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Ray Dalio warns that the global rule-based order is already ‘gone,’ toppled by America’s debt crisis and raw power – Let’s be realistic

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Bridgewater Associates founder Ray Dalio, speaking to Fortune‘s Kamal Ahmed at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, issued a stark warning to global leaders and business executives: Stop pretending the old rules still apply. In a candid assessment of the current geopolitical landscape, Dalio argued the fate of the post-World War II global order—much debated amid President Donald Trump’s pursuit of Greenland and unsettling of the NATO alliance—is a moot point.

“Let’s not be naive and say, ‘Oh, we’re breaking the rule-based system,’” Dalio said. “It’s gone.”

The billionaire founder of the largest hedge fund in history added that as a student of financial history, he pays close attention to the economic cycles of the last 500 years and sees cycles repeat themselves over time.

“And what I learned through that exercise is the same thing happens over and over again,” he said. “And it’s like a movie for me. It’s like watching the same movie happen.”

According to Dalio, five specific forces interact to drive the movie plot forward, with the “money-debt cycle” serving as the MacGuffin that kicks things off. The roots of the current instability, Dalio explained, lie in the monetary decisions made during the past several decades. Since 1971, when the U.S. under President Richard Nixon broke the dollar’s link to gold, Dalio notes, governments have consistently chosen to “print money” rather than allow debt crises to naturally play out. This behavior occurs when debt-service payments rise faster than incomes, squeezing spending. After more than half a century of this, he argued, repeating a consistent warning in his public remarks on the subject, the world is now witnessing a “breakdown of the monetary order,” evidenced by central banks altering their reserves and buying gold.

The previous day, Dalio had said in an appearance on CNBC’s “Squawk Box,” from the sidelines of the annual meeting in Davos, fiat currencies and debt as a storehouse of wealth were “not being held by central banks in the same way” anymore. He pointed to a decoupling in which the U.S. markets have underperformed foreign markets in specific metrics, a trend visible in the changing balance sheets of global central banks.

The core of Dalio’s concern lies in the transition from trade disputes to what he terms “capital wars.” He alluded to how U.S. Treasury bonds were the bedrock of global reserves for decades, but now, Dalio said the sheer supply of debt being produced by the U.S. is colliding with a shrinking global appetite to hold it.

“There’s a supply-demand issue,” Dalio noted, adding “you can’t ignore the possibility that … maybe there’s not the same inclination to buy U.S. debt.”

This reluctance is driven by geopolitical friction. According to Dalio, in times of international conflict, “even allies do not want to hold each other’s debt,” preferring instead to move capital into hard currencies. This shift forces the issuer of the debt to monetize it, a phenomenon Dalio summarized bluntly: “We’re increasingly buying our own money. That’s… the lesson of all this.”

As Dalio was speaking on Monday, markets weathered a global selloff as they digested the revelation that President Donald Trump was demanding U.S. possession of Greenland in revenge for not getting the Nobel Peace Prize in 2025. He had texted the Prime Minister of Norway Jonas Gahr Støre in anger about this, according to confirmed reports over the weekend, even though the Nobel Prize committee is separately operated from the government of Norway. But Dalio’s Tuesday remarks came amid calmer markets, as Trump reiterated his request for Greenland but clarified he would not authorize use of force to acquire it.

This economic instability feeds directly into the collapse of political norms, Dalio told Fortune on Wednesday. He argued the multilateral world order established in 1945—characterized by institutions such as the United Nations and the World Trade Organization—was arguably a “naive system” from the start, as it relied on representation without guaranteed enforcement.

“What happens when the leading power doesn’t want to abide by the vote?” Dalio asked. “Do you really expect that there’s going to be a United Nations vote or a World Court that’s going to resolve these things?”

The result, he argued, is a definitive shift from a multilateral system to a unilateral one. Dalio posited the central question of our time has become: “Who makes the rules, who enforces the rules, and how are you going to deal with that?”

Perhaps the most chilling aspect of Dalio’s analysis is the erosion of legal authority in favor of brute force. “Power matters more” than the law, he told Fortune, noting conflicts are increasingly decided by who controls the military, the police, and the National Guard. This trend is visible not only internationally but within nations, where democracy is threatened by populism and a growing belief the system is corrupt.

