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  • 太平洋岛国瑙鲁将公投 寻求更名摆脱殖民历史


    2026年5月13日 10:46 / 联合早报

    太平洋岛国瑙鲁将公投 寻求更名摆脱殖民历史

    瑙鲁总统阿德昂星期二(5月12日)说,瑙鲁将更名为“瑙埃罗”(Naoero),从而“更忠实地尊重我们国家的传统、语言和身份”。 (示意图 / Pixabay)

    太平洋岛国瑙鲁宣布将举行全民公投,更改官方名称。瑙鲁称现在的国名为殖民时代的遗物,源于“外来语言”对本土语言的扭曲。

    法新社报道,瑙鲁总统阿德昂星期二(5月12日)晚间发表声明称,瑙鲁将更名为“瑙埃罗”(Naoero),以“更忠实地尊重我们国家的传统、语言和身份”。

    这个小国的本土语言是“多雷林瑙埃罗”(Dorerin Naoero)语,全国约1万居民中的绝大多数人都使用这种语言。

    政府在一份解释更名原因的声明中说:“瑙鲁这个名字的出现是因为外来语言无法正确发音‘瑙埃罗’,而更名并非出于我们的意愿,而是为了方便。

    “此次更名将体现在全国范围内,从国家飞机和舰船的重新命名,到区域和国际上的官方身份标识(包括在联合国),以及所有国家官方记录和标志。”

    由于更名需要修改国家宪法,因此政府必须举行全民公投。

    从19世纪80年代末到第一次世界大战期间,德国一直声称瑙鲁是其保护国,直到这个岛屿被澳大利亚军队占领。

    瑙鲁在1968年获得独立之前,曾由澳洲、英国和新西兰共同管理。

    瑙鲁是世界上最小的国家之一,其大陆面积仅为20平方公里。

    世界银行最近的一份评估报告指出,瑙鲁极易受到气候变化的影响,并且失业率和健康问题都很严重。

    瑙鲁曾因其异常纯净的磷酸盐矿藏而成为世界上人均最富裕的地区之一。但这些矿藏早已枯竭,如今研究人员估计,瑙鲁80%的土地因采矿而变得不适宜居住。

    瑙鲁总统阿德昂星期二(5月12日)说,瑙鲁将更名为“瑙埃罗”(Naoero),从而“更忠实地尊重我们国家的传统、语言和身份”。 (示意图 / Pixabay)

    太平洋岛国瑙鲁宣布将举行全民公投,更改官方名称。瑙鲁称现在的国名为殖民时代的遗物,源于“外来语言”对本土语言的扭曲。

    法新社报道,瑙鲁总统阿德昂星期二(5月12日)晚间发表声明称,瑙鲁将更名为“瑙埃罗”(Naoero),以“更忠实地尊重我们国家的传统、语言和身份”。

    这个小国的本土语言是“多雷林瑙埃罗”(Dorerin Naoero)语,全国约1万居民中的绝大多数人都使用这种语言。

    政府在一份解释更名原因的声明中说:“瑙鲁这个名字的出现是因为外来语言无法正确发音‘瑙埃罗’,而更名并非出于我们的意愿,而是为了方便。

    “此次更名将体现在全国范围内,从国家飞机和舰船的重新命名,到区域和国际上的官方身份标识(包括在联合国),以及所有国家官方记录和标志。”

    由于更名需要修改国家宪法,因此政府必须举行全民公投。

    从19世纪80年代末到第一次世界大战期间,德国一直声称瑙鲁是其保护国,直到这个岛屿被澳大利亚军队占领。

    瑙鲁在1968年获得独立之前,曾由澳洲、英国和新西兰共同管理。

    瑙鲁是世界上最小的国家之一,其大陆面积仅为20平方公里。

    世界银行最近的一份评估报告指出,瑙鲁极易受到气候变化的影响,并且失业率和健康问题都很严重。

    瑙鲁曾因其异常纯净的磷酸盐矿藏而成为世界上人均最富裕的地区之一。但这些矿藏早已枯竭,如今研究人员估计,瑙鲁80%的土地因采矿而变得不适宜居住。

  • 太平洋岛国瑙鲁将公投 寻求更名摆脱殖民历史


    2026年5月13日 10:46 / 联合早报

    瑙鲁总统阿德昂星期二(5月12日)说,瑙鲁将更名为“瑙埃罗”(Naoero),从而“更忠实地尊重我们国家的传统、语言和身份”。 (示意图 / Pixabay)

    太平洋岛国瑙鲁宣布将举行全民公投,更改官方名称。瑙鲁称现在的国名为殖民时代的遗物,源于“外来语言”对本土语言的扭曲。

    法新社报道,瑙鲁总统阿德昂星期二(5月12日)晚间发表声明称,瑙鲁将更名为“瑙埃罗”(Naoero),以“更忠实地尊重我们国家的传统、语言和身份”。

    这个小国的本土语言是“多雷林瑙埃罗”(Dorerin Naoero)语,全国约1万居民中的绝大多数人都使用这种语言。

    政府在一份解释更名原因的声明中说:“瑙鲁这个名字的出现是因为外来语言无法正确发音‘瑙埃罗’,而更名并非出于我们的意愿,而是为了方便。

    “此次更名将体现在全国范围内,从国家飞机和舰船的重新命名,到区域和国际上的官方身份标识(包括在联合国),以及所有国家官方记录和标志。”

    由于更名需要修改国家宪法,因此政府必须举行全民公投。

    从19世纪80年代末到第一次世界大战期间,德国一直声称瑙鲁是其保护国,直到这个岛屿被澳大利亚军队占领。

    瑙鲁在1968年获得独立之前,曾由澳洲、英国和新西兰共同管理。

    瑙鲁是世界上最小的国家之一,其大陆面积仅为20平方公里。

    世界银行最近的一份评估报告指出,瑙鲁极易受到气候变化的影响,并且失业率和健康问题都很严重。

    瑙鲁曾因其异常纯净的磷酸盐矿藏而成为世界上人均最富裕的地区之一。但这些矿藏早已枯竭,如今研究人员估计,瑙鲁80%的土地因采矿而变得不适宜居住。

    太平洋岛国瑙鲁将公投 寻求更名摆脱殖民历史

    2026年5月13日 10:46 / 联合早报

    瑙鲁总统阿德昂星期二(5月12日)说,瑙鲁将更名为“瑙埃罗”(Naoero),从而“更忠实地尊重我们国家的传统、语言和身份”。 (示意图 / Pixabay)

