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US, China agree to set up military-to-military channels, Hegseth says

Following the “historic” meeting between Donald Trump and Xi Jinping, the US defense secretary claims that the two countries have come to terms with setting up military-to-military channels to “deconflict and deescalate any problems.”

Pete Hegseth claimed that he and Dong Jun, the Chinese counterpart, made the decision after receiving a call the night before in a statement on X on Saturday.

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Beijing didn’t respond right away.

Hegseth claimed that the pair, who also met in Malaysia following the Trump-Xi summit in South Korea, “agree that our two great and strong countries’ peace, stability, and good relations are their best assets.”

He continued, “Admiral Dong and I both agreed that we should establish military-to-military channels to resolve any conflicts and defuse any issues that may arise.”

Experts have long advocated direct military ties between the two superpowers, whose naval bases are well-known in the Asia Pacific, claiming that using hotlines would prevent an unintentional escalation.

As tensions between the two countries continue to rise, these contacts have, however, remained unreliable.

The US-based Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) reported in May that, between 2017 and 2021, the majority of the more than 90 communication channels between the US and China remained active during Trump’s first term as president.

Under the administration of Joe Biden, the country’s then-president, when Nancy Pelosi, the then-speaker of the House of Representatives, visited Taiwan, the self-governing island that Beijing claims as its province, China cut off its ties to the US military in 2022.

In the tense South China Sea and Taiwan Strait, the development was followed by a number of close knuckles between the Chinese and US militaries.

In what the US military called an “unnecessarily aggressive maneuver,” a Chinese fighter jet was accused of crossing in front of a US surveillance flight over the South China Sea in May 2023. A Chinese Navy destroyer sailed across the path of a US destroyer in another “unsafe” maneuver days later, in June that year, according to the US military.

Beijing at the time claimed that the US was to blame and that its rival had purposefully “provoked risk” by sending ships close to its shores.

Following a meeting between Biden and Xi in November 2023, the two leaders agreed to resume high-level military-to-military communications.

Since Trump’s January, according to the CSIS, these communications have been “limited” since then, according to a report released in May. Additionally, Trump stepped up a trade war against Beijing, noting that neither the US nor China have any crisis management mechanisms, which further increases the likelihood of an escalated conflict.

Trump and Xi discussed ways to lower the temperature at their meeting in South Korea on October 30. One example is the US president’s reduction of the country’s tariffs from 57% to 47%.

Trump added that China had consented to maintain the flow of rare earth metals. However, no deal was made regarding the potential sale of Nvidia’s advanced semiconductor chips or the sale of TikTok to US investors.

Trump also stated that Xi would visit the US soon and that he would travel to China in April.

On the day after Trump-Xi summit, Hegseth met Dong, the head of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations’ summit in Malaysia.

In a post on X following the meeting, he wrote that “I stressed the importance of maintaining a balance of power in the Indo-Pacific and that the United States is concerned about China’s activities in the South China Sea, Taiwan, and toward its allies and partners in the Indo-Pacific.”

The United States “does not seek conflict,” he continued, “it will continue to veer fervently and ensure it has the resources to do so” in the region.

The Chinese Ministry of National Defense remarked that Dong had warned Hegseth that the unstoppable historical trend was resulting from China’s and Taiwan’s reunification, and that the US should use caution when speaking and acting about the Taiwan issue.

According to Dong, who was quoted as saying that China was unyielding its national security interests while pursuing peaceful development.

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US military kills three in another strike on Caribbean vessel

At least three men were killed on board the ship when the United States struck it once more in the Caribbean, according to Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth.

Hegseth claimed that the attack was carried out at the president’s request and that a vessel “was known by our intelligence to be involved in illicit narcotics smuggling” was the target of the attack in a post on X late on Saturday.

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He claimed that during the international-scale strike, there were “three male narco-terrorists” aboard the ship.

He continued, “All three were killed.”

Following another attack on Wednesday that left four people dead and a string of bombings that left 14 others dead on Monday, the attack on Saturday came to an end.

More than 62 people have died as a result of the operation, which started in early September, along with 14 boats and a semi-submersible.

The Trump administration has stated that the attacks are aimed at alleged drug trafficking, but it has not yet provided any proof to the public to back up its claims.

Critics have labeled the strikes an extrajudicial killing and a violation of international law, which largely forbids nations from using lethal military force against noncombatants outside of conflict zones.

In a statement released on Friday, the UN’s High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk referred to the attacks as “unacceptable” and “and their mounting human cost.”

Whatever the criminal conduct alleged against them, Turk urged the US to stop these attacks and take all necessary steps to stop extrajudicial killings of those aboard these ships.

The attacks take place in the wake of the US’s growing military presence in the Caribbean, which includes nuclear submarines, F-35 fighter jets, guided-missile destroyers, and thousands of soldiers.