When asked if this rupture should strike fear into corporate boards and CEOs who have long relied on stable global rules, Dalio responded ignoring the truth is far more dangerous.

“I think what always scares me is the lack of realism,” he said.

Dalio advised leaders to stop relying on a dissolving rule-based system and instead focus on “jurisdiction questions,” seeking out places where people are “like-minded” and mutually supportive. Whether dealing with international boundaries or domestic regulations, Dalio insists businesses must now face the hard reality the era of assured legal protection is ending.

“Will law prevail?” Dalio asked. “Internationally, everybody is having to deal with that question.”

As confidence in institutions, the law itself, and fiat-denominated debt erodes, Dalio highlighted to CNBC the quiet but significant resurgence of gold. He emphasized gold should not be viewed merely as a speculative asset but as “the second-largest reserve currency” in the world. He noted in the previous year, gold was the “biggest market to move,” and it performed far better than tech stocks as central banks diversified their holdings. JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon had similar remarks in an interview with Fortune at the Most Powerful Women conference in October, when he said for the first time in his life, it had become “semi-rational” to have gold in your portfolio.

However, Dalio’s outlook was not entirely defensive. He said he sees the current era as a bifurcation between the decaying monetary order and a “wonderful technological revolution,” echoing Trump’s remarks onstage earlier that day about the “economic miracle” taking place. In that regard, at least, might may end up making right.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

Tickets for the 2026 European Championships Swimming Portion Available for Purchase Starting Friday

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Tickets for the swimming portion of the 2026 European Championships, scheduled for August 10-16, are set to go on sale Friday, January 23, at 2:00 pm French time. This initial release covers swimming, artistic swimming, and diving, with tickets for open water swimming and high diving to be released at a later date.

The official ticketing page for the competition is available here.

During the week, swimming heats range from €23 to €44 depending on your seating category, while evening finals run €46 to €91. Weekend sessions cost more: heats are priced between €27 and €53, with finals ranging from €56 to €109.

In addition to standard seating, reduced-visibility tickets are available at lower prices. These seats are priced by session rather than location: €20 for weekday heats, €40 for weekday finals, €23 for weekend heats, and €48 for weekend finals.

See the prices for each sport below, along with euro to US dollar conversions for swimming tickets.

 

 

 

 

 

                            PRICING CONVERSIONS

Session Type Category 1 Category 2 Category 3 Reduced Visibility
Weekday Heats €44 ($51.47) €31 ($36.27) €23 ($26.91) €20 ($23.40)
Weekday Finals €91 ($106.46) €64 ($74.89) €46 ($53.83) €40 ($46.81)
Weekend Heats €53 ($62.02) €38 ($44.47) €27 ($31.59) €23 ($26.91)
Weekend Finals €109 ($127.56) €77 ($90.11) €56 ($65.53) €48 ($56.17)

Pool swimming will be held at the Paris Olympic Aquatic Centre, which was the only new, permanent venue built for the Paris 2024 Olympics. The facility had a capacity of 5,000 for the Olympics, which was reduced to 2,500 post-Games. It hosted diving, water polo, and artistic swimming competitions during the Olympic Games, with pool swimming being hosted in La Defense Arena, which has since returned to its primary function as an indoor rugby and concert venue.

The 2026 event will mark the third time France has hosted the European Aquatics Championships and the second time Paris has been the hub city. Paris hosted the third edition in 1931, and then in 1987, the eastern French city of Strasbourg hosted the event.

The competition will encompass five of the six traditional aquatics disciplines, with water polo holding a separate championship since 1997. The 2026 edition is currently underway in Belgrade, Serbia.

The meet schedule has pool swimming in the back-half of the meet schedule, which breaks from the pattern of the last decade where in these inter-Olympic editions (aka non-Olympic years) have led off with swimming.

