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Trump Uses National Address To Revive False Claims Of 2020 Election Fraud And Exaggerate China’s Role In His Defeat

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Donald Trump, leader of a country at war and facing rising living costs, addressed the nation Thursday night to speak about the elections… from six years ago. It was not merely an attempt to settle scores over a personal defeat; the president of the United States, whose unpopularity has reached record levels, spoke with his eyes fixed on the vote that will take place in just under four months. These are the midterm elections, and polls predict a Democratic victory. In the best-case scenario for Trump, he is trying to prevent that outcome; in the worst case, he appears unwilling even to acknowledge that it is likely.

The Republican thus revived one of his oldest and most recurring obsessions: the false claim that his opponent at the time, Joe Biden, stole the 2020 election from him, despite Biden winning by a margin of seven million votes. Trump did so during prime time (9:00 p.m. Washington time) and in a format traditionally reserved by presidents for the most solemn occasions: addressing the nation from a position of authority during the gravest crises, or highlighting the most momentous moments in a shared history.

On Thursday, that solemnity served as a platform to raise the specter of foreign interference in the 2020 election and to exaggerate its effects. In a speech lasting just under 30 minutes, delivered in a somber tone while reading from a teleprompter only hours after firing one of its operators for allegedly using insider information to profit from betting on presidential speeches, Trump announced the “immediate declassification and release of critical intelligence revealing shocking vulnerabilities” in the electoral infrastructure system. “No country can be great without fair and honest elections,” he declared.

The president promised major revelations assembled by something called the White House Transparency Task Force. These were published under the title Election Integrity on the presidential website, which crashed while Trump was speaking. An initial review of the heavily redacted documents, some of which were already known, such as those relating to an old lawsuit involving polling places in Muskegon, Michigan, suggests that they demonstrate China’s efforts to influence the election and the Chinese government’s skepticism toward Trump. However, they do not prove that those efforts played a decisive role in his defeat. During his speech, the president himself did not go so far as to draw that conclusion.

The most substantiated accusation was directed at Nicolás Maduro, the president of Venezuela, who is imprisoned in New York following his capture in Caracas in January. The batch of documents includes a six-page CIA file concerning “a specific plot to do a big number in favor of the corrupt Maduro regime in Venezuela,” Trump said. Ironically, the South American country’s 2020 election was the only one Trump explicitly described as “rigged” during his speech. It remains far from proven that the Venezuelan government could influence the U.S. electoral system, despite the persistence of that conspiracy theory.

Trump focused much of his speech on China, employing his classic “squid ink” tactic: making numerous alarming-sounding accusations to muddy the waters. He accused Beijing of carrying out “what is believed to be the largest compromise of election data in history,” claiming that China had “illegally obtained” the records of “220 million American voters.” According to Trump, that information includes names, addresses, phone numbers, political party preferences, and other sensitive data needed to register to vote.

He also accused Beijing of bribing journalists critical of the Republican candidate at the time so that they would write against him because, he added, China preferred that he not win. Chinese leaders, he claimed, considered they knew he was “wise to them” and feared he would impose additional tariffs on them.

Trump also spoke of a conspiracy involving members of the “deep state,” one of his favorite conspiracy themes. He described them as “a group of very well known people” and accused them of working “to actively suppress and downplay information about the extent of China’s sinister election meddling.” Trump called on his administration to “investigate how and why such crucial information was hidden, to fire those involved in the cover-up and to file criminal charges, if appropriate, against those people.”

Trump also cited among the documents, produced by the CIA, the FBI, the National Intelligence Council and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), a Department of Homeland Security analysis commissioned from an unreliable private firm, which estimated that approximately “278,000 non-citizens” were registered to vote in the general election. That estimate runs counter to earlier studies, including official government analyses, of a problem that has become an obsession for the Trump administration but that experts say is rare.

“This intelligence underscores why we must take urgent action to ensure that our own system can never ever be hacked or compromised like it was in the past,” Trump said.

Thursday’s address was met largely with indifference, even by many on the right. Trump nonetheless reiterated several of these proposals after months of efforts aimed at what he sees as the scourge of election fraud. Critics and voting-rights advocates, however, argue that these measures are designed to make voting more difficult and to undermine confidence in free and fair elections. Some also warn that Trump could seek to invoke emergency powers to influence the electoral process.

Since returning to power, Trump has issued executive orders designed to make voting by mail more difficult; has said the time has come to “nationalize elections,” even though the Constitution assigns responsibility for administering them to the states; has sought to obtain voter-registration data from state authorities; and has removed Democratic members of the U.S. Election Assistance Commission. Nearly all of those initiatives have run up against the courts.

