions are "disappointment" and "fatigue."
"We were waiting for the war to end, for the fighting to end," they said. "We are tired of even waiting."
Two people close to the presidential administration said that the government doesn't have a clear postwar vision.
Meanwhile, another source said Russian elites, primarily high-ranking security officials, are growing irritated by the lack of manpower and material to wage the war, and believe Putin must launch a mobilization effort to further shift Russian society and economy to a war footing.
Since launching its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Russia has significantly grown its military and war economy. However, the war has come at a considerable cost.
Russian troop losses have risen for six straight months, the UK Ministry of Defence said this week, citing Ukrainian data. It said Russia's costliest day came on December 19, when 2,200 of its troops were killed or wounded.
Russia's economy has also come under strain due to persistent high inflation, slowing economic growth, and Western sanctions.
Even so, the Institute for the Study of War, a DC think tank, said Meduza's report, published Thursday, suggests that high-ranking Russian military and security officials believe Putin should escalate the war rather than seek a diplomatic solution.
In an update on Thursday, the ISW said that Russian security and military officials don't appear ready to abandon the war, despite mounting battlefield losses.
Instead, it said, they are seemingly advocating for Putin to intensify Russia's war effort by calling for additional partial reserve call-ups and a formal decision to transition to a wartime footing.
But, according to the ISW, Putin is against further mobilizing the Russian economy or a partial involuntary reserve call-up because these measures would be extremely unpopular and would worsen the country's labor shortages.
Hundreds of thousands of people are under evacuation orders or warnings.
Insured losses could top $20 billion, JPMorgan analysts estimated β the most-ever in California.
The Los Angeles area is battling a series of massive wildfires that continue to rip through its picturesque mountains and hillsides β creating a hellscape of burned-out neighborhoods and upended livelihoods that could ultimately be the most costly fire disaster in California history.
Authorities ordered over 150,000 residents to evacuate and warned another 166,000 to be ready to leave if the fires continue to spread, Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna said at a press conference on Friday morning. Over 57,000 structures are also at risk, he said.
A curfew has been placed in the Pacific Palisades area and Eaton Canyon starting at 6 p.m. on Friday evening until 6 a.m. on Saturday morning. "You cannot be in these affected areas," Luna said. "If you are, you are subject to arrest."
Erroneous emergency alerts telling residents to evacuate areas unaffected by the fires heightened panic in the region. Kevin McGowan, the director of the Los Angeles County Office of Emergency Management, apologized for the messages at Friday's conference.
"There is an extreme amount of frustration, anger, fear, with regards to the erroneous messages that have been being sent out through the wireless emergency alert system. I can't express enough how sorry I am for this experience," he said.
He reassured residents that resolving the issue is his "top priority" and that he has technical specialists working to identify the root cause. "I implore everyone to not disable the messages on your phone," he said.
JPMorgan analysts said the blazes tearing through the region could lead to over $20 billion in insured losses β and about $50 billion in total economic losses. That would make these conflagrations "significantly more severe" than the Camp Fires that struck the state in 2018 and racked up $10 billion in insured losses, the current record.
More than 35,000 acres have burned so far, with the LA County Medical Examiner reporting 10 deaths as of 9 p.m. local time on Thursday. More than 1,500 displaced people were being housed in shelters on Thursday night, authorities said.
Thick bands of smoke can be seen in several directions from the city's downtown core β with several fires burning throughout the 4,000 square-mile county, home to about 10 million people.
"Not since the 1990s, when Los Angeles was hit with the fires, the flood, the earthquake, and the riots, have I seen such disaster occur here in our city," Hochman said at a briefing, referring to the Northridge Earthquake and the disturbances in the wake of the Rodney King verdict.
The National Weather Service predicted that the "red flag warning" signaling high fire danger will persist for LA County and nearby Ventura County through Friday.
But there was some brightening on the horizon: Officials said weather conditions are beginning to turn favorably for firefighters.
Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna said at a Thursday briefing that twenty people had been arrested on suspicion of looting in areas affected by the fires.
Luna issued a stern warning to the public: Anyone who remains in areas under mandatory evacuation orders is guilty of a misdemeanor, and his officers will begin enforcing that. Beyond that, crimes like looting could reach the felony level, he said.
In an X post on Thursday night, California Gov. Gavin Newsom said that "taking advantage "of evacuated communities is "absolutely sick," and said that "looting will not be tolerated."
In a separate post on Thursday night, Newsom said that over 8,000 firefighting personnel, as well as over 600 California Guard members, 991 fire engines, and 40 helicopters were hard at work battling the wildfires.
Meanwhile, around 95,000 power customers remain in the dark, Janisse QuiΓ±ones, the CEO and chief engineer of the city's Department of Water and Power, said.
Starlink, Elon Musk's SpaceX subsidiary that provides satellite internet service, said on Thursday that people in the Los Angeles area can use the company's network to text loved ones, contact 911, and receive emergency alerts.
Here's a look at the latest happenings in the main fires spreading throughout the area:
Palisades Fire
The Palisades Fire in the Pacific Palisades area north of Santa Monica was the first fire to strike the region on Tuesday morning. It has spread to nearly 20,438 acres, Los Angeles City's Fire Chief Kristin Crowley said a Friday's press conference. 3,073 personnel have been assigned to addressing the fire.
Due to favorable weather conditions on Thursday night, firefighters managed to contain about 8% of the fire, Crowley said Friday. Evacuation orders still remain in place, she added.
The scale of the fire has made it one of the worst natural disasters in LA history, officials said Thursday.
Data from state agency CalFire early on Friday showed that the fire was 6% contained.
Los Angeles City's Fire Chief Kristin Crowley said in a Thursday briefing that the Palisades Fire had damaged or destroyed more than 5,300 structures.
Around 2,300 firefighters were tackling the blaze as of early Friday, LAFD spokesperson Capt. Adam VanGerpen told CNN.
Wind gusts in the area have calmed down since their Tuesday highs of nearly 100 mph, and are forecast to reduce to around 20 mph on Friday.
Crowley would not confirm reports that the fire started in a resident's garden, saying the origin is still under investigation.
On Thursday, a drone hit the wing of one of two Super Scooper planes fighting the wildfires, Los Angeles County Fire Chief Anthony Marrone said at Friday's press conference. He said the plane was under urgent repairs and set to be flying again by Monday. "If you fly a drone at one of these brush fires all aerial operations will be shut down," he said.
Eaton Fire
The second-largest fire in Los Angeles County is the Eaton Fire, which started on Tuesday evening in the Pasadena-Altadena area at the foothills of the Angeles National Forest.
The blaze has spread to over almost 14,000 acres, Los Angeles Marrone said. Only 3% of the fire has been contained and about 4,000 to 5,000 structures may be damaged or destroyed, though the damage reports are still pending.
Marrone said the fire had pushed toward Mount Wilson, where a number of communications towers are located. No buildings were damaged.
The Los Angeles County Fire Department has 1,527 firefighting personnel assigned to the incident. One firefighter suffered a significant injury after a fall on Thursday but is expected to make a full recovery.
Marrone said the cause of the fire remains "unknown."
Hurst Fire
The Hurst Fire, which began late on Tuesday night in the northern part of the San Fernando Valley, spread to 771 acres and is 37% contained as of early Friday, Crowley said at the press conference.
In an X post on Thursday afternoon, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass said the mandatory evacuation order for the Hurst Fire had been lifted.
Kenneth Fire
On Thursday, a small brush fire erupted at the Victory Trailhead near the border of Los Angeles and Ventura counties. Marrone said that fire has been stopped, with 35% containment. It burned about 1,000 acres, but no structures were reported damaged.