FULL COMPETITION SCHEDULE

  • Artistic Swimming: July 31-August 5
  • Diving: July 31-August 6
  • Open Water Swimming: August 4-August 8
  • Swimming: August 10-August 16
  • High Diving: TBD

This later timing is strategic, though, as it will avoid a direct conflict with the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, which are being held in an abbreviated format and timeline from July 23-August 2. Pool swimming is the only overlapping discipline between the two events after diving was left off the schedule for the first time in the event’s history.

Glasgow and Paris are only 2 hours apart by plane, and Paris time is only 1 hour later than Glasgow. The primary European nation that participates in the Commonwealth Games is the United Kingdom (and its various subsidiary parts like England, Scotland, and Wales). Cyprus and Malta also participate in both events.

Sky Lounge in MVRDV’s Striking Dubai Skyscraper Resembles a Jewel

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How do you stand out in a skyscraper-packed city like Dubai? Well, you can either build really big – or you can build eye-catching. MVRDV opted for the latter with its Inaura tower, which will be defined by a luminous, jewel-like orb nestled between the building’s upper floors.

Inaura is slated for Downtown Dubai and will be oriented to be visible from – and offer excellent views of – the nearby Burj Khalifa, which is currently the world’s tallest building.

Inaura will rise to a height of 210 m (689 ft) in Downtown Dubai

The Boundary

The skyscraper will rise to 210 m (689 ft), which isn’t an inconsiderable height, but is nowhere near the massive Dubai buildings like the Burj Khalifa mentioned and the Tiger Sky Tower. It will feature a relatively understated rectangular glass form, which is enlivened by a banded facade with wraparound balconies, as well as that glowing orb, which doubles as a dramatic Sky Lounge.

“In its rapid rise to become a globally renowned high-rise city, Dubai has not lacked for attention-grabbing spectacle buildings,” says the studio. “From fanciful, contorted shapes to intricately detailed crowns, many projects have sought to make their mark in a skyline dominated by the world’s tallest building, to varying degrees of success. As part of their brief, developer Arada considered the site’s context, including its strategic position in between Downtown Dubai and Business Bay, and the resulting visibility in the city. Among their design requirements, they therefore posed the question: ‘How might an iconic tower be designed within the context of one of the most renowned skylines in the world?'”

Most of the interior floorspace will be given over to apartments, including nine luxurious “Sky Villas,” plus there will be a hotel. Amenities include a restaurant, a gym, an infinity pool and an exclusive spa.

Inaura will be oriented to maximize views of the nearby Burj Khalifa, which is the world's tallest building
Inaura will be oriented to maximize views of the nearby Burj Khalifa, which is the world’s tallest building

The Boundary

We’ve no word yet on when this one is expected to be completed. It comes during a big week for eye-catching Dubai skyscrapers and follows Mercedes-Benz’s plan for a dozen towers in the Emirate, while in neighboring Saudi Arabia, the world’s next-tallest building races towards completion.

Source: MVRDV

Newsom Slams World Leaders as ‘Weak’ for Bowing to Trump

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new video loaded: Newsom Calls World Leaders ‘Pathetic’ for ‘Rolling Over’ to Trump

transcript

transcript

Newsom Calls World Leaders ‘Pathetic’ for ‘Rolling Over’ to Trump

Gov. Gavin Newsom of California told world leaders to “stop being complicit” and to “have a backbone” in dealing with President Trump and his threats to Greenland.

“It’s time to buck up. It’s time to get serious and stop being complicit. It’s time to stand tall and firm. Have a backbone. You know, it’s — I’ve seen this in the United States. The supine Congress playing both sides, you know, say one thing on a text or tweet and another publicly. It’s time to have principle. It’s time to stand tall.” Reporter: “When you say standing tall, what do you mean?” “Just, I can’t take this complicity. People rolling over. I should have brought a bunch of kneepads for all the world leaders. I mean, handing out crowns and handing — I mean, this is pathetic. Nobel Prizes that are being given away. I mean, it’s just pathetic. This guy is playing folks for fools, and it’s embarrassing.” Reporter: “Europeans think this is diplomacy and this will ultimately work.” “Oh, this is diplomacy with Donald Trump? He’s a T. Rex. You mate with him or he devours you, one or the other.”

Gov. Gavin Newsom of California told world leaders to “stop being complicit” and to “have a backbone” in dealing with President Trump and his threats to Greenland.

