
-
Rangers hire two-time NHL champion Sullivan as coach
-
Haaland on bench for Man City as striker returns ahead of schedule
-
US designates two Haitian gangs as terror groups
-
Lower profits at US oil giants amid fall in crude prices
-
NBA icon Popovich stepping down as Spurs coach after 29 seasons
-
'Devastated' Prince Harry says no return to UK but seeks royal reconciliation
-
Grande scratched from Kentucky Derby
-
Carney vows to transform Canada economy to withstand Trump
-
Prince Harry says he would 'love' to reconcile with family
-
Major offshore quake causes tsunami scare in Chile, Argentina
-
GM cuts shift at Canada plant over 'evolving trade environment'
-
F1 extends deal to keep Miami GP until 2041
-
Popovich mixed toughness and spirit to make NBA history
-
US asks judge to break up Google's ad tech business
-
Trump eyes huge 'woke' cuts in budget blueprint
-
Ruud downs Cerundolo to book spot in Madrid Open final
-
Gregg Popovich stepping down as San Antonio Spurs coach after 29 seasons: team
-
Guardiola to take break from football when he leaves Man City
-
Vine escapes to Tour of Romandie 3rd stage win as Baudin keeps lead
-
Olympic 100m medalist Kerley arrested, out of Miami Grand Slam meet
-
Chile, Argentina order evacuations over post-quake tsunami threat
-
Arteta 'pain' as Arsenal fall short in Premier League title race
-
Hard-right romps across UK local elections slapping down main parties
-
US ends duty-free shipping loophole for low-cost goods from China
-
Renewables sceptic Peter Dutton aims for Australian PM's job
-
Australians vote in election swayed by inflation, Trump
-
Syria slams Israeli Damascus strike as 'dangerous escalation'
-
Grand Theft Auto VI release postponed to May 2026
-
Lawyers probe 'dire' conditions for Meta content moderators in Ghana
-
Maresca confident Chelsea can close gap to Liverpool
-
Watchdog accuses papal contenders of ignoring sex abuse
-
Berlin culture official quits after funding cut backlash
-
US hiring better than expected despite Trump uncertainty
-
EU fine: TikTok's latest setback
-
Stocks gain on US jobs data, tariff talks hopes
-
Barca's Ter Stegen to return from long lay-off for Valladolid trip
-
US hiring slows less than expected, unemployment unchanged
-
Man Utd must 'take risk' and rotate players as they target European glory: Amorim
-
Vatican chimney installed ahead of papal conclave
-
Toulouse's Ramos to miss Champions Cup semi with injury
-
Grand Theft Auto VI release postponed to May 2026: publisher
-
S.African mother found guilty of selling young daughter
-
EU wins post-Brexit fishing row with Britain
-
Activists say drones attacked aid boat bound for Gaza
-
Israel says struck near Syria presidential palace amid Druze clashes
-
Eurozone inflation holds above expectations in April
-
Orgies, murder and intrigue, the demons of the Holy See
-
'Deadly blockade' leaves Gaza aid work on verge of collapse: UN, Red Cross
-
Pakistani Kashmir orders stockpiling of food as India tensions flare
-
Stock markets gain as China mulls US tariff talks
CMSC | 0.38% | 22.115 | $ | |
CMSD | 0.38% | 22.345 | $ | |
JRI | 0.19% | 13.035 | $ | |
BCC | 3.72% | 96.295 | $ | |
BCE | -0.68% | 21.295 | $ | |
NGG | 0.07% | 71.7 | $ | |
RIO | 2.05% | 59.775 | $ | |
RBGPF | 6.26% | 67.21 | $ | |
SCS | 3.05% | 10.18 | $ | |
BTI | -0.29% | 43.175 | $ | |
GSK | 0.17% | 38.815 | $ | |
AZN | 2.68% | 72.455 | $ | |
RYCEF | 1.26% | 10.35 | $ | |
BP | 0.73% | 28.085 | $ | |
VOD | -0.88% | 9.645 | $ | |
RELX | 1.65% | 54.99 | $ |

US raid on IS leader boosts Biden's foreign policy stature
The daring US helicopter raid deep in Syria that ended in the death of one of the world's most wanted men gives Joe Biden the kind of dramatic military win presidents crave -- and one the Democrat particularly needed.
"A major terrorist threat to the world" was extinguished, Biden said Thursday, unveiling details of the death of "horrible" Islamic State leader Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurashi.
Facing simultaneously a showdown with Russia over Ukraine, a flurry of North Korean missile tests, an ever-diminishing window of opportunity to control Iran's nuclear program and Chinese sabre-rattling over Taiwan, Biden's foreign policy To Do list is daunting.
And Republican critics have worked hard to generate a narrative that Biden is weak, making the world a more dangerous place.
Biden's answer? Pictures of the devastated house in Syria's Idlib region, where Qurashi blew himself up, and a White House-issued photo of Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris in the Situation Room during the operation.
The raid, which saw no US losses, is "a strong message to terrorists around the world: We will come after you and find you," Biden said.
In the post-9/11 world, killing far-flung jihadist leaders has become almost an expected display of strength for presidents.
Under Barack Obama, Americans cheered the rivetting news in 2011 that Al-Qaeda founder Osama Bin Laden, the man behind the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States, had finally been killed by US special forces in Pakistan.
Donald Trump, who repeatedly claimed to be the greatest president on many fronts, was if anything even more triumphant after the 2019 US operation in Syria killing Qurashi's predecessor as head of the IS -- Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
In eyebrow-raising comments, Trump used a national address to describe how Baghdadi "died like a dog... in utter fear, in total panic and dread, terrified of the American forces bearing down on him."
Biden's record as commander in chief, until now, was associated mostly with the humiliating retreat from Afghanistan -- even if the White House argues that the chaos was unavoidable in exiting a failed, 20-year war.
Now he has a clearcut victory.
"This operation is testament to America's reach and capability," he said in his own address to the nation.
- Grudging applause -
Even Republicans who have been pounding Biden over Russia, Iran and China, could not avoid applauding the apparently textbook military strike carried out in the dead of night.
"Very good news," Senator Mitt Romney said.
"I really appreciate the counterterrorism operation," said Senator Lindsey Graham, although he tempered his appreciation by claiming the administration "is deaf, dumb and blind when it comes to the growing radical Islamic threats emerging from Afghanistan."
Biden will next have to return to the higher-stakes tussles with the likes of Moscow and Beijing, which critics say are exploiting signs of American indecision.
"Is it any surprise that Chinese planes are flying over Taiwan? Or that North Korea is testing missiles again? Or that Iran is ramping up its nuclear program? They all sense Biden's weakness," Nikki Haley, who served as UN ambassador under Trump, tweeted this week.
Biden, who has decades of foreign policy experience from his time in the Senate, lays out a very different picture.
On Ukraine, for example, he is sending US troops to bolster NATO forces in Europe and leading intensive diplomatic efforts to maintain Western unity against Russia, with threats of "devastating" sanctions, levied in coordination with EU powers, should Moscow launch an invasion.
But whatever he does is unlikely to get support from opponents in a brutally divided Washington.
On one side, Republican hawks are hammering Biden for not imposing preemptive sanctions against Russia. At another extreme, the right's isolationist wing is questioning why the United States should want to defend Ukraine from Russia at all.
Celia Belin, a researcher at the Brookings Institution think tank, said US foreign policy debates often revolve around a "trial of weakness" between hawks and leaders who want more gradual approaches.
Biden is doing a "pretty good job of balancing the competing demands," said Kori Schake, director of foreign policy studies at the right-leaning American Enterprise Institute.
O.Karlsson--AMWN