A mandatory evacuation order was issued for several neighborhoods near the fire.
LAPD said it had detained a possible arson suspect, but could not confirm any connection to the fire.
An evacuation notice intended for residents impacted by the Kenneth Fire was mistakenly sent out across LA County due to a "technical error," County Supervisor Janice Hahn said in an X post.
Sunset Fire and others
The Sunset Fire broke out in the Runyon Canyon area of the Hollywood Hills on Wednesday evening, quickly spreading to scorch over 40 acres and threaten major LA landmarks.
All evacuation orders related to the Sunset Fire were lifted as of 7:30 a.m. Thursday, she added.
A large structure fire consumed two large homes in the Studio City area but firefighters were able to stop its forward growth at just one acre and prevent another brushfire, Crowley said.
Yet another fire, the Lidia Fire, started Wednesday afternoon in Acton near the Antelope Valley, about 20 miles northeast of the San Fernando Valley. It spread to consume 394 acres but has been 75% contained, per CalFire.
One of the fires has been 100% contained. The Woodley Fire, which began Wednesday morning in the southern part of the San Fernando Valley, has been suppressed and there are no current threats, Crowley said.
Patrols were monitoring the area for any flare-ups, she added.
Events canceled and landmarks closed as smoke chokes LA
Major and minor events alike have been canceled or postponed across the LA area as the city battles the fires.
The 30th Annual Critics Choice Awards, set for Sunday night, were rescheduled for January 26. A National Hockey League game between the Los Angeles Kings and the Calgary Flames, scheduled for Wednesday night at Crypto.com arena, was postponed. The LA Lakers rescheduled Thursday night's game.
Music venues across the city were also canceling or postponing their shows, including The Troubadour, The Wiltern, The Echo, the Kia Forum, Walt Disney Concert Hall, and others.
Flights into and out of LAX, Hollywood Burbank Airport, Ontario International Airport, and Santa Ana's John Wayne Airport were also experiencing delays and cancellations on Thursday.
The fires are also shuttering tourist attractions in and around Los Angeles, which attracts nearly 50 million visitors a year.
The fires forced some Los Angeles-area landmarks to close, including the Hollywood sign, the Los Angeles Zoo, the Broad Museum, the Norton Simon Museum, the Getty Villa and Getty Center, Universal Studios Hollywood and Universal CityWalk, and the Griffith Observatory.
Airbnb told CNN that it would be allowing refunds for bookings in areas affected by the wildfires, following a viral social media post from a customer who said the company refused to offer her a refund.
California already struggled with an insurance crisis
Experts told Business Insider that prices are likely to continue rising for those who can still get insurance.
"I've seen numbers go up 200%, 300%, even 500% in a year," Nick Ramirez, the owner of a California insurance agency, told BI.
And as the fires' estimated damages already climb into the billions of dollars, some homeowners will have to rebuild without the help of insurance payouts.
"These fires will likely be the costliest in history, not the deadliest, and that is the only silver lining right now," Daniel Swain, a climate scientist with UCLA, told LAist.
This a developing story. Please check back for updates.
Satellite images show flames wreaking havoc on houses, businesses, and other structures.
At least 10 people have died, and the fires have destroyed about 10,000 structures.
Widespread fires have besieged the Los Angeles area for four days. At least 10 people have died and more than 150,000 have been ordered to evacuate their homes.
As of Friday afternoon, six separate fires were still burning in parts of the city and its surrounding areas, but firefighters were making progress during a reprieve from powerful winds.
Satellite images provided to Business Insider by Maxar Technologies and Nearmap show the trail of destruction the fires have left in Altadena, Pasadena, Malibu, and Pacific Palisades, some of the most heavily affected areas.
The Palisades and Eaton Fires
These two blazes spread for days with firefighters unable to stop their growth.
As of Friday at noon Pacific Time, the Palisades fire had consumed more than 20,400 acres and was 8% contained, and the Eaton Fire had burned more than 13,600 acres with 3% containment, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.
Together, they've destroyed about 10,000 structures, the agency estimates.
Entire neighborhoods burned to the ground
Charred, leveled communities like this are emerging in the paths of both fires.
A windstorm quickly spread the fires
Pacific Palisades, a neighborhood on the west side of Los Angeles County, was the first to be devastated. The fire there broke out on Tuesday morning.
The blaze spread so far, so quickly in part because of a windstorm that the National Weather Service called "life-threatening and destructive."
Gusts up to 100 mph carried burning embers far into residential areas, igniting spot fires that grew into an urban conflagration.
In the above image, you can see where some of those spot fires began far from the initial brush fire.
Some of the world's most expensive homes burned
The Palisades Fire alone has become the most destructive fire ever to hit Los Angeles County, CNN reported Wednesday, citing Cal Fire data. Fire experts suspect it could be the costliest in California history, maybe even in US history.
The Altadena neighborhood also burned
These satellite images show houses burned down in the Altadena neighborhood, one of the areas most affected by the Eaton Fire.
The neighborhood was virtually destroyed
Houses and buildings on East Altadena Drive are glowing orange with flame and shrouded in smoke in this image from Wednesday.
Flying over the area after the flames subsided, the ABC7 helicopter pilot Scott Reiff said, "it looks basically like it was carpet-bombed."
In Pasadena, idyllic streets turned to ash
When houses are built this close together, one burning building can easily ignite its neighbors. A house fire burns much hotter than a forest fire because of the materials that are burning, according to Louis Gritzo, the chief science officer at the commercial property insurance company FM.
Many homes didn't stand a chance. They were under siege from "the high heat release from one burning structure combined with a continual ember attack," Gritzo said.
The road to Malibu burned
The Pacific Coast Highway and Tuna Canyon Road, which connects Malibu and Topanga, were covered in smoke Wednesday as fires burned through.
Many of the homes along the PCH have been incinerated.
Malibu did, too
The true scale of devastation and loss of life may not become clear for many days.
Fire conditions may continue for days
A red flag warning for critical fire weather is set to continue in Los Angeles and Ventura counties through 6 p.m. Friday.
The National Weather Service expects about 18 hours of reprieve before another round of "gusty" winds late Saturday into Sunday, with a stronger wind event possible Monday night through Wednesday.
"We're not out of the woods yet," said Courtney Carpenter, a warning-coordination meteorologist at the National Weather Service.
Correction: January 9, 2025 β An earlier version of this story misspelled the name of a warning-coordination meteorologist at the National Weather Service. She's Courtney Carpenter, not Courtney Carpen.
Firestorms in Los Angeles have burned nearly 27,000 acres, destroying homes and killing five people.
One of the biggest blazes, the Palisades Fire, could be the costliest in US history.
The fires have spread so fast in part because of a windstorm and flood-drought whiplash.
All was well in Los Angeles at around 10 a.m. on Tuesday.
Less than 24 hours later, 2,925 acres of the Pacific Palisades were ablaze in what is being called the worst wildfire in Southern California since 2011. It has grown by orders of magnitude since.
Several more blazes have ignited in the area, with one, the Eaton Fire, engulfing another 10,600 acres.
Firefighters had not contained the fires as of early Thursday morning, the Los Angeles Fire Department said. On Wednesday, Gov. Gavin Newsom told CNN that five people were dead, and "likely more."
More than 1,000 structures have burned and the fires could get even worse.
The UCLA climate scientist Daniel Swain called it an "urban firestorm" as he assessed live images of the developing Eaton Fire on Tuesday morning.