    太平洋岛国瑙鲁宣布将举行全民公投,更改官方名称。瑙鲁称现在的国名为殖民时代的遗物,源于“外来语言”对本土语言的扭曲。

    法新社报道,瑙鲁总统阿德昂星期二(5月12日)晚间发表声明称,瑙鲁将更名为“瑙埃罗”(Naoero),以“更忠实地尊重我们国家的传统、语言和身份”。

    这个小国的本土语言是“多雷林瑙埃罗”(Dorerin Naoero)语,全国约1万居民中的绝大多数人都使用这种语言。

    政府在一份解释更名原因的声明中说:“瑙鲁这个名字的出现是因为外来语言无法正确发音‘瑙埃罗’,而更名并非出于我们的意愿,而是为了方便。

    “此次更名将体现在全国范围内,从国家飞机和舰船的重新命名,到区域和国际上的官方身份标识(包括在联合国),以及所有国家官方记录和标志。”

    由于更名需要修改国家宪法,因此政府必须举行全民公投。

    从19世纪80年代末到第一次世界大战期间,德国一直声称瑙鲁是其保护国,直到这个岛屿被澳大利亚军队占领。

    瑙鲁在1968年获得独立之前,曾由澳洲、英国和新西兰共同管理。

    瑙鲁是世界上最小的国家之一,其大陆面积仅为20平方公里。

    世界银行最近的一份评估报告指出,瑙鲁极易受到气候变化的影响,并且失业率和健康问题都很严重。

    瑙鲁曾因其异常纯净的磷酸盐矿藏而成为世界上人均最富裕的地区之一。但这些矿藏早已枯竭,如今研究人员估计,瑙鲁80%的土地因采矿而变得不适宜居住。

  • 美国社交媒体监管法案获关键共和党参议员背书,立法势头再起


    2026年5月12日 晚上8:28 UTC / 路透社

    作者:考特尼·罗森
    2026年5月12日 晚上8:28 UTC 更新于2小时前

    image
    美国参议员特德·克鲁兹(R-德克萨斯州)于2026年3月28日在德克萨斯州格普林德盖洛德德克萨斯度假村及会议中心举行的2026年美国保守派政治行动会议(CPAC)上发言。路透社/卡拉汉·奥黑尔 购买授权,打开新标签页

    华盛顿5月12日(路透社)——要求社交媒体公司为其应用对儿童和青少年造成的影响承担更多责任的美国立法周二克服了一项关键障碍,一位资深共和党参议员表示将支持该法案。

    美国参议员特德·克鲁兹周二在华盛顿的一场活动中表示,他将支持《儿童在线安全法案》,该法案要求社交媒体公司在设计可能对未成年人造成伤害的功能时“尽到合理注意义务”。法案中列出的伤害类型包括饮食失调、抑郁以及对未成年人的性骚扰等。

    即刻订阅《每日案卷》新闻简报,将最新法律新闻直接发送至您的收件箱,开启您的清晨资讯之旅。点击此处注册。

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    克鲁兹的支持意义重大,因为他是参议院商业委员会主席,该委员会通常负责在全院投票前审议和批准相关立法。克鲁兹过去曾支持类似法案,但在第119届国会本届立法会议期间,他尚未就该法案安排正式的委员会投票。

    “我们将在商业委员会通过这项法案,随后在参议院全体投票中通过它,”他周二在国会大厦外与声称因网络伤害失去子女的家长们共同出席的活动上表示。

    克鲁兹的发言人未透露他接下来将如何推进该法案,仅补充称他对该法案的支持与他此前的表态“一致”。

    考特尼·罗森报道;爱德华· Tobin与杰米·弗里德编辑

    我们的准则:汤森路透信托原则,打开新标签页

    US social media legislation gains momentum as key Republican senator pledges support

    2026-05-12 8:28 PM UTC / Reuters

    By Courtney Rozen

    May 12, 2026 8:28 PM UTC Updated 2 hours ago

    U.S. Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) speaks during the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) USA 2026 at the Gaylord Texan Resort and Convention Center, in Grapevine, Texas, U.S. March 28, 2026. REUTERS/Callaghan O’Hare Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab

    WASHINGTON, May 12 (Reuters) – U.S. legislation that would require social media ​companies to take more responsibility for how their ‌apps affect children and teens overcame a key hurdle on Tuesday, when a leading Republican senator said he would back the bill.

    U.S. Senator ​Ted Cruz said at an event in Washington ​on Tuesday that he will back the Kids Online Safety ⁠Act, opens new tab, which would require social media companies to “exercise reasonable ​care” when designing features that contribute to harms to minors, ​according to the legislation. The list of harms includes eating disorders, depression and sexual harassment of minors, among others.

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    Cruz’s support is significant because ​he chairs the Senate Commerce Committee, the panel typically ​responsible for vetting and approving the legislation before the rest of the ‌chamber ⁠votes on it. Cruz supported similar legislation in the past, but so far had not arranged a formal committee vote on the bill during the 119th Congress, the legislature’s current ​session.

    “We are ​going to pass ⁠it out of the Commerce Committee, we’re going to pass it in the Senate,” he ​said at an event outside the U.S. ​Capitol on ⁠Tuesday with parents who say they lost their children to online harms.

    A spokesperson for Cruz did not provide details about ⁠what ​he would do next with the ​legislation, adding that his support for the bill was “consistent” with his previous statements.

    Reporting ​by Courtney Rozen; Editing by Edward Tobin and Jamie Freed

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles., opens new tab

  • 美国计划斥资220亿美元翻新华盛顿杜勒斯国际机场


    2026-05-12 21:12:37 UTC / 路透社

    作者:大卫·谢泼德森

    2026年5月12日 世界协调时21:12 更新于3小时前

    image

    2023年11月22日,美国弗吉尼亚州杜勒斯的华盛顿杜勒斯国际机场内,旅客们在感恩节前的出行高峰期间穿梭于航站楼。路透社/凯文·拉马克 资料图片 获取授权许可,将在新标签页打开

    华盛顿,5月12日(路透社)——美国运输部长肖恩·达菲周二表示,联邦政府计划斥资220亿美元翻新华盛顿杜勒斯国际机场。

    “我们将对杜勒斯机场进行全面翻新,”达菲在华盛顿的一场会议上表示,该项目总成本约为220亿美元。

    【路透社伊朗简报通讯】将为您带来伊朗局势的最新动态与分析,点击此处订阅。

    美国总统唐纳德·特朗普一直推动对这座美国国家首都地区主要国际门户机场进行大规模翻新。该机场同时也是美国联合航空公司的主要枢纽之一。

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    航空建筑网站周一报道称,其已审阅了一份5月期间向航空公司公布的、价值220亿美元的机场振兴计划草案,内容包括航站楼扩建和四座全新航站楼,预计2034年完工。

    达菲在会后向路透社表示,这将是一座“全新的机场”,但补充称仍有诸多细节有待敲定。他拒绝透露政府将承担该项目多少比例的资金。

    2月25日,特朗普就机场未来发展召开会议,参会者包括美国联合航空公司(纽约证券交易所代码:UAL.O,将在新标签页打开)首席执行官斯科特·柯比,该公司承担了杜勒斯机场近70%的客流量。联合航空公司未立即置评。