The Ford carrier strike group has been given a task order by the Trump administration for the area, and it is scheduled to make its way to the Caribbean in the coming weeks.

Venezuela and Colombia have been in conflict as a result of the US campaign, with the country’s government denouncing the strikes as being against the country and illegal.

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has also accused Trump of attempting to change the country, an allegation that the US president has downplayed. He has strengthened his security measures and deployed tens of thousands of troops there.

Washington accused Maduro of having connections to organized crime and drug trafficking in August by offering a $50 million reward for information leading to his arrest.

Landslides in Kenya’s Rift Valley leave 21 dead, 30 others missing

At least 21 people have died and more than 1, 000 have been destroyed as a result of heavy rains that have caused landslides in the western Rift Valley region of Kenya, according to officials.

At least 25 people with “serious injuries” have been airlifted from Elgeyo-Marakwet County to the city of Eldoret for medical attention, according to Kenyan Cabinet Secretary for the Interior Kipchumba Murkomen, who spoke to X on Saturday. At least 30 are still missing.

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He stated that with the assistance of the police and the military, rescue efforts would resume on Sunday.

“The victims are getting ready to receive more food and non-food relief items,” the president said. He continued, “Military and police choppers are on standby to transport the items.”

Chesongoch, in western Kenya, in Elgeyo-Marakwet County, was hit by heavy rain overnight because of the country’s waning short rainy season.

Local Stephen Kittony reported to the Citizen Television station that he heard a deafening noise and that he and his children rushed out of their homes and scurried in different directions.

The Kenyan Red Cross distributed aerial images of the area that showed extensive flash flooding and massive mudslides.

It claimed to be coordinating rescue efforts with the government, including airstrikes for the injured.

In a statement on X, it stated that “access to some of the affected areas continues to be extremely challenging due to flooding and blocked routes.”

Trump to host Syria’s al-Sharaa for talks at White House, envoy says

According to Washington’s envoy to Damascus, Donald Trump will meet with Syria’s interim leader, Ahmad al-Sharaa, for talks on November 10 for what would be the first time a Syrian president has traveled to the US capital.

US envoy to Syria, Tom Barrack, announced to the Axios newspaper on Saturday that al-Sharaa is scheduled to sign a deal to join an international US-led coalition against the ISIL (ISIS) group during his visit.

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A Syrian source with knowledge of the situation, according to the Reuters news agency, claimed the trip was scheduled to take place within the next two weeks.

No previous Syrian president has made an official visit to Washington, according to the US State Department’s historical list of foreign leaders.

Al-Sharaa, who seized Bashar al-Assad’s rule in December, has been attempting to re-establish relations with international powers that had previously ruled Damascus.

In their first meeting in 25 years, he and Trump met in Saudi Arabia in May.

A Syria that is still adapting to life after more than 50 years of the Assad family’s rule was the subject of the meeting, which took place on the sidelines of Trump’s get-together with the Gulf Cooperation Council leaders.

Al-Sharaa also addressed the September UN General Assembly in New York.

On the sidelines of the Bahraini Manama Dialogue, Barrack, the US envoy to Syria, stated to reporters that the US had been trying to persuade Damascus to join the coalition it had led since 2014 to combat ISIL, an armed group that once held up about a third of Syria and Iraq between 2014 and 2017.

“We are trying to get everyone to be a partner in this alliance, which is very important for them,” Barrack said.

Al-Sharaa once oversaw al-Qaeda in Syria, but Osama bin Laden’s network was abandoned by his anti-Assad rebel group ten years ago, and he later clashed with ISIL.

Al-Sharaa once had a head-mounted $10 million US reward.

Before joining fighters fighting US forces in Iraq, al-Sharaa, also known as Abu Mohammed al-Julani, fought alongside him in the Syrian conflict. He was even held there for a number of years by US troops.

ISIL was driven out of its most recent stronghold in Syria in 2019 by the US-led coalition and its regional partners.

After Israel and Hamas began implementing a ceasefire and captives’ agreement earlier this month, Trump is urging Middle East allies to take advantage of the situation to create a lasting peace in the region. The two-year Israeli occupation of Gaza will be ended with a permanent resolution in that agreement.

The situation is still precarious despite the fragile ceasefire and captivity release agreement.

104 people were killed by Israeli airstrikes in Gaza earlier this week, according to the enclave’s health authorities. The strikes, the deadliest since the ceasefire’s initiation on October 10, presented the most significant challenge to the fragile truce to date.

In the meantime, Syria and Israel are negotiating a resolution that Damascus hopes will force Israel to stop its airstrikes and withdraw its troops from southern Syria.

Barrack previously stated to the Manama Dialogue that the US has been mediating de-escalation talks between Syria and Israel.

He claimed that an agreement between Syria and Israel was on the verge of completion, but he would not specify a date.

Syria and Israel have faced off in the Middle East for decades.