Perhaps the best historical comparison is the 1991 Tunnel Fire, which raged through more than 1,500 acres of Oakland, but it was smaller than either of the two giant blazes in Los Angeles. It killed 25 people and injured 150, and ranks as the third-deadliest and third-most-destructive fire in California history.
The true toll of this week's fires won't be clear until later.
Swain said that he and several colleagues have estimated that the Palisades Fire could be the costliest on record in the US because of the number of structures burning and the fact that those homes are some of the most expensive in the world.
"We are looking at what is, I think, likely to become the costliest wildfire disaster in California, if not national history, along with a number of other superlatives," Swain said.
A historic windstorm spread the fire fast
A powerful windstorm buffeted the flames throughout Tuesday and into Wednesday morning, with gusts of wind reaching up to 90 miles an hour, according to the National Weather Service.
During a 2 Β½ hour period overnight, the Palisades Fire's size more than doubled, per the fire service's reports.
The winds were so powerful on Tuesday evening that water- and retardant-dropping aircraft could not fly.
It's a phenomenon that scientists have warned about: a deadly combination of high winds and dry, open land β such as the brushland now being swept by flames in Los Angeles β amounting to fires that move faster than emergency responders can keep up with.
"It's certainly unusual how fast it's grown," Douglas Kelley, a researcher at the UK's Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, told Business Insider. "It's definitely a lot faster than I guess a lot of people were expecting in the area at the time."
A study published in Science in October found that while only about 3% of US fires over a nearly two-decade period could be considered "fast fires," they caused disproportionate damage.
"The most destructive and deadly wildfires in US history were also fast," wrote the study's authors, led by University of Colorado Boulder's Jennifer Balch.
Between 2001 and 2020, fast fires accounted for 78% of fire-destroyed buildings and a full 61% of suppression costs β or $18.9 billion, the scientists wrote. And they are getting more frequent, the study said.
The windstorm was bad luck. But the other primary factor in the fires' rapid explosions β the fuel β is strongly linked to the climate crisis.
Weather whiplash made abundant fire fuel
Southern California has experienced heavy rainfall and flooding the past two winters β which is a huge part of the problem.
Abundant rainfall spurred an explosion of grasses and brush, the primary fire fuel in Southern California. Then, with very little rainfall in the past few months, all that vegetation was flash-dried.
Kelley said those dry conditions made the Palisades especially susceptible to a fast-spreading fire.
This is part of a growing phenomenon that Swain calls "hydroclimate whiplash," or weather whiplash. As global temperatures rise, many parts of the world, especially California, are seeing more violent swings between extreme wet and extreme dry conditions.
The same confluence of weather whiplash and extreme winds was behind the Camp Fire, Swain said. That November 2018 blaze in Paradise, California, was the deadliest and most destructive in the state's history, destroying 18,804 structures and killing 85 people.
A Ukrainian F-16 pilot may have pulled off a feat no one flying the jet has achieved before.
Ukraine's Air Force Command said the pilots took out six Russian cruise missiles in a single flight.
Colonel Yuriy Ihnat said it was the first time this had been recorded in the jet's history.
Ukraine said one of its F-16 pilots achieved a feat nobody flying the jet has managed before.
In a Facebook post on Tuesday, Ukraine's Air Force Command said a pilot flying an F-16 took out six Russian cruise missiles during a single flight, using air-to-air missiles and an aircraft cannon.
This occurred during a "mass" missile and drone attack in December, it said.
On December 13, Russia fired almost 200 drones, Kinzhal air-launched ballistic missiles, and 94 cruise missiles at Ukraine.
The pilot's main target was the cruise missiles, according to the post.
He used all four air-to-air missiles on board the F-16, two of which were short-range, forcing the jet to fly closer to the missiles β an "extremely dangerous" task, it said.
The pilot then struck two other missiles flying close to each other using an air cannon.
Business Insider was not able to verify the report.
Intercepting "such important targets is not an easy task for a pilot, but who, if not Ukrainian pilots, has the most experience in the world of winged missiles?" Colonel Yuriy Ihnat, head of the Ukrainian Air Force Command's public relations service, said.
Since the start of its full-scale invasion in 2022, Russia has frequently launched large missile attacks on Ukraine, aimed at overwhelming Ukraine's air defense systems and hitting targets behind the front lines.
The pilot, who had recently undergone retraining for F-16s in the US, said in the post that Ukrainian F-16 pilots had never used an aviation cannon to shoot down targets.
However, he said he applied the lessons he learned in the US.
"I must have set a record that day," he said, adding, "I am convinced that this experience will be useful to colleagues."
Colonel Ihnat described it as the first-ever documented case.
He said that "based on objective control, we have one hundred percent confirmation that for the first time in history in anti-air combat, an American fighter F-16 shoots down six winged missiles."
Ukraine says it's designed a new type of river drone to target Russian vessels.
The Black Widow 2 is also able to perform reconnaissance operations, it said.
Ukraine's military requested it to combat Russian forces and supply runs on the Dnipro River.
Ukraine says it has developed a new type of drone to target Russian vessels deployed on Ukrainian rivers.
Hard Cat, a Kyiv-based drone manufacturer, told Business Insider that the uncrewed river drone, the Black Widow 2, can take out surface targets, including small boats.
It can also carry out reconnaissance and patrolling operations, providing real-time situational awareness, it said, with a maximum speed of almost 25 miles an hour and a communication range of up to 6.2 miles.
And unlike sea drones, which operate in wider bodies of water, the one-meter-long drone's "compact size and high maneuverability allow it to operate effectively" in narrow waterways and river areas.
Drones have been a hallmark of the war in Ukraine, with both sides using them to attack, surveil, and target more accurately.
Ukraine has heavily targeted Russia's fleet in the Black Sea using sea drones, with notable effect.
Hard Cat unveiled the river drone's prototype at the Defense Tech Valley investment summit in Kyiv in October 2024.
It told BI the drone has now been successfully tested in rear-area conditions and is undergoing combat trials with two Ukrainian army brigades. It didn't say where those trials were taking place.
"Warfare on water is quite specific and comes with unique challenges, making such a small water drone potentially very useful," it added.
One of the developers, who requested anonymity for safety reasons, told BI that they began work on the drone in December 2023, at the request of the Ukrainian military, as a way to counter Russian motorboats used for personnel rotation, supply runs, and reconnaissance.
At the time, Ukrainian troops were fighting to hold out on the eastern bank of the Dnipro River in southern Ukraine, against Russian forces that vastly outnumbered them.
John Hardie, deputy director of the Russia Program at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, told BI that he expects Ukraine to use these new systems primarily on the Dnipro.
"They would probably be most useful in a defensive role, such as striking small vessels carrying Russian assault troops or supplies," he said, rather than working in conjunction with larger, longer-range naval drones to attack Russian ships in the Black Sea.
Basil Germond, an expert in international security at Lancaster University in the UK, made a similar assessment.
"It is important to understand that Russia not only operates big warships and submarines but also a wide array of small boats that support land operations at the tactical level, especially in the wet areas such as the Dnipro Estuary and other rivers," he said.
Germond added: "River drones are likely to contribute to operations against these sorts of assets."
A UK-led coalition is using AI to track Russia's shadow fleet, the British Ministry of Defence said.
The operation, involving 10 countries, comes after damage to major undersea cables in the Baltic.
Finland said evidence suggests a Russia-linked ship dragged its anchor to sever the cables.
A UK-led coalition of European countries has deployed AI to track Russia's shadow fleet and detect possible threats to underwater cables, after suspected sabotage incidents in recent months.
On Monday, the UK's Ministry of DefenceΒ saidΒ that the Joint Expeditionary Force's operation, dubbed Nordic Warden, has been using AI to evaluate data from several sources, including the Automatic Identification System, which ships use to share their real-time locations.