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    去年12月,特朗普表示他已为杜勒斯机场构思了新的设计方案,“因为这座机场并不出色。它本该成为一座一流机场……现有建筑本身不错,但机场运营得很差。”

    批评人士称杜勒斯机场亟需现代化改造,并抱怨连接航站楼与停机坪的摆渡车速度缓慢。美国交通部去年12月曾批评航站楼内“弥漫着航空燃油味”,以及主航站楼“可用登机门数量极少”。

    该机场由大都会华盛顿机场管理局运营,根据国会批准的50年租赁协议运作。该管理局周二未立即置评。

    2025年,机场管理局批准了一项总资本计划,未来数年将斥资至少70亿美元对杜勒斯机场进行全面翻新。

    这座距离美国首都约25英里(40公里)的机场于1962年启用,2025年客流量达2900万人次,同比增长6.4%,创历史新高。今年秋季,一座面积达43.5万平方英尺(约合40412平方米)、拥有14个登机门的全新航站楼将投入使用,主要服务联合航空公司的旅客。

    芬兰建筑师埃罗·沙里宁设计了该机场的航站楼,这座造型独特的建筑拥有倾斜屋顶,两侧屋顶向上倾斜直指天空。

    本文由大卫·谢泼德森报道;马克·波特与大卫·格雷戈里奥编辑

    我们的报道准则:汤姆森路透社信托原则,将在新标签页打开

    US plans $22 billion rebuilding of Washington Dulles airport

    2026-05-12 21:12:37 UTC / Reuters

    By David Shepardson

    May 12, 2026 9:12 PM UTC Updated 3 hours ago

    Passengers make their way through the terminal as they travel ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday at Washington Dulles International Airport in Dulles, Virginia, U.S., November 22, 2023. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File photo Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab

    WASHINGTON, May 12 (Reuters) – U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said on Tuesday that the federal government plans a $22 billion rebuilding ​of Washington Dulles airport.

    “We’re going to rebuild Dulles,” Duffy said at a Washington ‌conference, saying it would cost roughly $22 billion.

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    President Donald Trump has been pushing for a massive rebuilding of the airport that is the main international gateway for the national capital region. The airport is also ​a major United Airlines hub.

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    Airport Architecture, a website, reported on Monday it had ​reviewed a $22 billion proposed revitalization plan shared with airlines in May that ⁠includes a terminal expansion and four new concourses to be completed by 2034.

    Duffy told ​Reuters after the remarks it would be a “brand-new airport” but added there were still details ​being worked through. He declined to say how much of the project the government’s share might be.

    On February 25, Trump held a meeting on the airport’s future that included United Airlines UAL.O, opens new tab CEO Scott Kirby, ​whose company handles nearly 70% of the traffic at Dulles. United did not immediately comment.

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    In ​December, Trump said he has a new design in mind for Dulles “because it’s not a good airport. ‌It ⁠should be a great airport… They have a great building and a bad airport.”

    Critics say Dulles needs modernization and gripe about slow vehicles that transport passengers across the tarmac. USDOT in December criticized the “jet fuel smell in the concourses” and the “paltry” number of gates in ​the main terminal.

    The airport ​is operated by ⁠the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority under a 50-year lease approved by Congress. MWAA did not immediately comment Tuesday.

    In 2025, the airport authority ​approved a master capital plan to spend at least $7 billion overhauling ​Dulles in coming ⁠years.

    The airport, about 25 miles (40 km) from the U.S. capital, opened in 1962 and had a record year in 2025, handling 29 million total passengers, up 6.4%. This fall, it ⁠will ​get a new 435,000-square-foot (40,412-square-meter), 14-gate concourse serving United customers.

    Finnish ​architect Eero Saarinen designed the airport’s terminal building, a distinctive structure with a sloping roof that sweeps up toward ​the sky on opposite sides.

    Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Mark Porter and David Gregorio

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles., opens new tab

  • 普京赞扬俄罗斯试射新型“撒旦二号”洲际弹道导弹,称其为“全球最强大导弹”


    2026年5月12日 / 美国东部时间下午5:23 / 哥伦比亚广播公司/美联社

    俄罗斯于周二试射一枚新型洲际弹道导弹,作为该国核力量现代化努力的一部分。此次发射受到总统弗拉基米尔·普京的赞扬,此前几天他刚刚宣称乌克兰战事即将结束。

    普京表示,这款携带核弹头的萨尔马特导弹将于今年年底投入作战服役。它旨在取代日渐老化的苏联时代研制的沃耶沃达导弹。

    “这是全球最强大的导弹,”普京宣称,并声称萨尔马特导弹分导式弹头的总威力是西方同类导弹的四倍多。

    自2022年2月出兵乌克兰以来,这位俄罗斯领导人多次挥舞核大棒,试图威慑西方国家加大对乌克兰的支持力度。


    image

    在周六出席红场纪念第二次世界大战战胜纳粹德国的阅兵式后,普京宣称乌克兰战事即将结束。此次阅兵近二十年来首次未展示重型武器。

    自2000年掌权以来,普京一直主导升级俄罗斯核三位一体力量中的苏联时代装备:部署数百枚新型陆基洲际弹道导弹、列装新型核潜艇、升级具备核打击能力的轰炸机。

    俄罗斯对核力量的升级推动美国启动了耗资巨大的本国核武库现代化计划。

    核军备条约已失效

    俄美之间最后一份 remaining核军备条约于今年2月到期,半个多世纪以来首次对全球两个最大的核武库不再设置任何限制,引发了人们对不受约束的核军备竞赛的担忧。

    同月,美国和俄罗斯同意重新建立正式的高层军事沟通渠道,该渠道于2021年底俄罗斯全面入侵乌克兰之前被暂停。

    萨尔马特导弹——北约将其命名为“撒旦二号”——旨在取代约40枚苏联时期研制的沃耶沃达导弹。该导弹的研发工作始于2011年,在此之前仅进行过一次已知的成功试射,据报道2024年的一次试射失败期间发生了大规模爆炸。当时哥伦比亚广播公司分析的卫星图像显示,俄罗斯北部普列谢茨克航天发射场的发射台上出现了一个巨大弹坑和疑似爆炸的残骸。

    根据战略与国际研究中心导弹防御项目的信息,萨尔马特被归类为“重型”洲际弹道导弹,有效载荷可达10吨。

    普京周二表示,萨尔马特是他2018年披露的一系列新型武器之一,他当时声称这些武器将使美国任何未来的导弹防御系统形同虚设。萨尔马特的威力与沃耶沃达相当,但精度更高。他表示,该导弹具备亚轨道飞行能力,射程超过21700英里,并具备突破任何未来导弹防御系统的扩展能力。