Push for reform

Yet on no issue is the president investing more political capital than his campaign to pressure congressional Republicans into passing a sweeping electoral reform package known as the SAVE America Act, which would tighten voter identification requirements and introduce new measures aimed at preventing non-citizens from voting. Trump used Thursday’s address to urge his allies on Capitol Hill to get the legislation passed by whatever means possible before the midterm elections. For now, however, the bill remains stalled in the Senate, where it does not have the supermajority needed to advance.

The subject of the speech had been clear for days. Speaking to reporters at the White House on Tuesday, Trump promised what he called “really big news.” “It doesn’t get bigger because without free and fair elections, you don’t have a country,” he said.

The expectation that Trump was about to address the nation in order to repeat false claims about election fraud led several major U.S. television networks, including NBC, CNN and ABC, to refuse to air the speech live. It was not the first time that such a thing has happened. In 2022, some of those same networks also declined to carry a Biden speech on threats to democracy, deeming it “too political.”

Anonymous sources had told major news outlets earlier in the week that a White House meeting had been held on Monday at which Trump was briefed on the findings of a recent FBI investigation based on a review of old election records. After hearing the results of that inquiry, Trump decided to announce the address himself on his social media platform, Truth Social.

U.S. intelligence agencies investigated the 2020 election and concluded in 2021 that, while Iran, Russia and China had attempted to influence the race, there was no significant foreign interference in the voting process and no manipulation of vote-counting machines. Those claims, repeatedly rejected by the courts, were nevertheless promoted by Trump and his inner MAGA circle in the weeks leading up to the January 6, 2021, assault on the Capitol by a mob of Trump supporters who embraced the conspiracy theory that came to be known as the “Big Lie.

A clear victory

Trump has never raised objections to the outcome of the 2024 election, which he won decisively. But his fixation on the defeat four years earlier has only intensified with time. A man who has never seemed inclined either to move on from failure or to acknowledge it, Trump continues to repeat the false claim that he actually won in 2020, including at international gatherings such as NATO and United Nations meetings.

After returning to power, Trump instructed his first Director of National Intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, who resigned in May, to investigate vote-counting machines in Puerto Rico, an inquiry whose findings have yet to be made public. Gabbard also travelled to Georgia to seize thousands of ballots preserved from that election for a fresh review. The Trump administration has likewise revisited the results in other states the party lost in 2020, including Wisconsin and Arizona. Yet no place embodies Trump’s frustrations more than Fulton County, home to Atlanta, where the president is scheduled to travel next week.

Republican politicians have voiced their displeasure, both publicly and privately, with Thursday night’s address to the nation. For many of them, reviving the ghosts of a disputed election while voters face high gasoline prices, their party leader’s poor approval ratings and an apparently open-ended war with Iran is hardly the message they need as they prepare to stand for re-election in November.

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China Tacha De “invenciones” Las Acusaciones De Trump Sobre Su Supuesta Injerencia En Las Elecciones De 2020

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China ha respondido con dureza este viernes a las acusaciones del presidente estadounidense, Donald Trump, quien sugirió la víspera, en un discurso a la nación, que Pekín trató de influir en las elecciones presidenciales de 2020 para impedir su reelección. El Ministerio de Exteriores chino ha calificado esas afirmaciones de “pura invención” y “difamación maliciosa”, y ha instado a Washington a dejar de convertir al gigante asiático en argumento de sus disputas políticas internas.

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China Bans AI Partners From Children

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China is banning virtual partners and virtual relatives for minors, while at the same time also requiring platforms to strongly remind users that they are speaking to AI and prompt breaks after long conversations.

The allure of the “Perfect” digital partner

Your AI boyfriend never forgets your birthday. Your AI girlfriend always replies instantly. They remember your favourite music, ask how your day went, and can even flirt back. Unlike human relationships, chatbot companions never get tired, never argue over forgotten anniversaries, never leave messages unread, and are available 24 hours a day.

In just a few short prompts, users can create a chatbot that feels less like software and more like a real partner. Today’s generative AI can be easily customised to behave like a romantic partner, a best friend, or even parents and siblings. They remember previous conversations, develop ongoing story lines, offer emotional reassurance, and adapt their personalities to individual users.

It is this realism and tireless availability is precisely what worries regulators. For younger people, it creates a very real risk of developing a highly unhealthy emotional dependence on a system specifically designed to keep conversations going. This is exactly the kind of relationship China has decided children should not be having.

Drawing a legal line around virtual relationships

From July, 15, new Chinese regulations will prohibit AI platforms from offering virtual partners or virtual family members to anyone under the age of 18, making China one of the first countries to explicitly draw a legal line around AI companionship for minors.

The rules are part of the country’s new Interim Measures for the Management of Artificial Intelligence Anthropomorphic Interactive Services, jointly issued by five government departments, including the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC).