By Axel Boada

January 21, 2026

Melanie Geiger appointed as Director at Atlantic Records Germany

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Warner Music Central Europe has named Melanie Geiger as the new Director of Atlantic Records Germany.

Geiger takes over the leadership of the label with immediate effect, succeeding Tun Schumacher, who departs the company by “mutual agreement,” according to a press release.

Geiger is a nine-year veteran of Warner Music.

Following various roles within the company, she was appointed Head of Hip-Hop at ADA, Warner’s independent distribution and label services arm, in 2024, before being promoted to Director of Distribution Services Hip-Hop in 2025.

During her tenure in Warner’s distribution and services divisions, Geiger signed artists, including Azet x Dardan, Lucio101, and Nimo, while collaborated with artists such as Ayliva, Bausa, Farid Bang, Katja Krasavice, Summer Cem, 01099, and others.

Commenting on the appointment, Niels Walboomers, President, Recorded Music & Publishing, Warner Music Central Europe, said: “With Melanie Geiger, we have found the ideal person.”

“After almost ten years at Warner Music, she is the perfect choice to consistently develop the ambitions of the global brand Atlantic Records in the German market.”

Niels Walboomers, Warner Music

He added: “She combines cultural relevance with an instinctive feel for new talent. After almost ten years at Warner Music, she is the perfect choice to consistently develop the ambitions of the global brand Atlantic Records in the German market.”

Atlantic Records Germany was launched in late 2021 as a creative hub based in Berlin-Kreuzberg, initially focusing on the country’s burgeoning underground rap and hip-hop scenes. Its current roster includes artists such as Yung Hurn, Stickle, and Charlize.

“Our goal is to present an even stronger, unified front. To achieve this, we are combining our frontline and distribution operations under one roof and offering maximum flexibility.”

Melanie Geiger

“For me, Atlantic Records is a label that deeply understands cultural trends in hip-hop, urban, and pop music,” added Geiger.

“Our goal is to present an even stronger, unified front. To achieve this, we are combining our frontline and distribution operations under one roof and offering maximum flexibility. I look forward to opening the next chapter of Atlantic Records Germany together with the team and our artists.”

The leadership change at Atlantic Records Germany follows a period of significant structural reorganization within Warner Music Group’s European operations.


In October 2025, Music Business Worldwide reported on a major shakeup at Warner Music Central Europe, which saw the departure of long-serving Co-Presidents Doreen Schimk and Fabian Drebes. Following their exit, the division was expanded to merge Warner’s businesses in the Benelux region with those in Germany, Switzerland, and Austria (GSA).

The consolidated region is now led by Niels Walboomers, who previously headed Spinnin’ Records and Warner Music Benelux.Music Business Worldwide

Seven maps showcasing Greenland’s strategic importance: The reasons behind Trump’s interest in the island | Maps News

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US President Donald Trump is in Davos, Switzerland, to attend the annual gathering of the World Economic Forum (WEF), where the issue of Greenland will be front and centre.

Trump’s long-running fixation on acquiring Greenland, an autonomous territory of NATO member Denmark, has escalated into a transatlantic imbroglio, with threats of sweeping new tariffs and even taking Greenland by military force rattling stock markets.

Speaking at a White House media briefing on Tuesday to mark one year since his second-term inauguration, he said Greenland was “imperative for national and world security”.

He warned the United Kingdom, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the Netherlands, and Finland that they will face 10 percent tariffs on all goods from February 1, rising to 25 percent by June, unless they back his proposed takeover of the Danish autonomous territory. It comes as European leaders meeting in Davos warn the dispute risks a trade war and a rupture in the NATO alliance.

Where is Greenland?

Greenland is the world’s largest island, located mostly within the Arctic Circle between the Arctic and Atlantic oceans. Geographically, it is part of North America, lying northeast of Canada and west of Iceland, but politically it is an autonomous territory within the Kingdom of Denmark.

Approximately 80 percent of Greenland is covered by the Greenland ice sheet, the second-largest body of ice on Earth. Because the interior is largely uninhabitable, most of Greenland’s population lives along the coastline. The capital city, Nuuk, located on the southwest coast, is Greenland’s largest city, home to about one-third of the island’s roughly 56,000 residents.