    俄罗斯的新型武器包括先锋高超音速滑翔飞行器,其飞行速度可达音速的27倍。首批飞行器已投入服役。

    俄罗斯还列装了新型具备核打击能力的奥列什尼克中程弹道导弹,并用其常规型号对乌克兰发动了两次打击。奥列什尼克的射程可达3100英里,能够覆盖欧洲境内的任何目标。

    普京还宣布,俄罗斯在研制携带核弹头的波塞冬水下无人机和“海燕”微型核反应堆动力巡航导弹方面已处于“最后阶段”。波塞冬的设计目的是在敌方海岸线附近引爆,引发放射性海啸。得益于核动力推进,“海燕”的射程几乎不受限制,能够盘旋数日,绕开防空系统并从意想不到的方向发起攻击。

    普京将这些新型武器描述为俄罗斯对美国导弹防御系统的回应,该系统是美国在2001年退出冷战时期美苏限制导弹防御条约后研发的。

    俄罗斯军方策划者曾担忧,导弹防御系统可能会诱使美国发动先发制人打击,摧毁莫斯科的大部分核武库,同时拦截少量幸存的 retaliatory 发射导弹。

    “面对新的现实,以及维持战略力量平衡与均势的需要,我们不得不考虑确保我们的战略安全,”普京说道。

    根据美国科学家联合会的数据,今年2月到期的核条约是美俄双边协议,两国分别拥有约4300枚和3700枚核弹头。

    与此同时,三位知情人士向哥伦比亚广播公司透露,美国和乌克兰政府已起草一份备忘录,概述两国之间潜在的新型无人机防御协议条款。

    埃莉诺·沃森为本报道撰稿。

    Putin hails Russia’s test launch of new ICBM known as Satan II, calls it “most powerful missile in the world”

    May 12, 2026 / 5:23 PM EDT / CBS/AP

    Russia on Tuesday test-fired a new intercontinental ballistic missile as part of efforts to modernize the country’s nuclear forces, a launch hailed by President Vladimir Putin just days after his claim that the fighting in Ukraine is nearing an end.

    Putin said that the nuclear-armed Sarmat missile would enter combat service at the end of the year. It was built to replace the aging Soviet-built Voyevoda.

    “This is the most powerful missile in the world,” Putin declared, claiming that the combined power of the Sarmat’s individually targeted warheads is more than four times higher than that of any Western counterpart.

    The Russian leader has repeatedly brandished the nuclear sword after sending troops into Ukraine in February 2022 to try to deter the West from ramping up support for Ukraine.

    In this image made from video provided by Russian Defense Ministry Press Service on May 12, 2026, Russia’s new Sarmat intercontinental ballistic missile is test launched at an unspecified location in Russia. AP

    After overseeing a military parade on Red Square on Saturday commemorating the defeat of Nazi Germany in World War II, which for the first time in nearly two decades didn’t include heavy weapons, Putin declared the conflict in Ukraine is coming to an end.

    Since coming to power in 2000, Putin has overseen efforts to upgrade the Soviet-built components of the Russian nuclear triad – deploying hundreds of new, land-based intercontinental ballistic missiles, commissioning new nuclear submarines and modernizing nuclear-capable bombers.

    Russia’s effort to revamp its nuclear forces pushed the United States to launch a costly modernization of its arsenal.

    Nuclear arms pact expired

    The last remaining nuclear arms pact between Russia and the U.S. expired in February, leaving no caps on the world’s two largest atomic arsenals for the first time in more than a half-century and fueling fears of an unconstrained nuclear arms race.

    That same month, the U.S. and Russia agreed to reestablish formal, high-level military communications that were suspended in late 2021, prior to Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

    The Sarmat — designated “Satan II” by NATO — is meant to replace about 40 Soviet-built Voyevoda missiles. Its development began in 2011 and before now, the missile had only one known successful test and reportedly suffered a massive explosion during an abortive test in 2024. A satellite image analyzed by CBS News at the time showed a large crater and remnants of a possible explosion on a launchpad at Plesetsk Cosmodrome in northern Russia.

    The Sarmat is classified as a “heavy” ICBM and is capable of carrying up to 10 tons in payload, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies’ Missile Defense Project.

    Putin said Tuesday that the Sarmat — part of a slew of new weapons that Putin revealed in 2018, claiming they would render any prospective U.S. missile defenses useless — is as powerful as the Voyevoda but with a higher precision. It is capable of suborbital flight, he said, giving it a range of more than 21,700 miles and an extended capability to penetrate any prospective missile defenses.

    Moscow’s new weapons include the Avangard hypersonic glide vehicle, capable of flying 27 times faster than the speed of sound. The first vehicles have already entered service.

    Russia has also commissioned the new nuclear-capable Oreshnik intermediate-range ballistic missile, and used its conventionally-armed version twice to strike Ukraine. Oreshnik’s range of up to 3,100 miles makes it capable of reaching any target in Europe.

    Putin also announced Russia was in the “final stages” of the development of the nuclear-armed Poseidon underwater drone and the Burevestnik cruise missile powered by miniature atomic reactors. The Poseidon is designed to explode near enemy coastlines and cause a radioactive tsunami. The Burevestnik has virtually unlimited range thanks to nuclear propulsion, allowing it to loiter for days, circling air defenses and attacking from an unexpected direction.

    Putin has described those new weapons as part of a Russian response to the U.S. missile shield that Washington developed after its 2001 withdrawal from a Cold War-era U.S.-Soviet pact that limited missile defenses.

    Russian military planners have feared a missile shield could tempt Washington to launch a first strike that would knock out most of Moscow’s nuclear arsenal in hopes of intercepting a small number of surviving missiles fired in retaliation.

    “We were forced to consider ensuring our strategic security in the face of the new reality and the need to maintain a strategic balance of power and parity,” Putin said.

    The nuclear treaty that expired in February was a bilateral agreement between the U.S. and Russia, which have about 4,300 and 3,700 nuclear warheads respectively, according to the Federation of American Scientists.

    Meanwhile, the governments of the U.S. and Ukraine have drafted a memorandum outlining the terms of a potential new drone defense deal between the countries, three sources familiar with the matter told CBS News.

    Eleanor Watson contributed to this report.