In the event of a potential threat, it said the system would monitor the suspect vessel in real time and issue a warning, which will be communicated to both NATO allies and participating countries.
The UK's Defense Secretary John Healey said AI would allow them to monitor "large" sea areas using a "comparatively" small number of resources.
"Nordic Warden will help protect against both deliberate acts of sabotage as well as cases of extreme negligence which we have seen cause damage to underwater cable," Healey added.
The UK MOD didn't respond to a request for comment, but in its news release said that there were 22 areas of interest, including parts of the English Channel, the North Sea, the Kattegat Sea, and the Baltic Sea.
It said the operation's launch came after reported damage to a major undersea cable in the Baltic.
Over the past two months, several undersea cables in the Baltic Sea have been damaged, including the BCS East-West Interlink cable, the C-Lion1 telecommunications cable linking Finland and Germany, and the Estlink 2 electricity cable connecting Estonia and Finland.
Last week, Finnish officials said they found a 60-mile trail on the seabed that suggested the Eagle S β a Russia-linked tanker β could have been responsible for slicing a cluster of valuable data and power cables.
Edward Hunter Christie, a senior research fellow at the Finnish Institute of International Affairs and a former NATO official, told BI that AI will help NATO identify suspicious ships among the vast majority of legitimate commercial activity in the region.
Neither Russia's shadow fleet nor any other country for that matter, "even the Chinese," can afford to lose ship after ship trying to damage cables, he said, pointing to Finland's seizure of a Russian-linked vessel last week.
"Russia needs its shadow fleet," he added, "that's how it earns its oil export revenues."
North Korea could get Russian satellite tech, the US Secretary of State has warned.
The tech would be in exchange for it sending troops to fight Ukraine, Antony Blinken said on Monday.
The US and its allies have accused Russia and North Korea of trading arms and military technology.
Russia could share satellite technology with North Korea in exchange for the troops it sent to fight Ukraine, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken has warned.
Blinken said the US had reason to believe that "Moscow intends to share advanced space and satellite technology with Pyongyang," during a press conference in Seoul on Monday.
North Korea "is already receiving Russian military equipment and training," he added.
If confirmed, it would add to Russia's reported ongoing efforts to help North Korea advance its satellite launch program.
Kim Jong Un, the North Korean leader, has repeatedly tried and often failed to launch satellites into space. The country said it had successfully launched a military spy satellite in November 2023. The most recent failure was when a rocket exploded during the first stage of flight in May last year.
At the time, the South Korean news agency Yonhap reported, citing an unnamed senior defense official, that a "large number" of Russian technicians had entered North Korea to guide the country's space program ahead of the failed launch.
In September 2023, Russian President Vladimir Putin promised Russia would help North Korea build satellites.
Having a satellite network would allow North Korea to identify targets to strike with its missiles and strengthen its ability to launch a preemptive strike against the US or its allies, giving them only a few minutes to respond.
However, "brazen acts of unprovoked military violence" are not in North Korea's best interest, said Marco Langbroek, a satellite tracker and lecturer in optical space situational awareness at The Netherlands' Delft Technical University.
"If anything, North Korea improving its intelligence position through a better reconnaissance satellite program with Russian help could help ease some of the North Korean paranoia regarding US and Allied activities in the region and avoid things getting out of hand by mistake," he added.
Russia and North Korea's relationship has come under scrutiny in the past year after both countries signed a strategic partnership agreement in June, which requires the countries to defend each other in the event of aggression.
North Korea has also sent thousands of troops to aid Russia in its fight against Ukraine, officials from South Korea, Ukraine, and the US have said.
Blinken suggested Russia-North Korea's relations could go deeper as Putin may be "close" to formally accepting North Korea's status as a nuclear power.
He also described North Korea's deployment of artillery, ammunition, and troops as one of the "biggest ongoing drivers" that enabled Russia's war against Ukraine.
Parts of the US are being battered by Winter Storm Blair, with states of emergency declared.
The frigid conditions are impacting travel, with icy Midwest roads and flights and trains canceled.
Snow hit Washington, DC, on Monday as the area prepares for the Trump administration transition.
Ice-storm warnings and unpleasantly cold conditions are expected to continue in much of the northern US.
The Arctic outbreak, dubbed Winter Storm Blair by the Weather Channel, has disrupted travel and resulted in at least five deaths.
The storm is bringing heavy snow to areas in the mid-Atlantic region that haven't seen such weather in a decade, the National Weather Service warned.
Heavy snowfall has occurred in places such as Kansas City, Missouri, where local media reported 10 inches of snow on Sunday night, and Louisville, Kentucky, which saw its largest single-day snowfall in about 25 years.
On Tuesday, snow is expected to dwindle in most of the areas blanketed by it as the storm moves south.
Two people have died in a weather-related crash in Wichita, Kansas, a Missouri public works employee was fatally injured during snow removal operations, and a person in Houston, Texas, died due to cold weather, NBC reported on Monday afternoon.
As of 3 a.m. ET Tuesday, about 207,063 utility customers were without power across Kentucky, Indiana, West Virginia, Virginia, Illinois, and Missouri, according to PowerOutage.us, which tracks power outages across the US. That was down from about 254,000 customers on Monday afternoon.
Travel delays and cancellations
More than 2,900 flights were canceled and over 9,300 flights within, into, or out of the US were delayed on Monday, according to FlightAware.
More than half of Monday flights were canceled at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, while the nearby Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport saw 125 flights, or 43% of those scheduled Monday, canceled.
Chicago O'Hare and Dallas-Fort Worth International Airports are leading the country in delays.
Amtrak, the US national rail operator, also announced a series of cancellations in the Northeast and the Midwest on Monday.
The numbers of impacted flights are expected to continue to rise.
Airlines including American, Delta, Southwest, and United have said they're waiving change fees for flights impacted by the storm.
Meanwhile, freezing temperatures led to icy roads and dangerous driving conditions in the Midwest on Sunday. The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported 436 crashes and 1,788 stranded motorists by 3 p.m. on Monday.
Heavy snow and cold to continue
The NWS Weather Prediction Center said Monday that the adverse weather would move toward the mid-Atlantic throughout the day, bringing up to 12 inches of snow and dangerously cold temperatures.
Snow β possibly mixed with sleet and freezing rain β reached about 8 inches in Washington, DC, where preparations are underway for Donald Trump's incoming administration.
Additional cold weather warnings have also been issued in Baltimore, Cincinnati, Louisville, and St. Louis, with officials warning to limit travel in the impacted areas, The Weather Channel reported.
The Baltimore-Washington National Weather Service said on Monday afternoon that heavy snow would continue through 11 p.m., dropping up to 3 more inches before the snow system exits the area.
On Monday night, it predicted light snow to continue into the night with an extra 1 to 2 inches near urban areas and in the mountains, and low temperatures in the single digits in the west to upper teens elsewhere.
In an X post in the early hours of Tuesday, the mayor of Washington, DC, Muriel Bowser, said more than 200 snow plows would work through the night, and that school would be closed Tuesday.
Kansas, Missouri, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland, and Arkansas have declared states of emergency, with Gov. Phil Murphy of New Jersey declaring a state of emergency for several counties.
In all, about half the US population is expected to experience freezing temperatures over the next week, Axios reported.
China is readying forces that could seize Taiwan in a future attack, analysts and officials say.
Any military operation is likely to rely partly on China's militarized police.
The People's Armed Police has been training in a wide range of conditions, including water.
China is preparing its militarized police for kinds of combat that would play a key role in any invasion of Taiwan.