(Al Jazeera)

Countries in the Arctic Circle

The Arctic Circle is an imaginary line at 66.5 degrees north that includes the North Pole, the northernmost point on Earth.

Eight countries, including Canada, Finland, Greenland, Iceland, Norway, Russia, Sweden and the United States, have land lying within this region.
INTERACTIVE-GREENLAND - Countries in the Arctic Circle - JAN 21, 2026-1768987632
Some Arctic countries are closer to each other than many people realise.

Greenland’s closest neighbour is Canada, and at its narrowest point, between the Nares Strait, the two countries are only 26km (16 miles) apart. Canada and Greenland also technically share a land border, having settled a decades-long dispute over Hans Island, a small rock in the strait, by dividing it in half.

Russia and the US are also neighbours, with Alaska and Russia separated by the Bering Strait, which is about 85km (53 miles) at its narrowest point – a distance similar to that between New York City and New Jersey.

In fact, when you count the Diomede Islands located within the Bering Strait, Russia and the United States are less than 4km (2.4 miles) apart. These small, rocky islands consist of Big Diomede, which belongs to Russia and hosts a weather station, and Little Diomede, part of Alaska. The islands are separated by the International Date Line, creating a 21-hour time difference and marking the boundary between North America and Asia.

How big is Greenland?

On some map projections, which enlarge landmasses near the poles, Greenland appears much bigger than it really is.

In reality, the Arctic island covers 2.17 million square kilometres (836,330 square miles), making it roughly three times the size of the US state of Texas, or about the same size as Saudi Arabia, Mexico or the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

INTERACTIVE - How big is Greenland-jan8-2025 (1)-1736336584
(Al Jazeera)

Arctic shipping routes

Most of the Arctic is divided into exclusive economic zones (EEZ) extending 200 nautical miles (370km) from the territorial waters of states and where they have jurisdiction over natural resources.

According to data from Arctic Ship Traffic Data, the number of ships operating in the Arctic has increased 37 percent between 2013 and 2023, driven by melting ice and expanding economic opportunities in the region.

There are three main shipping routes in the Arctic, connecting the Atlantic and Pacific:

  • The Northern Sea Route (NSR)/Northeast Passage runs along the Arctic coast of Russia and could cut maritime travel between East Asia and Western Europe by 10-15 days compared with travelling via the Suez Canal. In Soviet Russia, the route was used for military supplies and extraction of resources in the Arctic. Now Russia uses it to transport liquified natural gas (LNG).
  • The Northwest Passage (NWP) crosses Canada’s Arctic Ocean and could cut maritime vessel journeys between East Asia and Europe by 10 days compared with vessels travelling via the Panama Canal.
  • The Transpolar Sea Route (TSR) goes from the centre of the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean and is a direct route via the North Pole. While this route avoids the territorial waters of Arctic states, it is rarely used due to the presence of permanent sea ice. Due to melting ice caps, it is predicted that this sea route may be fully open to vessels by the 2050s, potentially even sooner with high-strength icebreakers.
    INTERACTIVE-GREENLAND - Arctic shipping routes - JAN 21, 2026-1768987630

What is the military presence in the Arctic?

Greenland has one major permanent US base, the Pituffik Space Base, and several smaller Danish military facilities.

Pituffik Space Base, formerly known as Thule Air Base, is located in the northwest corner of the island. It supports missile warning, missile defence and space surveillance missions and satellite command and control. It is strategically positioned to counter Russian activities in the Arctic.

About 650 personnel are stationed at the base, including US Air Force and Space Force members, as well as Canadian, Danish and Greenlandic civilian contractors. Under a 1951 agreement with Denmark, the US is permitted to establish and maintain military facilities in Greenland as part of mutual defence within the NATO framework.

The North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD), a US-Canadian joint military organisation, also operates systems from Pituffik in the form of a Ballistic Missile Early Warning System (BMEWS) for the organisation’s space surveillance.