  • 舒默支持共和党议员在未来政府停摆期间“自讨苦吃”的计划:“我会投票支持”


    2026年5月12日 美国东部时间下午4:18 / 福克斯新闻

    约翰·肯尼迪参议员的决议将暂停议员174,000美元年薪,直至政府停摆结束

    亚历克斯·米勒 福克斯新闻撰稿

    马伦抨击民主党人“鲁莽”的移民海关执法局言论 此前发生创纪录长时长国土安全部停摆

    国土安全部部长马克韦恩·马伦警告称,这场“历史性的”76天政府停摆已让美国国家安全机构难以恢复,并指责民主党人将边境拨款作为人质,以讨好极左翼基础选民。

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    参议院共和党人一项“让自身承受痛苦以阻止未来政府停摆”的赌博意外获得了支持者:参议院少数党领袖、纽约州民主党参议员查克·舒默。

    美国参议院将于周三就路易斯安那州共和党议员约翰·肯尼迪提出的决议进行投票,该决议将禁止议员在政府停摆期间领取薪水。共和党人希望借助这一手段,获得谈判筹码,阻止民主党在秋季再次导致政府停摆。

    而曾在过去一年带领民主党经历两次政府停摆的舒默,计划对此表示支持。

    参议院就新一轮痛苦杠杆策略展开审议 市场对新一轮政府停摆的担忧加剧

    2026年3月24日,华盛顿特区美国国会大厦参议院民主党午间会议后,参议院少数党领袖、纽约州民主党参议员查克·舒默与加州民主党参议员亚历克斯·帕迪拉、华盛顿州民主党参议员帕蒂·默里一同出席新闻发布会并发言。(亚历克斯·王/盖蒂图片社)

    “我会投票支持,”舒默说道,“我认为这项决议会获得大量支持。”

    肯尼迪的决议将指示参议院秘书暂停议员薪酬,直至政府停摆结束。普通参议员年薪为174,000美元,两党党鞭年薪则超过193,000美元。

    此外,该决议仅适用于参议院。不过,它要到11月中期选举后才会生效,一些共和党人担心,选民投票前,舒默和民主党会再次让政府停摆。

    肯尼迪推动暂停国会议员停摆期间薪酬的计划

    2026年3月11日,参议院多数党领袖、南达科他州共和党议员约翰·图恩在美国国会大厦参议院发表讲话并接受记者采访后返回办公室。(奇普·索莫德维利亚/盖蒂图片社)

    尽管如此,在舒默以及本周早些时候将该提案列入投票议程的参议院多数党领袖约翰·图恩的支持下,这项决议很可能会获得通过。

    这可能会降低议员们在未来几个月内再次让政府停摆的意愿——因为国会仍在应对日益频繁的政府停摆及其留下的烂摊子。

    最近一次部分政府停摆持续了76天,是美国历史上最长的一次,导火索是民主党要求对美国境内的移民执法行动实施严格改革。去年,民主党人拒绝为政府拨款,导致停摆43天,以此要求延长现已到期的奥巴马医改税收抵免政策。

    共和党人希望永远终结政府停摆 担忧民主党会故技重施

    共和党人目前正加速推进预算和解程序,以解决此前停摆遗留的遗留问题,并为移民海关执法局(ICE)和边境巡逻队提供未来三年半的资金支持。

    图恩指出,共和党人之所以选择这一方案,正是因为民主党拒绝为这些机构拨款,但他仍希望肯尼迪的决议能成为终结未来政府停摆的“灵丹妙药”。

    “如果我们通过这项法案,并将其适用于参议员,或许能为未来阻止参议院民主党再次导致政府停摆提供额外的激励,”图恩说道。

    亚历克斯·米勒是福克斯新闻数字频道记者,负责报道美国参议院事务。

    Schumer backs GOP’s plan to bring the pain during future shutdowns: ‘I’m going to vote for it’

    May 12, 2026 4:18pm EDT / Fox News

    Sen John Kennedy’s resolution would withhold lawmakers’ $174,000 salary until a shutdown is resolved

    By Alex Miller Fox News

    Mullin blasts Democrats’ ‘reckless’ ICE rhetoric after record-long DHS shutdown

    DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin warns that the ‘historic’ 76-day government shutdown has left the nation’s security agencies struggling to recover while accusing Democrats of holding border funding hostage to satisfy the far-left base.

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    Senate Republicans’ gamble to inflict pain on themselves to thwart future shutdowns just got an unlikely backer: Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

    The upper chamber is set to vote on Sen. John Kennedy’s, R-La., resolution on Wednesday that would prevent senators from getting a paycheck during a government shutdown. It’s a tool that Republicans hope will give them leverage in preventing Democrats from again shuttering the government in the fall.

    And Schumer, who has led Democrats through two shutdowns in the last year, plans to support it.

    SENATE WEIGHS NEW, PAINFUL LEVERAGE TACTIC AS FEARS OF ANOTHER GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN GROW

    Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., speaks during a news briefing with Sens. Alex Padilla, D-Calif., and Patty Murray, D-Wash., after a Senate Democratic luncheon at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on March 24, 2026.(Alex Wong/Getty Images)

    “I’m going to vote for it,” Schumer said. “And I think it has a lot of support.”

    Kennedy’s resolution would direct the Secretary of the Senate to withhold lawmakers’ pay until a shutdown is resolved. A rank-and-file senator earns $174,000 per year, while a leader of either party can earn over $193,000 per year.

    His resolution would only pertain to the Senate, too. However, it wouldn’t take effect until after the November midterm elections, and some Republicans fear that Schumer and Democrats will again shut the government down before voters hit the polls.

    KENNEDY PUSHES PLAN TO HALT CONGRESS PAY DURING GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN

    Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., returns to his office after speaking on the Senate floor and addressing reporters at the U.S. Capitol on March 11, 2026.(Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

    Still, with the blessing of Schumer and Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., who teed up the measure for a vote earlier this week, it’s likely to pass.

    That could lessen the desire of lawmakers to thrust the government into yet another shutdown in the next few months as Congress is still reeling from the growing frequency of closures, and the messes that they leave behind.

    The latest partial shutdown lasted 76 days, the longest in U.S. history, and was spurred by Democrats’ demands for stringent reforms to immigration operations in the country. Last year, Democrats refused to fund the government for 43 days in pursuit of an extension to now-expired Obamacare tax credits.

    REPUBLICANS EYE ENDING GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWNS FOREVER OVER FEARS DEMS WILL DO IT AGAIN

    Republicans are now sprinting through the budget reconciliation process to shore up loose ends from the previous shutdown and fund Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Border Patrol for the next three and a half years.

    Thune noted that the only reason Republicans turned to that option was because of Democrats’ refusal to fund those agencies, but still hoped that Kennedy’s resolution could be the silver bullet to put an end to shutdowns in the future.

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    “And if this — passing this and applying it to senators, maybe it will provide an additional incentive to prevent Senate Democrats in the future from shutting the government down again,” Thune said.

    Alex Miller is a writer for Fox News Digital covering the U.S. Senate.

