Killing of Hamas’s Political Leader in Tehran Spurs Fears of Broader Conflict, and Other Headlines of the Day

Killing of Hamas’s Political Leader in Tehran Spurs Fears of Broader Conflict, and Other Headlines of the Day

The Daily News Brief

July 31, 2024 9:55 am (EST)

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Welcome to today’s edition of the Daily News Brief, CFR’s flagship morning newsletter summarizing the top global news and analysis of the day. Written by Catherine Osborn and edited by Mariel Ferragamo, with support from Diana Roy.

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Top of the Agenda

Killing of Hamas’s Political Leader in Tehran Spurs Fears of Broader Conflict

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Hamas accused Israel of the overnight assassination of its political leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran, with the group’s military wing warning that his death will have major repercussions for the entire region and Iran vowing to retaliate. Israel did not claim responsibility for Haniyeh’s assassination, which came hours after it said it had struck a senior Hezbollah military leader in Beirut. Together, the events have fueled fears of further regional escalation between Israel and Iran-backed forces.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said today that Washington was not aware of or involved in the attack on Haniyeh, who was Hamas’s lead negotiator in ongoing talks with Israel over a potential cease-fire and hostage release deal in Gaza. Qatar, which had been playing a mediating role in those talks, called the killing a “heinous crime and dangerous escalation.” Haniyeh had been living in exile in Qatar but often traveled to his residence in Iran. “The best way to bring the temperature down everywhere is through the cease-fire in Gaza,” Blinken said in a televised interview today. (FT, NYT

ANALYSIS

“Iranian officials are in utter shock over assassination of Haniyeh, sources say, because it also delivers a huge blow to Iran’s security reputation at a time it wants to project power in the region,” the New York Times’ Farnaz Fassihi posts. 

“Iran does not want an all-out war. But Iran’s April 13 missile strikes [on Israel] had two lessons, both surprising to Israel. One: an accumulation of Israeli strikes, each individually tolerable, can cross red lines. Two: Iran’s risk tolerance [is] less predictable than it once was,” the Economist’s Shashank Joshi posts.

“The Israelis have just taken a significant strike at the so-called axis of resistance hitting Hezbollah, Hamas, and Iran in sequence. The U.S. has struck [Kata’ib Hezbollah] in Iraq. Cease-fire talks [are] in deep freeze. Regional war—something the Mideast has never seen—[is] not inevitable but odds have gone up,” the Carnegie Endowment’s Aaron David Miller posts.  

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Read the full suite of Foreign Affairs and CFR.org resources on Israel and the current conflict.

Americas

International Expert Group Says It Can’t Verify Venezuela Vote, Slams Lack of Transparency 

The U.S.-based Carter Center had a technical mission of seventeen experts in Venezuela during its Sunday election and said yesterday that electoral authorities’ failure to announce disaggregated results by polling station is “a serious breach of electoral principles,” adding that the vote “cannot be considered democratic.” Venezuela’s opposition says it has evidence that it won the vote. As nationwide demonstrations surged against the government’s announcement of its own victory, Venezuela’s attorney general said more than seven hundred demonstrators have been arrested. (AP)

For the Pressure Points blog, CFR expert Elliott Abrams asks whether President Nicolás Maduro can be negotiated out of Venezuela.

U.S./Mexico: Following a labor practices complaint filed under the U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade agreement, the Mexican government committed to ensuring carmaker Volkswagen provides full back pay and benefits to some workers and better protects their freedom of association and collective bargaining. (U.S. Department of Labor, Reuters)

Pacific Rim

Japan Raises Interest Rates for Second Time Since 2007

Today’s rate hike to 0.25 percent demonstrates the bank’s resurging confidence in Japan’s economic growth and concern about the weak value of the yen. Japan’s central bank had just increased rates in March for the first time since 2007. (Nikkei, NYT)

U.S./China/Russia: Beijing and Moscow criticized Washington’s claims to portions of the seabed floor at a meeting of the International Seabed Authority, saying they were not based in international law. The United States hasn’t ratified the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, which governs maritime zones around countries. Earlier this year, hundreds of former U.S. officials and military officers wrote to the U.S. Senate urging it to ratify the treaty. (Bloomberg, FT)  

South and Central Asia

Bangladesh Bans Main Islamic Party After Protests

The government announced it is banning the Jamaat-e-Islami party effective today following antigovernment protests across the country in recent weeks. The party called the decision “illegal, extrajudicial, and unconstitutional.” It had been essentially barred from running in elections since 2013 by a ruling that it countered Bangladesh’s secular constitution. (Dhaka Tribune, Reuters)

For the Asia Unbound blog, CFR expert Joshua Kurlantzick explains how Bangladesh’s protests expose deep-rooted political challenges