In Alaska, NORAD controls the Clear Space Force Station, equipped with missile warning, defence and space awareness capabilities. The US also implements forward operating locations – temporary military airfields and radar stations – in Alaska, which are used to extend US defence and response.

INTERACTIVE-GREENLAND - Military bases in the Arctic - JAN 21, 2026-1768987635Denmark manages the defence of Greenland through the Joint Arctic Command (JAC) with its headquarters in the capital, Nuuk. The base’s main tasks are surveillance and search and rescue operations, and the “assertion of sovereignty and military defence of Greenland and the Faroe Islands”, according to Danish Defence.

According to the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), the Northern Sea route is central to Russia’s security posture in the Arctic. Control of the route sits with Rosatom, giving Moscow the ability to restrict foreign military traffic without direct government approval. In the eastern Arctic, access through the Bering Strait has pushed Russia to expand radar coverage, search and rescue capacity and airfields, including the Sopka-2 radar installations on Wrangel Island and Cape Schmidt.

In the central Arctic, Russia has hardened its military footprint. Bastion-P and Pantsir-S1 systems – mobile defence systems – are deployed on Novaya Zemlya and Kotelny Island, extending area-denial across air and sea approaches.

In the western Arctic, the Northern Fleet, which oversees Russia’s second-strike capability, is based in Severomorsk. CSIS says Moscow has also reactivated dozens of Soviet-era facilities, reopening airbases, radar stations and border posts across the region.

Chinese investments in the Arctic

China has emerged as a key player in the Arctic, stating its desire to create a “Polar Silk Road”, similar to the Belt and Road Initiative, where new shipping routes would emerge as ice sheets recede.

According to the Carnegie Endowment, China views the Arctic as a future transport and industrial corridor. A number of Chinese companies also have mining projects in Greenland, including for iron ore, rare earths and uranium. China also has projects focused on Arctic energy via Russia’s LNG sector.

Chinese state-owned firms have stakes in Novatek’s LNG projects and are a major buyer of Arctic gas. The Chinese have also supplied key equipment to Russia’s Arctic LNG projects, especially after Western sanctions on Russia.

What are Greenland’s resources?

Greenland is rich in natural resources, including zinc, lead, gold, iron ore, rare earth elements (REEs), copper and oil.

It is home to some of the world’s largest deposits of rare earths used in high-tech industries. These resources have attracted significant attention, including from President Trump.

Gold pockets exist in areas like Nanortalik and South Greenland. Greenland also has deposits of diamonds in the Maniitsoq region, just north of Nuuk.

Copper deposits are largely unexplored in Greenland, according to the Mineral Resources Authority, with areas in the northeast and central east largely untapped. Iron ore deposits are dotted around West Greenland, while nickel traces have been found around the island’s southwest coast.

Graphite, used mostly in EV batteries and steel-making, is also reported to exist in Greenland, with exploration around Amitsoq. While zinc has been found in the north of Greenland, titanium and vanadium deposits are located in the southwest, east and south of the territory. Tungsten is also found in central east and Northeast Greenland with assessed deposits in the south and west.

INTERACTIVE-Greenlands mineral resources-MARCH9-2025-1741681526
(Al Jazeera)

A brief history of Greenland

The first Inuit people settled in Greenland in about 2500 BCE.

In the 10th century, Norse explorers arrived in Greenland and established settlements. By 1721, Denmark had made Greenland a colony.

Though a Danish territory, Greenland became self-governing in 1979 after more than two centuries under Danish control. It is one of Denmark’s two autonomous territories, with the Faroe Islands being the other.

In 1941, during World War II, the US and Denmark agreed to allow American forces to defend Greenland. Its strategic location was vital for countering German submarines and securing shipping routes. The US maintained a military presence throughout the Cold War, using Greenland for early-warning radar and monitoring Soviet activity.

In 2009, Greenland gained self-rule over most of its internal affairs, including control over natural resources and governance. However, Denmark still handles foreign policy, defence and funding.

INTERACTIVE-Where is Greenland basic history-1766595219

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Netanyahu Joins Trump’s Board of Peace as Israeli Prime Minister

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Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has accepted an invitation to join US President Donald Trump’s Board of Peace.