A SeptemberΒ reportΒ from China Central Television shows what appears to be the People's Armed Police Force, or PAP,Β simulating attacks from inflatable boats.
Footage and pictures from Chinese state-run outlets show the extent of the combat training and battlefield simulation β blockade breakthroughs, grenade throwing, battlefield rescue, and group tactics in cold, hot, and high-altitude conditions.
This training indicates PAP soldiers "are getting ready" for a takeover of Taiwan, said Lyle Goldstein, director of Asia Engagement at the Defense Priorities think tank in Washington, DC.
Clandestine movement by water would be an essential capability to quell resistance in Taiwan's populated areas near the coast and rivers.
"From my observation, they train hard; they are well equipped and disciplined, and they're given stringent ideological training for the reason that they are probably, in my view, the primary reserve force for section invasion," Goldstein said.
"If they went forward with a full-up invasion, I think an amphibious assault is not just conceivable but is quite a possibility," he added.
Urban training
Since its founding in 1982, China's PAP has been firmly placed under the country's military.
These armed police are a shock force in China's vast state security apparatus. The force plays a key internal security role, mostly in law enforcement, counterterrorism, disaster response, and maritime rights protection.
Beijing also regularly uses them for propaganda. One likely goal of publicizing the recent training was to intimidate Taiwan and its backers.
Alessio Patalano, a professor of war and strategy in East Asia at King's College London, said the PAP's inclusion in any takeover of Taiwan would make sense given their urban training.
He told BI the PAP keeps "highly skilled" special forces at hand who are involved in surgical operations to capture strategic goals where mobility, speed, and familiarity with operating in urban areas are key.
"To that extent, whether in decapitation scenarios or early stages of operations to seize key port and airport infrastructures, the use of PAP should be regarded as a viable, if not preferable, option," Patalano said.
A supporting role
It's unlikely that the PAP would participate in the first stages of any island landing.
"That is the purview of the PLA," said Joel Wuthnow, a senior research fellow at the Center for the Study of Chinese Military Affairs at the National Defense University in DC. The PLA is China's main military β the People's Liberation Army.
He said that the PAP would instead initially participate in operations to firm up internal security in mainland China, including suppressing signs of social unrest, protecting critical infrastructure, and clearing out national highways to facilitate the delivery of supplies to regions near Taiwan.
Any attempt to seize Taiwan, a self-ruled island of 23 million that Beijing views as a breakaway province, would require warships, armored vehicles, and heavy firepower, to answer Taiwan's advanced missiles, tanks, and F-16 fighter jets.
However, if PLA's operations in Taiwan didn't go according to plan, and it faced a protracted campaign, Wuthnow said the PAP's Special Operation Forces could be mobilized to institute military governance through missions in urban areas like Taipei.
Another aspect of the PAP's response could involve China's Coast Guard, which it oversees.
The coast guard is already "very much" on the front lines of China's "coercive" campaign against Taiwan, Wuthnow said, and its role seems to be increasing.
Meanwhile, Taiwan's mountainous terrain, as well as its few major land routes and numerous river crossings, would make it difficult for any invading forces to move.
"If the population of Taiwan were not compliant with a PRC-led occupation authority, the period where the PRC would need to rely on their own police might be quite prolonged," said Philip Shetler-Jones, a senior research fellow in the International Security team at the UK's Royal United Services Institute, using the acronym for the People's Republic of China.
The more PAP forces can take over the "public order" task, the more it frees up combat troops, he added.
An imminent invasion
Military experts and defense officials see signs β like China's rapid modernization of its armed forces over the past two decades and drills around Taiwan β that suggest that China could take action within a few years.
But the form of that action is a matter of debate, from a blockade to a full-scale invasion.
During a 2021 hearing of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Adm. Phil Davidson, then the US Indo-Pacific commander, said Taiwan was "clearly" one of China's "ambitions" and that he believed the threat would be "manifest" within the next six years.
Chinese leader Xi Jinping said in October, as part of the country's anniversary celebrations, that reunification with Taiwan was "where the greater national interest lies, and it is what the people desire."
"The wheel of history will not be stopped by any individual or any force," he added.
Goldstein of Defense Priorities, who described himself as a bit of an outlier, said he believes China is ready to take over Taiwan now "if they choose to," and that the PAP's Special Operation Forces would likely play a significant role.
They "will be in very high demand in a Taiwan scenario," he said.
He added that China regards Taiwan as internal security. "So, for them, the use of these forces is entirely legitimate."
An Azerbaijan Airlines flight crashed after sustaining damage over Russia, killing 38.
The plane was likely hit by Russian air defense before the crash, BI reported Thursday.
Several airlines are canceling flights to Russia, citing passenger safety and risks.
Airlines are avoiding Russian airspace after an Azerbaijan Airlines flight crashed on Wednesday, killing 38 passengers.
The Embraer 190 jet was bound for Russia from Azerbaijan β but veered off course after sustaining some kind of damage over Russia.
It managed to reach Aktau airport in Kazakhstan before crash-landing. 29 passengers survived.
The reason for the crash remains unknown. Business Insider reported Thursday, citing reports from Euronews and The New York Times, that Azerbaijani investigators believed Russia shot the plane down, a view supported by many analysts.
Several airlines suspended flights to Russia since the crash.
Azerbaijan Airlines said it would suspend flights to 10 Russian cities starting Saturday, citing "physical and technical external interference."
"The suspension will remain in effect until the completion of the final investigation," it said.
El Al, Israel's flagship carrier, said in a Telegram post on Thursday that it was suspending all flights on the Tel Aviv-Moscow route for this week due to the events in Russia's airspace.
It said it would carry out a new assessment next week on whether the route would be resumed.
Flydubai, an Emirati low-cost carrier, said it would suspend flights from Sochi in Russia until January 2 inclusive and from Mineralnye Vody until January 3, the Association of Tour Operators of Russia reported on Friday.
Qazaq Air, a Kazakh air carrier,Β saidΒ it was temporarily suspending flights from Kazakhstan's capital, Astana, to Yekaterinburg, Russia, from Saturday until January 27, 2025.
Western airlines generally have not operated in Russia's airspace since its invasion of Ukraine in 2022, meaning they have no services to divert or cancel.
Peter Frankopan, an expert on Russian and Balkans history at Oxford University, told Business Insider that if Moscow is determined to be at fault, it will "make people nervous about ever flying over Russian airspace."
"That has significance during the war and after it is over β including for Russian revenues from overflights," he said, referring to fees paid to countries for the right to cross their airspace.
According to a Reuters analysis, Russia had spent over $12 billion in state subsidies and loans as of December 2023 to sustain its civil aviation industry since Western sanctions took effect.
The plane was bound for Russia from Azerbaijan β but veered off course after sustaining some kind of damage, crossing the Caspian Sea to crash-land at the airport in Aktau, Kazakhstan.
At a press briefing Thursday, Karabayev said Kazakh authorities heard of the disaster from a Russian air-traffic controller. They said an oxygen cylinder had exploded in the passenger cabin of the aircraft, and that some passengers were losing consciousness.
Karabayev said this triggered an emergency response in Aktau. Rescuers were quickly on the scene and managed to rescue 29 of the 67 passengers.
The plane departed from Baku, Azerbaijan, early Wednesday, heading for Grozny, Russia.
Business Insider reported Thursday, citing reports from Euronews and The New York Times, that Azerbaijani investigators believed Russia shot the plane down.
Those sources pointed to a Russian Pantsir-S air-defense system.
Russia has said the plane diverted after a bird strike, and denied playing a role β an explanation analysts were swift to dismiss.