Sri Lanka: Ninety-two legislators out of the total 225 lawmakers in parliament said they are backing President Ranil Wickremesinghe’s reelection bid despite the country’s largest political party not officially endorsing him over disagreement about several of his policies. Polls open in September for the presidential seat. (The Hindu)

Middle East and North Africa

U.S. Forces Report Defensive Strike in Iraq

U.S. forces struck an area south of Baghdad yesterday where they detected fighters attempting to launch a drone attack, unnamed U.S. officials told ABC. The strike follows rocket launches last week toward an Iraqi air base housing U.S. forces. Iraq condemned yesterday’s attack, Washington’s first since February. The U.S. officials did not confirm any casualties. (ABC, Reuters)

Sub-Saharan Africa

Sudan’s Army Chief Survives Assassination Attempt, Army Says

Five people were killed in a drone attack on a military graduation ceremony in eastern Sudan today that was targeting army leader Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, an army spokesperson said. The spokesperson blamed the paramilitary group Rapid Support Forces (RSF), the Sudanese army’s opponent in the country’s ongoing civil war. The RSF did not immediately comment. (Sudan Tribune, BBC)

Angola/DRC/Rwanda: Angola’s presidency said that officials agreed in talks yesterday to a cease-fire in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) beginning August 4. The meeting included Congolese and Rwandan officials, but the statement did not make clear which groups were parties to the deal or how long a truce would last. DRC forces have been battling rebels in the area, and Rwanda has previously denied accusations that it backs the rebels. (Reuters) 

This timeline traces the conflict and legacy of intervention in the DRC

Europe

Wind and Solar Outpace Fossil Fuels in EU Power Generation in First Half of 2024

The first six months of 2024 was the first time for several member states where more electricity was generated from wind and solar sources combined than from fossil fuels, climate think tank Ember said. European Union (EU) power plants burned 24 percent less coal and 14 percent less natural gas during the first half of this year than in the same period last year. The EU has some of the world’s most ambitious renewable energy targets. (The Guardian)

Russia/Ukraine: Russia unleashed nearly ninety drones across Ukraine in an overnight attack, one of the largest waves of strikes since its 2022 invasion. Ukraine’s air defense forces said that more than thirty of the drones were shot down, and a Kyiv city official said none of the drones hit their targets. (FT)

This Expert Brief by CFR Fellow Thomas Graham explains what Russia’s President Vladimir Putin really wants in Ukraine

U.S. Campaign 2024

Former Trump Advisor Steps Down From Leading Project 2025

Paul Dans, previously a top advisor in former President Donald Trump’s administration, said yesterday he is stepping down as director of the Heritage Foundation’s policy initiative known as Project 2025 after it faced severe backlash from Democrats and Trump himself. While Trump has aimed to distance himself from the initiative in recent weeks, CNN tallied that at least 140 people who worked for the Trump administration had a role in the project. It includes pledges such as strict new immigration laws and reversing federal approval of an abortion pill. (CNN)

 

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Top Stories on CFR

Artificial Intelligence (AI)