  • 美国能源价格飙升推高多年来最严重通胀


    2026年5月12日 / 美国东部时间下午4:19 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻

    由伊朗战争引发的全球石油供应冲击正在严重打击美国驾车者和其他消费者,联邦最新数据清晰显示了这一点。

    4月消费者价格指数按年率飙升3.8%,为近三年来最快涨幅,其中能源价格上涨贡献了总通胀涨幅的40%。

    美国劳工部数据显示,上月汽油价格指数同比涨幅超过28%。包括汽油、取暖油和电力在内的整体能源成本上月同比上涨近18%。

    华尔街分析师指出,对于数百万劳动者而言,过去两个月的价格飙升意味着当前通胀增速已经超过了工资涨幅。

    “这清晰地表明了高油价正在挤压家庭实际工资,”惠誉评级首席经济学家布莱恩·库尔顿在一封电子邮件中表示,并警告称如果油价维持高位,在政府6月初发布下一份消费者价格指数报告时,整体通胀率可能突破4%。

    根据美国汽车协会(AAA)的数据,目前美国全国汽油均价为每加仑4.50美元,较战争爆发前上涨了超过1.50美元。美国能源信息署周二发布的预测显示,今年剩余时间全美零售汽油均价将为每加仑3.88美元,2027年将降至每加仑3.62美元。

    2月中东冲突爆发前,美国全国汽油均价略低于3美元。

    GasBuddy的石油专家帕特里克·德汉姆估计,自3月1日以来,美国民众因油价上涨在汽油上多花费了280亿美元,其中220亿美元的额外燃油成本直接源于伊朗战争。

    特朗普政府官员表示,他们预计中东冲突造成的石油流动中断将是暂时的,一旦原油供应恢复,美国汽油价格将迅速回落。

    “不过,4月消费者价格指数报告进一步证明,尽管存在这些 disruption,特朗普总统的长期经济议程仍在发挥作用:得益于总统的最惠国待遇和价格透明举措,药品和医院服务价格正在下降,同时数万亿美元的投资继续为制造业和建筑业工人带来强劲的实际工资增长,”白宫发言人库什·德赛在给哥伦比亚广播公司新闻的一份声明中说道。

    通胀影响超出燃油领域

    美国各地的电力价格也在大幅上涨,4月平均同比上涨6.1%。此次涨价正值科技公司竞相建设数据中心,以满足人工智能服务所需的海量能源需求。

    高盛集团分析师在近期一份报告中表示,他们预计数据中心热潮带来的电力需求增长将在未来两年推高通胀。

    机票价格是消费者感受到压力的另一个领域,消费者价格指数数据显示,4月机票价格同比上涨近21%。美国航空业贸易组织美国航空协会的数据显示,航空公司正在提高票价以抵消航空燃油成本上涨的压力,自战争爆发以来航空燃油价格已上涨超过1.50美元。

    由于伊朗战争推高了广泛应用于运输、航运和农业的柴油价格,消费者可能还会面临食品价格上涨。根据美国汽车协会的数据,周二柴油均价为每加仑5.64美元,仅比2022年6月的历史最高价低18美分。

    最新消费者价格指数数据显示,4月食品价格同比上涨3.2%。

    通胀未来走势如何?

    经济学家预计,随着战争的影响在经济中蔓延,未来几个月美国通胀率将进一步上升。

    “即便伊朗战争今日结束,其引发的经济危机余波也将持续数月甚至更久,从汽油到食品再到公用事业价格,”进步派智库世纪基金会访问资深研究员、前美国劳工部首席经济学家珍妮尔·琼斯在一封电子邮件中说道。

    安永咨询公司首席经济学家格雷戈里·达科认为,5月年度通胀率将超过4%,而剔除波动较大的食品和能源成本的核心通胀率将接近3%。4月核心通胀率为2.8%,略高于FactSet调查的经济学家此前预测的2.7%。

    随着通胀进一步偏离美联储设定的2%目标,许多经济学家现在预测美联储今年将完全不降息。

    编辑:阿兰·谢特

    Searing U.S. energy prices are driving the hottest inflation in years

    May 12, 2026 / 4:19 PM EDT / CBS News

    The global oil supply shock stemming from the Iran war is scorching U.S. motorists and other consumers, new federal data makes clear.

    Higher energy prices accounted for 40% of the total jump in inflation in April, when the Consumer Price Index surged at an annual rate of 3.8% — the fastest increase in nearly three years.

    The index for gasoline prices last month was up more than 28% from a year ago, the Department of Labor found. Overall energy costs — which includes gas, heating oil and electricity — last month rose nearly 18% from a year ago.

    For millions of workers, the spike in prices over the last two months means inflation is now outpacing wage growth, Wall Street analysts noted.

    “That is a very clear illustration of the impact that higher energy prices are having in squeezing households’ real wages,” Brian Coulton, chief economist at Fitch Ratings, said in an email, warning that headline inflation could top 4% by the time the government releases the next CPI report in early June if oil prices remain elevated.

    A gallon of gasoline around the country now costs an average of $4.50, up more than $1.50 since the war started, according to AAA. And in a forecast on Tuesday, the U.S. Energy Information Administration estimated that retail gas prices will average $3.88 per gallon over the rest of the year and $3.62 per gallon in 2027.

    Before the Middle East conflict erupted in February, the national average for a gallon of gas hovered just below $3.

    Patrick De Haan, a petroleum expert at GasBuddy, estimates that Americans have spent an additional $28 billion on gas since March 1 due to higher prices. Of that figure, he estimated that $22 billion in additional fuel costs stem directly from the Iran war.

    Trump administration officials have said they expect the disruption in oil flows due to the Middle East conflict to be temporary and that U.S. gas prices will quickly recede once crude supplies resume.

    “The April CPI report reinforces, however, that President Trump’s long-term economic agenda continues to deliver despite these disruptions: Drug and hospital services prices are declining thanks to the President’s Most-Favored-Nation and price transparency initiatives, while trillions in investments continue to drive robust real wage growth for manufacturing and construction workers,” White House spokesman Kush Desai said in a statement to CBS News.

    Pain beyond the pump

    Electricity prices around the U.S. also are shooting up, rising an average of 6.1% in April from a year ago. The increase comes as technology companies race to boot up data centers capable of supplying the vast amounts of energy needed to power AI services.

    In a recent report, Goldman Sachs analysts said they expect increased electricity demand from the data center boom to boost inflation over the next two years.

    Airfares are another area where consumers are feeling the sting, with ticket prices up nearly 21% in April from a year ago, the CPI data shows. Airlines are hiking their prices to absorb higher jet fuel costs, which are up by more than $1.50 since before the war started, according to data from Airlines for America, a trade association.

    Consumers could also see higher grocery prices as the Iran war drives up the cost of diesel, which is widely used in transportation, shipping and agriculture. Diesel averaged $5.64 a gallon on Tuesday, just 18 cents below its record high in June 2022, according to AAA.

    Food prices in April were up 3.2% from a year ago, according to the latest CPI data.

    Where could inflation go from here?

    Economists expect U.S. inflation to accelerate in the coming months as the impact from the war works its way through the economy.

    “Even if the war in Iran were to end today, the tail of the economic crisis it has created will last months or longer, from gasoline to food to utility prices,” Janelle Jones, visiting senior fellow at the progressive Century Foundation and former chief economist at the Department of Labor, said in an email.

    Gregory Daco, chief economist at EY-Parthenon, thinks the annual rate of inflation will surpass 4% in May, while core inflation (which strips out volatile food and energy costs) will approach 3%. Core inflation in April was 2.8%, just above the 2.7% predicted by economists polled by FactSet.