A statement from his office said Netanyahu would become a member of the board “which is to be comprised of world leaders”.

The board was originally thought to be aimed at helping end the two-year war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza and oversee reconstruction. But its proposed charter does not mention the Palestinian territory and appears to be designed to supplant functions of the UN.

The United Arab Emirates and Bahrain have also agreed to join, as have Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Hungary, Kazakhstan, Morocco and Vietnam. Many others have expressed reservations.

It is not clear how many countries have been invited to join Trump’s new body -Canada, Russia, Turkey and the UK are among them, but have not yet publicly responded.

Norway has said it will not join because the current proposal “raises a number of questions”, while France and Sweden have indicated they will do the same.

According to a copy of the charter leaked to the media, member states will be given a renewable three-year term, but they can secure a permanent place if they contribute $1bn (£740m) of funding to the board.

The document says the Board of Peace will be “an international organisation that seeks to promote stability, restore dependable and lawful governance, and secure enduring peace in areas affected or threatened by conflict”. It will “undertake such peace-building functions in accordance with international law”, it adds.

Trump will be the chairman but also “separately serve” as representative of the US. A US official has said the chairmanship can be held by Trump “until he resigns it”, but that a future US president may choose a new representative.

As chairman, he will have “exclusive authority to create, modify or dissolve subsidiary entities as necessary or appropriate to fulfil the Board of Peace’s mission”, according to the document.

He will also select “leaders of global stature” to serve two-year terms on an Executive Board that will help deliver the mission of the Board of Peace, US officials say.

Last Friday, the White House named the seven members of the founding Executive Board. They included US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Middle East special envoy Steve Witkoff, Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner as well as former British prime minister Tony Blair.

Trump also named Nickolay Mladenov, a Bulgarian politician and former UN Middle East envoy, as the Board of Peace’s representative on the ground in Gaza during phase two of Trump’s peace plan, which should see the reconstruction and demilitarisation of the territory, including the disarmament of Hamas, as well as a full withdrawal of Israeli forces.

Mladenov will act as a link with a Palestinian technocratic government which will “oversee the restoration of core public services, the rebuilding of civil institutions, and the stabilisation of daily life”.

A separate Gaza Executive Board will help support the technocratic government, according to the White House.

Witkoff, Kushner, Blair, Rowan, Mladenov will serve on it with Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan, Egyptian intelligence chief Hassan Rashad, Qatari strategic affairs minister Ali al-Thawadi, UAE minister of state for international co-operation Reem al-Hashimy, billionaire Israeli real estate developer Yakir Gabay, and Sigrid Kaag, a Dutch politician and UN special co-ordinator for the Middle East peace process.

On Saturday, Netanyahu’s office said the Gaza Executive Board’s composition “was not co-ordinated with Israel and runs contrary to its policy”.

Israeli media said the decision to include representatives of Turkey and Qatar – which both helped broker the ceasefire that took effect in October, along with Egypt and the US – had happened “over Israel’s head”.

Under phase one of the peace plan, Hamas and Israel agreed to the ceasefire, an exchange of living and dead Israeli hostages in Gaza for Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails, a partial Israeli withdrawal, and a surge in deliveries of humanitarian aid.

Phase two faces major challenges, with Hamas having previously refused to give up its weapons without the creation of an independent Palestinian state, and Israel having not committed to fully withdrawing from Gaza.

The ceasefire is also fragile. More than 460 Palestinians killed in Israeli strikes since it came into force, according to Gaza’s Hamas-run health ministry, while the Israeli military says three of its soldiers have been killed in Palestinian attacks during the same period.

The war was triggered by the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.

Israel responded to the attack by launching a military campaign in Gaza, during which more than 71,550 people have been killed, according to the territory’s health ministry.

Amended Form S-1 for GrabAGun Digital Holdings Inc Filed on January 21

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Form S-1/A GrabAGun Digital Holdings Inc For: 21 January

US allies join forces to oppose Trump’s plan to acquire Greenland at Davos | Business and Economy

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US allies reacted to President Donald Trump’s threats to take over Greenland on Tuesday, with Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney telling delegates at Davos that it was time to imagine a future without US leadership.