Osprey Flight Solutions, an aviation security firm, said in an alert sent to its clients and shared with BI that the flight was "likely shot down by a Russian military air-defense system of unspecified type/variant over the North Caucasus Federal District."
Kazakhstan's transport ministry didn't immediately respond to a request for comments.
Russia's economy will be under significant strain next year, economists told Business Insider.
High inflation, slowing economic growth, energy prices, and sanctions could hurt its war machine.
One expert told BI that stagnation was similar to the Soviet Union at the beginning of the 1980s.
Russia's economy is likely entering a year of pain in 2025.
Since launching its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the Kremlin has restructured its economy to prioritize its war efforts, imposing export bans, tapping its national wealth fund, and strengthening trade with non-Western countries.
But unprecedented defense spending, labor shortages, and Western sanctions have come at a cost, and some believe the country is reaching the limits of its capacity.
Economists told Business Insider that while they don't expect Russia's economy to collapse, they said it would face a tough 2025 if it keeps on fighting in Ukraine.
Persisting inflation
"Russia has set in motion processes that will continue to eat out its economy from within," Roman Sheremeta, an associate professor of economics at the Weatherhead School of Management at Case Western Reserve University, told BI.
He said that if the war continues, "it will put a significant strain on the already bleeding Russian budget."
Russia has increasingly boosted its defense spending to sustain its war efforts, from $59 billion in 2022 to $109 billion in 2023, and $126.8 billion set aside in 2025, when defense will make up 32.5% of Russia's federal budget, up from 28.3% this year.
While soaring defense spending has fueled Russia's economy in recent years, it has also contributed to rising inflation, which Russian President Vladimir Putin said could hit 9.5% in 2025.
To rein this in, the country's central bank raised its key interest rate from 19% to 21% in October, a record high, which has eaten into companies' profit margins.
The bank was expected to raise the rate again in December, but held off, though it may need to increase it next year.
"The main question is how high the inflation will be and how the slowing down will materialize," Alexander Kolyandr, a financial analyst and non-resident senior scholar at the Center for European Policy Analysis, told BI.
Putin has acknowledged that inflation is at "a relatively high level." Speaking at anΒ investment forumΒ in Moscow earlier this month, he urged his government and the central bank to curb it.
TsMAKP, a Russian think tank, warned last month that Russia's failure to tame inflation was driving the country toward stagflation, a scenario in which growth is low and inflation high, and which is harder to escape than a recession.
"The overall trend is pretty grim," said Kolyandr. "I would say it's overall stagnation akin to what the Soviet Union had at the beginning of the 1980s."
The Soviet Union was dissolved in 1991.
Slowing economic growth
Russia is expected to experience lower-than-expected economic growth in 2025. In its October World Economic Outlook, the IMF dropped its GDP growth estimate for Russia from 1.5% to 1.3%.
"Overall growth will be quite slow," Iikka Korhonen, the head of research at the Bank of Finland Institute for Emerging Economies, told BI.
However, he said the Kremlin will make sure that military production has enough resources.
But "many sectors will most likely contract," he said.
US sanctions on Gazprombank and other financial institutions in November caused the ruble to plummet, according to The Wall Street Journal, which also said that companies were slashing expansion plans.
It reported that more than 200 shopping centers in Russia are under threat of bankruptcy due to rising debt burdens and almost a third of Russian freight haulers say they fear bankruptcy in 2025.
Russia's largest mobile operator, MTS, also blamed an almost 90% drop in Q3 net profits on costs related to interest payments.
"The elites are fighting for survival, and while they remain loyal to Putin, they are increasingly discontent," Alexandra Prokopenko, a former Russian central bank official and now a fellow at the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center in Berlin, told the Journal.
In fact, in recent months, RussianCEOs and business leaders have increased their vitriol against interest-rate hikes and Western sanctions.
While Russia's share of oil and gas revenues has fluctuated in recent years, and dropped in 2023, Russia expects it to account for about 27% of the country's total budget revenue in 2025.
"As long as Russia can sell as much crude oil as it is now selling with the current prices, they will have enough tax revenue for the war well into 2025," Korhonen said.
Earlier this month, Russian state-owned oil firm Rosneft agreed to a 10-year, $13 billion deal to supply crude oil to India, Reuters reported, citing three sources familiar with the deal.
However, Center for European Policy Analysis' Kolyandr said he believes Russia's revenue outlook is "over-optimistic," since "global oil prices might be lower than the government thinks."
While G7 countries have set a $60 price cap on Russian oil since December 2022, Russia has partly evaded the cap by using a shadow fleet,Β redirecting oil exportsΒ to countries like China and India, and inflatingΒ ancillary costsΒ to obscure purchase prices.
But the tightening of Western sanctions could further reduce Russia's oil and gas revenues.
Reserves
Russia's economic performance in 2025 will ultimately come down to the availability of resources, said Korhonen.
"There will be a deficit, but it can initially be financed from the National Welfare Fund," he said.
Russia's National Warfare Fund has assets amounting to about $131.1 billion as of October, while the central bank has about $614.4 billion in international reserves.
Kolyandr, meanwhile, said that "whether Russia is going to face any crisis in 2025" would depend on everything that will happen in 2025, including oil prices, sanctions, President-elect Donald Trump's trade policies, and the Russian labor market.
"The Russian economy will continue to fall," said Weatherhead School of Management's Sheremeta, "which will restrict Russia's ability to wage war."
But he added: "Much will depend on the Western support of Ukraine."
Multiple prohibited items were found in a woman's bag at Los Angeles International Airport, per the TSA.
A TSA officer flagged the bag after spotting the items in an X-ray image.
Jason Pantages, LAX TSA Federal Security Director, said the incident was "extremely concerning."
The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) said one of its officers found fireworks, knives, and other prohibited items in a woman's carry-on bag as she attempted to catch a flight at Los Angeles International Airport earlier this month.
In a recent press release, the TSA said one of its officers flagged the bag after spotting the items in an X-ray image.
"When the bag was opened with the passenger present, the TSA officer was shocked at its contents," the TSA said.
The bag, which belonged to a female passenger set to travel to Philadelphia, contained 82 consumer-grade fireworks, three knives, two replica firearms, and one canister of pepper spray, it added.
The incident occurred at LAX's Terminal 4 at around 10 p.m. local time on December 15.
The TSA said it informed the Los Angeles World Airport (LAWA) police department and that officers went to the security checkpoint and interrogated the traveler while a bomb squad confiscated the fireworks.
Jason Pantages, LAX TSA Federal Security Director, described the find as "extremely concerning."
"This traveler should have followed TSA's tried and true advice - unpack your bag before you pack it to ensure you don't bring any prohibited items to the security checkpoint," he said. "We are in the midst of the holiday travel season when security checkpoints will be busy everywhere."
The TSA reminded travelers that fireworks are not allowed on board an aircraft in carry-on or checked luggage and that knives and replica firearms should travel in checked baggage.
It also said that one four-ounce container of pepper spray is permitted in checked luggage as long as it has a safety mechanism to avoid "accidental discharge."
It comes as airports across the US brace for a busy festive season.
More than 3.2 million people are expected to pass through Los Angeles International Airport during the holidays, the Los Angeles Times reported.
The TSA, meanwhile, said it expected to screen nearly 40 million people from December 19 to January 2, up 6.2% from last year. It forecasts the busiest days as December 20, 27, and 30.
TSA and LAWA didn't immediately respond to requests for comments made outside working hours.
A Russian-flagged cargo vessel has sunk in the Mediterranean Sea, per Russia's foreign ministry.
The Ursa Major ship went down after an explosion in the engine room, the ministry said.