    With inflation drifting further from the Federal Reserve’s 2% target rate, many economists now predict the central bank won’t cut interest rates at all this year.

    Edited by Alain Sherter

  • 美国消费者金融保护局将在关闭总部一年多后要求员工返岗


    2026-05-12 20:51:24 GMT / 路透社

    作者:道格拉斯·吉利森
    2026年5月12日 美国东部时间晚上8:51 更新,距发稿已过去2小时

    image
    2025年2月20日,美国华盛顿,消费者金融保护局(CFPB)的名称和标识被从其办公大楼门上刮除。路透社/布莱恩·斯奈德 资料图

    华盛顿5月12日(路透社)——据三位知情人士透露,美国消费者金融监管机构的领导层计划在特朗普政府关闭其华盛顿总部并试图裁撤该机构员工一年多后,要求员工返回办公室办公。

    知情人士称,消费者金融保护局的返岗计划尚未向员工公布,具体时间仍未确定。

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    广告 · 下滑继续阅读

    据三位消息人士和另外两位了解办公占用情况的人士透露,该机构位于市中心的总部大楼目前部分被美国行政管理和预算局使用,该局局长罗素·沃特同时也兼任消费者金融保护局局长。

    三位知情人士表示,目前尚不清楚员工是否会被召回消费者金融保护局总部,也不确定这项强制返岗要求是否会覆盖华盛顿以外的机构员工。

    消费者金融保护局的代表周二未立即回应置评请求。正如路透社此前报道的那样,特朗普政府于2月取消了消费者金融保护局总部大楼的租约,并将该物业移交给了美国总务管理局。

    广告 · 下滑继续阅读

    在去年公开呼吁彻底撤销消费者金融保护局后,政府高层官员如今表示,他们已缩减了裁减该机构员工的计划。一名法官此前发布的临时禁令仍在生效,此前一家下级法院认定,特朗普政府计划在法律体系裁定该举措是否合法之前就将消费者金融保护局彻底解散。

    由于机构业务大幅缩减且未来不明,许多消费者金融保护局员工已经离职。该机构是2008年金融危机后设立的,旨在保护公众免受消费金融领域的掠夺性行为侵害。根据法庭文件,自特朗普政府上台以来,该机构的员工人数已减少约30%。

    包括唐纳德·特朗普总统在内的政府高层官员将消费者金融保护局描述为对自由企业的政治性负担,而民主党人和该机构的捍卫者则称,撤销该机构的举措是牺牲消费者利益向企业让利。

    道格拉斯·吉利森 华盛顿报道;丹尼尔·沃利斯 编辑

    本报守则:路透社信托原则

    US consumer finance agency to bring staff back to office year after closure

    2026-05-12 20:51:24 GMT / Reuters

    By Douglas Gillison

    May 12, 2026 8:51 PM UTC Updated 2 hours ago

    The name and logo for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CPFB) is seen scraped off the door of its building in Washington, D.C., U.S., February 20, 2025. REUTERS/Brian Snyder/File Photo

    WASHINGTON, May 12 (Reuters) – Leadership at the U.S. consumer finance watchdog plans to recall staff to the office more than a year after the Trump ​administration shuttered its Washington headquarters and tried to eliminate the workforce, according to ‌three people with knowledge of the matter.

    The return-to-office plan for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has not yet been announced to staff and timing remains uncertain, the people said.

    Make sense of the latest ESG trends affecting companies and governments with the Reuters Sustainable Switch newsletter. Sign up here.

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    The ​agency’s downtown headquarters are now partly occupied by the Office of ​Management and Budget, whose Director Russell Vought also leads the CFPB, ⁠the three sources and two others briefed on the occupancy said.

    It was ​unclear whether staff would be recalled to CFPB headquarters and whether the mandate ​would include agency staff based outside Washington, three of the people said.

    CFPB representatives did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Tuesday. The Trump administration in February canceled the ​lease on the CFPB’s headquarters and handed the property to the General ​Services Administration, as Reuters previously reported.

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    After calling for the CFPB’s outright elimination last year, top ‌administration ⁠officials now say they have scaled back plans to slash the agency’s workforce. A judge’s provisional order blocking this remains in place after a lower court previously found that the administration planned to wipe out the CFPB before the legal ​system could decide whether ​this was legal.

    With ⁠agency work sharply curtailed and its future uncertain, many CFPB employees have left the agency, which was created following ​the 2008 financial crash to protect the public from predatory ​practices ⁠in consumer finance. Headcount is down about 30% since the start of the Trump administration, according to court filings.

    Top administration officials including President Donald Trump have described ⁠the CFPB ​as a politicized burden on free enterprise, ​while Democrats and agency defenders have described efforts to eliminate it as a giveaway to corporations at ​the expense of consumers.

    Reporting by Douglas Gillison in Washington; Editing by Daniel Wallis

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

  • 新闻


    未提取到有效content值

    Taiwan watches Trump-Xi meeting for signs China will test US resolve

    2026-05-12 6:00pm EDT / Fox News

    Over the past week, more than 50 Chinese aircraft crossed the Taiwan Strait median line or entered its air defense identification zone

    By Eryk Michael Smith, Fox News

    Published May 12, 2026 6:00pm EDT | Updated May 12, 2026 6:01pm EDT

    Trump-Xi China summit: Taiwan reportedly fears ‘off-script’ policy shift amid military buildup

    Fox News contributor Michael Pillsbury discusses the upcoming Trump-Xi Jinping summit in Beijing. Taiwan reportedly fears Trump may go ‘off-script’ on its fate, while China pushes for it as a top priority. Pillsbury details the complex trade and security issues.

    NEW You can now listen to Fox News articles!

    Listen to this article

    6 min

    KAOHSIUNG, Taiwan:President Donald Trump’s meetings with communist China’s supreme leader Xi Jinping in Beijing will be keenly watched here in Taiwan, from the presidential office to military command centers and semiconductor company boardrooms. The key question many are asking is whether Trump negotiates with China from a position of strength, or leaves Taiwan exposed?

    The de facto independent nation of 23 million people has spent decades living under threat from the Chinese Communist Party, which claims Taiwan as its territory despite never having ruled it for even a day.

    Observers here warn that Xi may try to offer Trump a deal: cooperation on tariffs, fentanyl, U.S. business access, or global flashpoints like Iran and Ukraine in exchange for Trump accepting a larger Chinese role in Taiwan’s future.

    CHINA ORDERS FIRMS TO IGNORE US IRAN SANCTIONS, DARING US TO ENFORCE CRACKDOWN

    The PLA Navy and the PLA Army conduct a cross-day, all-factor live-fire red-blue confrontation drill in Zhangzhou City, Fujian Province, China, on Aug. 24, 2022.(CFOTO/Future Publishing/Getty Images)

    Taiwan’s Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Francois Wu recently told Bloomberg News, “What we are the most afraid is to put Taiwan on the menu of the talk between Xi Jinping and President Trump.”