Sign up to receive CFR President Mike Froman’s analysis on the most important foreign policy story of the week, delivered to your inbox every Friday afternoon. Subscribe to The World This Week. In the Middle East, Israel and Iran are engaged in what could be the most consequential conflict in the region since the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. CFR’s experts continue to cover all aspects of the evolving conflict on CFR.org. While the situation evolves, including the potential for direct U.S. involvement, it is worth touching on another recent development in the region which could have far-reaching consequences: the diffusion of cutting-edge U.S. artificial intelligence (AI) technology to leading Gulf powers. The defining feature of President Donald Trump’s foreign policy is his willingness to question and, in many cases, reject the prevailing consensus on matters ranging from European security to trade. His approach to AI policy is no exception. Less than six months into his second term, Trump is set to fundamentally rewrite the United States’ international AI strategy in ways that could influence the balance of global power for decades to come. In February, at the Artificial Intelligence Action Summit in Paris, Vice President JD Vance delivered a rousing speech at the Grand Palais, and made it clear that the Trump administration planned to abandon the Biden administration’s safety-centric approach to AI governance in favor of a laissez-faire regulatory regime. “The AI future is not going to be won by hand-wringing about safety,” Vance said. “It will be won by building—from reliable power plants to the manufacturing facilities that can produce the chips of the future.” And as Trump’s AI czar David Sacks put it, “Washington wants to control things, the bureaucracy wants to control things. That’s not a winning formula for technology development. We’ve got to let the private sector cook.” The accelerationist thrust of Vance and Sacks’s remarks is manifesting on a global scale. Last month, during Trump’s tour of the Middle East, the United States announced a series of deals to permit the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Saudi Arabia to import huge quantities (potentially over one million units) of advanced AI chips to be housed in massive new data centers that will serve U.S. and Gulf AI firms that are training and operating cutting-edge models. These imports were made possible by the Trump administration’s decision to scrap a Biden administration executive order that capped chip exports to geopolitical swing states in the Gulf and beyond, and which represents the most significant proliferation of AI capabilities outside the United States and China to date. The recipe for building and operating cutting-edge AI models has a few key raw ingredients: training data, algorithms (the governing logic of AI models like ChatGPT), advanced chips like Graphics Processing Units (GPUs) or Tensor Processing Units (TPUs)—and massive, power-hungry data centers filled with advanced chips.  Today, the United States maintains a monopoly of only one of these inputs: advanced semiconductors, and more specifically, the design of advanced semiconductors—a field in which U.S. tech giants like Nvidia and AMD, remain far ahead of their global competitors. To weaponize this chokepoint, the first Trump administration and the Biden administration placed a series of ever-stricter export controls on the sale of advanced U.S.-designed AI chips to countries of concern, including China.  The semiconductor export control regime culminated in the final days of the Biden administration with the rollout of the Framework for Artificial Intelligence Diffusion, more commonly known as the AI diffusion rule—a comprehensive global framework for limiting the proliferation of advanced semiconductors. The rule sorted the world into three camps. Tier 1 countries, including core U.S. allies such as Australia, Japan, and the United Kingdom, were exempt from restrictions, whereas tier 3 countries, such as Russia, China, and Iran, were subject to the extremely stringent controls. The core controversy of the diffusion rule stemmed from the tier 2 bucket, which included some 150 countries including India, Mexico, Israel, Switzerland, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. Many tier 2 states, particularly Gulf powers with deep economic and military ties to the United States, were furious.  The rule wasn’t just a matter of how many chips could be imported and by whom. It refashioned how the United States could steer the distribution of computing resources, including the regulation and real-time monitoring of their deployment abroad and the terms by which the technologies can be shared with third parties. Proponents of the restrictions pointed to the need to limit geopolitical swing states’ access to leading AI capabilities and to prevent Chinese, Russian, and other adversarial actors from accessing powerful AI chips by contracting cloud service providers in these swing states.  However, critics of the rule, including leading AI model developers and cloud service providers, claimed that the constraints would stifle U.S. innovation and incentivize tier 2 countries to adopt Chinese AI infrastructure. Moreover, critics argued that with domestic capital expenditures on AI development and infrastructure running into the hundreds of billions of dollars in 2025 alone, fresh capital and scale-up opportunities in the Gulf and beyond represented the most viable option for expanding the U.S. AI ecosystem. This hypothesis is about to be tested in real time. In May, the Trump administration killed the diffusion rule, days before it would have been set into motion, in part to facilitate the export of these cutting-edge chips abroad to the Gulf powers. This represents a fundamental pivot for AI policy, but potentially also in the logic of U.S. grand strategy vis-à-vis China. The most recent era of great power competition, the Cold War, was fundamentally bipolar and the United States leaned heavily on the principle of non-proliferation, particularly in the nuclear domain, to limit the possibility of new entrants. We are now playing by a new set of rules where the diffusion of U.S. technology—and an effort to box out Chinese technology—is of paramount importance. Perhaps maintaining and expanding the United States’ global market share in key AI chokepoint technologies will deny China the scale it needs to outcompete the United States—but it also introduces the risk of U.S. chips falling into the wrong hands via transhipment, smuggling, and other means, or being co-opted by authoritarian regimes for malign purposes.  Such risks are not illusory: there is already ample evidence of Chinese firms using shell entities to access leading-edge U.S. chips through cloud service providers in Southeast Asia. And Chinese firms, including Huawei, were important vendors for leading Gulf AI firms, including the UAE’s G-42, until the U.S. government forced the firm to divest its Chinese hardware as a condition for receiving a strategic investment from Microsoft in 2024. In the United States, the ability to build new data centers is severely constrained by complex permitting processes and limited capacity to bring new power to the grid. What the Gulf countries lack in terms of semiconductor prowess and AI talent, they make up for with abundant capital, energy, and accommodating regulations. The Gulf countries are well-positioned for massive AI infrastructure buildouts. The question is simply, using whose technology—American or Chinese—and on what terms? In Saudi Arabia and the UAE, it will be American technology for now. The question remains whether the diffusion of the most powerful dual-use technologies of our day will bind foreign users to the United States and what impact it will have on the global balance of power.  We welcome your feedback on this column. Let me know what foreign policy issues you’d like me to address next by replying to [email protected].

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