It comes after Ukraine said Moscow had sent four ships to Russian military bases in Syria.
A Russian-flagged cargo vessel has sunk in the Mediterranean Sea after an explosion in its engine room, Russia's foreign ministry said on Tuesday.
Fourteen crew members were rescued, but two were missing, the ministry's situation and crisis unit said in a Telegram post.
The ministry said the vessel, the Ursa Major, was owned by SK-YUG LLC, a Russian shipping company also known as SC South that has been sanctioned by the US.
Spain's Maritime Rescue agency told Business Insider that it had received a distress alert call from the Ursa Major last night.
It said the ship was 57 nautical miles off the coast of Almeria in southern Spain in bad weather conditions. This prompted the maritime rescue centers of Almeria, Cartagena, and Madrid to coordinate a rescue effort, it added.
The 14 people rescued were transferred to the Spanish port city of Cartagena, the agency said, adding that anotherRussian ship later arrived in the area and took over the rescue operations.
Ship tracking data said the 466-foot Ursa Major, built in 2009, last departed from St. Petersburg on December 11.
It comes after Ukraine's intelligence directorate reported on Monday that a Russian cargo ship called Sparta had broken down near Portugal after the engine failed.
The GUR said the ship had been sent to evacuate Russian weapons and equipment from Syria.
The crew was able to fix the vessel, and it continued on through the Strait of Gibraltar, the GUR said.
It remains unclear whether the Sparta and the Ursa Major are the same ship. Maritime tracking data shows that the Ursa Major was previously named Sparta III.
Moscow has operated two military facilities in Syria, the Hmeimin airbase and the Tartus naval base. Both have been crucial for projecting Russia's influence across the Middle East and Africa.
Russia sent a ship to evacuate soldiers from its bases in Syria, per Ukrainian intelligence.
But it broke down en route in the open sea near Portugal, Ukraine said.
Russia is trying to secure a deal with Syria's new leadership to keep the bases, per reports.
A ship sent to evacuate Russian troops and equipment from Syria broke down while in the open sea off Portugal, according to Ukrainian intelligence.
In a Telegram post on Monday, Ukraine's main intelligence directorate said that the Sparta cargo ship's engine failed and that the crew was trying to fix the problem while the ship was drifting in the high seas.
Since the fall of Bashar Assad, Syria's longtime ruler, earlier this month, the fate of Russia's two military bases in the country β the Hmeimim air base and the Tartus naval base β has been under threat.
Russia struck a 49-year lease with Assad's government for the bases, which it has used since 2017 to project power in the Mediterranean and into Africa.
But Syrian rebels, led by the Islamist group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, or HTS, overthrew Assad earlier this month, after a rapid two-week campaign.
Last week, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said there were "no final decisions" about Russia's bases in Syria but that Moscow is in contact with "representatives of the forces that currently control the situation" in the country.
Earlier this month, Ukraine said the Russian Sparta and Sparta II cargo ships had left Russia and were heading to Tartus to transport military equipment from the Russian base on Syria's Mediterranean coast.
The journeys required the ships to sail along stretches of European coastline to access the Mediterranean.
Russian state media said earlier this month that Syrian rebel forces now controlled Latakia province, where the Russian bases are located.
Images taken in mid-December by Maxar Technologies showed Russian aircraft still present at the base in Hmeimim, but warships no longer stationed at the nearby naval facility in Tartus.
Last week, analysts from the Institute for the Study of War said Russia was probably taking this "tentative" stance and removing some assets in case HTS decided to deny Russia a sustained military presence in Syria.
Obeida Arnaout, the spokesman for Syria's new transitional government, told the Associated Press last week that Russia should reconsider its presence and interests in Syria.
"Their interests were linked to the criminal Assad regime," he said.
"They can reconsider and take the initiatives to reach out to the new administration to show that they have no animosity with the Syrian people, and that the era of Assad regime is finally over," he added.
Javier Milei, the Argentine leader who has inspired Elon Musk, says he plans to cut how many taxes there are.
He said he was planning to "eliminate 90% of taxes β not revenue, but the number of taxes."
Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, co-heads of DOGE, are looking to radically trim the US federal government.
Argentina's President Javier Milei says he will reform the Argentine tax system to have no more than 6 taxes.
In a clip from an interview with Forbes Argentina, published on Sunday, Milei said: "We'll advance privatization, deepen labor reforms, and eliminate 90% of taxes β not revenue, but the number of taxes β moving to a simplified system with no more than six taxes at most."
It would be the latest sweeping move by a firebrand president who has inspired members of the incoming Trump administration.
Since taking power on December 10, 2023, Milei has presided over sweeping cuts. He fired tens of thousands of public employees, shut down half the country's 18 ministries, and reduced state spending by an estimated 31% in his first 10 months alone β making good on his pledge to take a "chainsaw" to the state.
Milei's actions caught the attention of Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, the men now charged with a similar task under President-elect Donald Trump.
Last month, Musk said Argentina had made "impressive progress,'" while Ramaswamy said that the US needed "Milei-style cuts on steroids."
In the interview, Milei said his administration had only accomplished the "first step" of its plan, and that what was coming next was the "deep chainsaw."
"It is not only a question of deregulating and removing these obstacles, but it also implies a new reform of the state to make it even smaller," he said.
Milei added that his administration has so far only implemented a quarter of the reforms it wants to pursue.
Argentina's latest economic figures suggest the country may be turning a corner after struggling economically.
Argentina's inflation dropped fromΒ 25.5%Β in December 2023 toΒ 2.4%Β in November 2024. However, unemployment rose to 6.9% in Q3, from 5.7% in the same period last year.
Economic activity, meanwhile, grew 3.9% in Q3, compared to Q2.
According to BBVA projections, Argentina will achieve a fiscal balance in 2024 for the first time in 15 years. It also said that it expects Argentina's GDP to rebound strongly next year, from a 3.8% deficit in 2024 to 5.5% in 2025, driven by investments and private consumption.
However, Facundo Nejamkis, director of Opina Argentina, a political consultancy firm, told Reuters this month that Milei's cuts had ignited a "major" recession, and according to Argentina's statistics agency, the country's poverty rate rose to 52.9% in the first half of 2024, the highest rate in 30 years.
Speaking at an event at Argentina's Chamber of Commerce and Services last month, Milei said the recession was "over," after the country had gone through "a difficult period of effort and pain."
And in an episode of the Lex Fridman podcast last month, Milei advised Musk and Ramaswamy to go "all the way" in cutting US federal spending.
Reacting to Milei's latest interview on X, where he talked about eliminating the taxes, Musk wrote one word: "Impressive."
Elon Musk tried to play down his role in tanking a government spending bill on Thursday.
Democrats have started calling him "President Musk," in a move likely to frustrate Donald Trump.
"Trump must absolutely hate the whole President Musk thing," one commentator said.
Elon Musk has tried to downplay his influence in helping tank a government funding bill, and after Democrats started referring to him as "President Musk."
In a series of X posts on Thursday night, Musk tried to distance himself from Democrats' claims that he is now the de facto leader of the Republican Party.
Musk, who will co-lead the Department of Government Efficiency under President-elect Donald Trump,Β had criticized the first version of the spending billearlierthis week, calling for it to be "killed."
A revised spending bill that he helped usher in then failed to get enough votes, potentially setting the stage for a government shutdown.
"Objectively, the vast majority of Republican House members voted for the spending bill, but only 2 Democrats did," Musk wrote in response. "Therefore, if the government shuts down, it is obviously the fault of @RepJeffries and the Democratic Party."