    Huang Kwei-bo, a professor in National Chengchi University’s Department of Diplomacy, told Fox News Digital that Taiwan shouldn’t assume nothing will change. “Taiwan shouldn’t rule out the possibility that the United States and mainland China could reach an understanding behind the scenes, agreeing to reduce arms sales to Taiwan, or become less active in helping us meaningfully participate in international space,” he said.

    In comments on Monday, President Trump acknowledged China’s dislike of U.S. arms sales to Taiwan, and said the topic would be “one of the many things I’ll be talking about.”

    CHINA LAUNCHES LARGEST MILITARY DRILLS OFF TAIWAN IN 8 MONTHS WITH LIVE-FIRE EXERCISES CAUGHT ON CAMERA

    China launched rockets near Taiwan during live-fire drills as the People’s Liberation Army Eastern Theater Command surrounded the island with warships and aircraft amid rising tensions.(PLA Eastern Theater Command/Reuters)

    Over the past week, more than 50 communist Chinese aircraft crossed the Taiwan Strait median line or entered Taiwan’s air defense identification zone.

    Those numbers are not a dramatic new escalation. In Taiwan, they are increasingly seen as part of a new normal: a sustained pressure campaign that falls short of war but keeps Taiwan’s military on alert. China also intentionally damages the undersea cables that connect Taiwan to the internet, hacks into Taiwan’s computer systems daily, and floods social media with content that praises the communist party.

    FILE: In this undated file photo released by the Taiwan Ministry of Defense, a Chinese PLA J-16 fighter jet flies in an undisclosed location(Taiwan Ministry of Defense via AP)

    Taiwan’s semiconductor industry is a major concern for Washington. The island is home to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., or TSMC, the dominant producer of the world’s most advanced semiconductors. Those chips are used in smartphones, cars, artificial intelligence systems and U.S. defense technology. Any conflict or blockade that cuts Taiwan off from global markets would ripple through American factories, consumers, technology companies and military planning.

    However, as the leaders of the two nations most closely intertwined with Taiwan’s future meet, there is no outward sense of panic here.

    President Donald Trump and President Xi Jinping prepare for a key summit in May.(Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/Getty Images)

    “Most people here are not obsessed with China every day,” Audrey Chiang, who runs a tourist souvenir shop in Kaohsiung, told Fox News Digital. Chiang has a son who is just a few years away from serving one year as a military conscript, a 2024 response to China’s invasion threats. “We go to work. We worry about the next big test at our kids’ school. We complain about traffic. But everyone knows things can change very quickly.”

    Taiwan’s legislature on May 8 passed a near US$25 billion supplemental defense spending bill, meant in part to signal to Washington that Taipei isn’t simply depending on America to protect itself. But the package was smaller than the almost US$40 billion requested by Taiwan President Lai Ching-te’s administration.

    Taipei-based American political analyst, Ross Darrell Feingold, told Fox News Digital that many in Taiwan assume that the U.S., and possibly Japan, will come to the island’s defense in the event of a war. “Going back to the Cold War when the U.S. had a treaty obligation to defend Taiwan, and even after the treaty was abrogated, the consistent assumption is that the U.S. president will send in the military to save Taiwan. More recently, there is a growing assumption Japan will do so as well. But Taiwan still must do what is necessary to prove to its partners that Taiwan’s own people will be on the front line,” he said.

    The Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company fabrication plant in Phoenix, Arizona, on March 3, 2025. TSMC plans to invest an additional $100 billion in U.S. plants to increase chip production and support President Donald Trump’s goal of boosting domestic manufacturing.(Rebecca Noble/Bloomberg)

    CHINA PROMISES ‘COUNTERMEASURES’ TO US ARMS SALE TO TAIWAN

    Taiwan’s main political parties have major differences in their approaches to China, but broadly support U.S. arms purchases and agree that Beijing is a threat to democratic Taiwan.

    Chinese officials insist Taiwan’s status is an “internal affair.” Taiwan’s elected government rejects that, and so do most Taiwanese, who see Taiwan’s future as something only they should decide.

    National Pingtung University Associate Professor Paul Lee is among those who think Xi Jinping is going to push the U.S. president hard on Taiwan. Speaking by phone, he told Fox News Digital that “Xi Jinping almost certainly wants one clear change from the U.S., he’ll want Trump to say the United States ‘opposes Taiwan independence’ rather than the language it uses now that is closer to ‘does not support Taiwan independence.’ To be frank, I don’t think President Trump sees Taiwan as that important – except as the producer of the world’s most advanced semiconductors, and as a source of some revenue from weapons sales.” Lee notes that the difference between “doesn’t support” and “opposes” may not seem like much for Trump, but for Xi, it would be viewed as a major victory.”

    A procession of Taiwanese armed military vehicles patrols outside Songshan Airport in Taipei on Oct. 14, 2024, following China’s announcement of the Joint Sword-2024B military exercise encircling Taiwan.(Daniel Ceng/Anadolu)

    For Taiwan’s ruling party, and anyone in Taiwan who supports moves by Lai and his predecessor to establish at home and abroad that Taiwan is not part of China, such a change in language would come as a blow as it implies that the U.S. does not agree with the people of Taiwan having the right to self-determination on their future, Lee explained, and he said Xi Jinping wouldn’t be satisfied with Trump simply saying a few sentences.

    “Trump has roughly three years left on his second term, and Xi will want to ensure the ‘oppose independence’ language translates into a new framework with new rules such as not letting Taiwan President Lai transit through the U.S., as one example. Xi knows U.S. presidents come and go, so the goal is to create a tacit agreement that Taiwan is in the Chinese sphere of influence, he said.

    CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

    Chinese President Xi Jinping has instructed the Chinese Communist Party to assert influence for the country globally through a “United Front” strategy. He reviews troops during his inspection of the People’s Liberation Army garrison in the Macao Special Administrative Region on Dec. 20, 2024.(Li Gang/Xinhua via Getty Images)

    Lee said China has been patiently waiting for an opportune moment, and the war in Iran, tariffs and other issues facing President Trump is presenting exactly that.

    Lee said Taiwan’s government and academic community will closely scrutinize the official translations of what the two sides “agree” on. “Put simply,” Lee said, “if Xi Jinping agrees to help make things easier for Trump, Xi will not be satisfied with cryptically worded official press releases. He will want to see the beginning of a new U.S.-China framework for dealing with Taiwan.”

    Eryk Michael Smith is a Taiwan-based correspondent who since 2007, has worked both as a broadcast journalist for the island’s only English-language radio station, ICRT, as well as with numerous other publications and local news outlets. Smith’s journalism focuses on Taiwan-China relations, local politics, as well as science and technology developments in the greater China region. He is based in Taiwan’s largest southern city, Kaohsiung.He can be followed @ErykSmithTaiwan