Before the vote, Musk had posted: "First of all, I'm not the author of this proposal. Credit to @realDonaldTrump, @JDVance & @SpeakerJohnson."
All but 38 House Republicans voted for the revised bill, but it fell short of the two-thirds majority required to extend government funding until March.
Democrats seized on the opportunity to embarrass Trump by portraying him as a subordinate of Musk.
Rep. Brendan Boyle of Pennsylvania said, "The leader of the GOP is Elon Musk," adding, "He's now calling the shots."
Rep. Greg Casar of Texas asked if Musk was "kind of cosplaying co-President here," adding, "I don't know why Trump doesn't just hand him the Oval Office."
Meanwhile, Rep. Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut, the top Democratic member on the House Appropriations Committee, said Republicans "got scared" because "President Musk said: 'Don't do it β shut the government down.'"
Others also weighed in.
"Welcome to the Elon Musk presidency," Rep. Robert Garcia of California said in a post on Thursday.
"It's clear who's in charge, and it's not President-elect Donald Trump," Rep. Pramila Jayapal of Washington added.
After Thursday's vote, Musk reacted favorably to a post that said the reason Democrats keep saying "President" Elon Musk was to "drive a wedge" between him and Trump.
Charlie Sykes, a political commentator and author of "How the Right Lost Its Mind," wrote that Musk had committed two cardinal sins: "upstaging" Trump and being responsible for an "embarrassing defeat."
"Trump must absolutely hate the whole President Musk thing," he added.
North Korean troops are engaged in combat against Ukrainian forces, the White House said.
They've had a rough start, and seem to lack experience with drones and working with Russians.
This has led to reported losses, but analysts said they should be able to learn to adapt.
North Korean troops have engaged in combat with Ukrainian forces in Russia's Kursk region, with media and intelligence reports suggesting they're off to a rough start.
Footage obtained by Radio Liberty on Monday showed Ukraine striking a group of soldiers, with sources telling the outlet that North Koreans were among them.
The same day, Ukrainian officials and soldiers told The Washington Post that North Korea's troops were operating in big groups out in the open, and were getting killed by drones they didn't realize were dangerous.
A senior US military official said this week that North Korea's dead and wounded could now be counted in the hundreds.
Military analysts told BI that, while the limited number of early reports makes it difficult to give a definitive assessment, they're not surprised by the reports.
"The North Koreans are taking apparently unnecessary casualties as they are rushed into combat without a period of training on the unique threats here," saidWallace Gregson, a former US Marine Corps officer and former assistant defense secretary for Asian and Pacific Security Affairs.
Uncharted territory
National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said on Monday that North Korean troops had moved to the front lines and were "actively engaged in combat operations."
Evans Revere, a senior advisor with Albright Stonebridge Group, said that while North Korean troops seemed "disciplined" and "tough," their lack of experience in ground combat and unfamiliarity with drone warfare was taking its toll.
He said that the reported casualty numbers suggest that North Korean forces are in the "thick of heavy fighting" and that "if the North Koreans continue to suffer casualties at this rate, they will very soon require fresh forces."
Revere also said their lack of Russian language and absence of experience in training and operating jointly with Russian forces seemed to be a problem.
On Saturday, Ukrainian intelligence said North Korean troops opened fire on Russian military vehicles, killing eight soldiers, due to a language barrier between the two forces.
Too early, too inexperienced
The last time North Korean troops really fought was during the Korean War, where fighting ended in 1953.
Gregson said that this time around, Russia may have thrown North Korean troops to the front in earlier waves of attacks, which he said usually include the "least-trained" soldiers.
He told BI that "high casualties" weren't unexpected, given their light infantry capabilities and the likely language barrier.
However, he said you needed to respect their "apparent courage and determination β and sacrifice β in a conflict not of their choosing far from their home."
Military analysts also said that the North Korean troops could soon adapt to the new battlefield conditions.
Revere said it won't be long before the North Koreans learn how to operate in this environment.
However, he said it's "still not clear" how well Russian and North Korean troops are operating in tandem, or whether Russian commanders are providing good leadership and guidance.
The UK Ministry of Defence said in an intelligence update on Thursday that Russian and North Korean forces were "almost certainly" experiencing difficulties, with North Korean troops struggling to integrate into Russia's command and control structure.
Another major issue is their unfamiliarity with modern battlefield warfare.
John Hardie, the deputy director of the Russia Program at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, said the evidence so far suggests North Korean troops were unprepared for the drone threat.
But, he said, "Isuspect they'll adapt with time and may have started doing so already."
Covering up deaths
According to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Russia has been trying to conceal North Korean deaths. In a nightly address on Monday, he claimed that Russian forces were burning the faces of killed soldiers to conceal their identity.
Revere said attempts to cover up the deaths were likely part of Russia's effort to avoid admitting to the Russian people that the country lacks the ability to defeat Ukraine by itself.
North Korea has also often been the object of ridicule in Russia, he added, "so for the Russians to have to admit their need for DPRK support would be embarrassing."
For North Korea, the stakes are also high.
Bruce W. Bennett, a defense researcher and North Korea specialist at RAND, said that Kim Jong Un is taking risks by sending troops to support Russia, especially potential elite-class military personnel.
He said that Kim is unlikely to want to return the bodies of those killed to their families, fearing potential instability inside North Korea.
"Kim will likely prefer that the soldiers who are killed simply disappear," he said.
North Korean troops don't realize drones are dangerous and are sitting ducks, Ukraine troops said.
They have engaged in combat against Ukrainian troops in Kursk, per US and Ukraine officials.
A couple hundred were killed or wounded in combat in the Kursk region, a US official said.
Ukrainian officials and soldiers told The Washington Post that North Korea's troops are frequently getting killed by drones they don't seem to consider dangerous.
The accounts point to an apparent gap in the knowledge of the troops sent by Kim Jong Un to support Russia's invasion.
The prevalence and effectiveness of drones is a defining feature of the war in Ukraine, and experienced soldiers there have described to Business Insider a widespread fear of them.
But North Korea's troops are new to the war, separated by a language barrier, and appear not to have the same approach.
Three Ukrainian soldiers fighting in the Kursk region of Russia told the Post that waves of what seemed to be North Korean forces advanced directly at Ukrainian positions defended by drones and other weapons.
"We were very surprised; we had never seen anything like it β 40 to 50 people running across a field," one drone commander told the Post.
"FPV drones, artillery, and other weapons struck them because they were moving in the open field," he said. "You can imagine the result."
Another drone operator, Artem, told the outlet that instead of running away from the drones, the North Korean troops shot at them "indiscriminately," while others just kept moving. Many were killed, he said.
During a nighttime drone operation, Artem said he recognized three soldiers based on their heat signatures on a thermal camera and anticipated killing only one β but when the other two failed to react fast enough, he and his comrades struck all three.
He described the experience as "bizarre," adding, "It was the first time it felt like playing a computer simulator on easy mode."
On Monday, National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said North Korean troops had moved to the front lines and were "actively engaged in combat operations."
During a press briefing that same day, Pentagon press secretary Maj. Gen. Patrick Ryder said they had indications that North Korean soldiers engaged in combat in Kursk had suffered losses.
At least 30 North Korean soldiers were killed or wounded during assault operations near the villages of Plekhovo, Vorozhba, and Martynovka in or near the Kursk region last weekend, Ukraine's military intelligence (GUR) said on Monday.
A couple hundred North Korean troops were killed or wounded in combat in the Kursk region, a senior military official told the Associated Press on Tuesday.
On Tuesday, the GUR said North Korean troops had set up extra observation posts, fearing Ukrainian drone attacks after suffering serious losses.