To curb excessive attachment and protect minors’ mental well-being, the new regulations introduce several strict requirements for providers –

Reality check reminders – Platforms must make it clear that users are interacting with artificial intelligence rather than a real person. Anyone spending more than two continuous hours chatting must receive reminders about their usage.
Youth modes – Platforms must introduce dedicated youth modes with features such as usage limits and parental controls.
Crisis intervention – If providers detect that a user is experiencing severe emotional distress or expressing intentions of self-harm, they must generate supportive guidance and, in serious cases, take intervention measures, including contacting a guardian or emergency services.
Data privacy – Companies are prohibited from using sensitive conversation data to train AI models without separate, explicit user consent.

How is the Europe reacting to virtual relationships?

Elsewhere, governments are watching closely but have taken a different, less restrictive approach. Europe has so far stopped short of a China-style ban. The EU does not prohibit AI boyfriends, girlfriends, or companion chatbots. Instead, its AI Act focuses broadly on preventing harmful uses of AI, such as systems that manipulate users or exploit children’s vulnerabilities in ways that could cause significant harm. European policymakers and researchers are increasingly voicing concerns about emotional attachment to AI among young people, however, at present there are currently no EU-wide bans in place.

AI is day by day becoming deeply integrated into our lives, we already know that chatbots can successfully imitate friendship and romance, but how much of that relationship we are comfortable encouraging especially to our younger generation.

Would you be concerned if your child told you their boyfriend, girlfriend or best friend lived inside their phone?

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The World Is Plunging Into A Dangerous Spiral Of Military Spending

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The Atlantic allies met this week in Turkey for NATO’s annual summit against a backdrop of sustained growth in global military spending. Spurred both by the threat from Russia and political pressure from the White House, the Alliance’s European partners have taken significant steps forward in military investment. This trend is taking place within the broader context of a global rearmament effort that has been underway for the past decade. Geopolitical tensions, technological revolutions, economic and industrial considerations, and other factors suggest that this trend still has a long way to run.

According to data compiled by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), a highly respected authority in this field, the world has now experienced 11 consecutive years of rising military expenditure, a period that coincides with the beginning of Russia’s aggression against Ukraine in 2014. Military spending has increased by 41% over the past decade. In 2025, nearly $3 trillion was devoted to defense, equivalent to 2.5% of global GDP. The increase in 2025 was 2.9%, lower than the jump recorded the previous year (9.7%). However, multiple indicators suggest that 2026 and 2027 could bring further substantial increases.

Within NATO, U.S. military spending this year will be higher than last year’s, and the Trump administration has asked Congress to approve a Pentagon budget increase for the next fiscal year from the current $1 trillion to $1.5 trillion — a remarkable jump. There is resistance among lawmakers to such a dramatic increase, and it is highly unlikely that it will be approved in those exact terms. However, it is quite possible that the final agreement will still represent another significant step forward compared with the previous budget.

At the same time, the European allies are heading toward further increases in military spending. For example, BNP Paribas forecasts for 2026 “a further acceleration in military spending within the European Union. After an increase from 1.9% to 2.15% of GDP between 2024 and 2025, spending is expected to rise by around €80 billion [$91.6 billion] and reach 2.5% of EU GDP” this year.

Overall, NATO accounts for 55% of global military spending.

Many other actors, of course, are also contributing to this escalation. Russia is naturally at the center of the story. Its aggression against Ukraine has driven a runaway increase in its own military spending while also spurring higher spending by others. Its economic difficulties, however, make it harder for Moscow to continue advancing along that path.

China, meanwhile, has for some time maintained a steady pace of nominal military spending increases of around 7% per year. This consistent growth reflects Beijing’s effort to narrow the gap with the United States. It is worth noting that this stability persists despite a slowdown in its economic growth, which is forecast at around 4.5%.

Other parts of the world, by contrast, are galloping ahead. Countries in Southeast Asia are experiencing a situation that is similar — though not identical — to that of Europe. Concern about a powerful neighboring country and pressure from the United States are pushing them in the same direction.

U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth delivered a speech in late May at the important Shangri‑La Dialogue in Singapore that will sound very familiar to Europeans: “President Trump is setting the gold standard. We demand 3.5% from our allies and partners […] For those nations that rise to this challenge that embrace responsibility as true partners, the benefits will be clear […] But for those who believe they can continue to free ride on the generosity of the American taxpayer, hear us now. Those days are over. Allies who refuse to step up and carry their own weight for our collective defense will face a clear shift in how we do business.”

The message is resonating strongly in the Middle East as well, where there is little doubt that the war against Iran and its consequences will fuel a significant wave of rearmament.

What’s driving the rise

The motivations behind this dynamic are primarily geopolitical. “The world is moving toward a multipolar configuration. Asymmetric, but multipolar. And in that transition monsters are born,” says Michele Testoni, associate professor at the IE School of International Relations and coordinator of the book NATO and Transatlantic Relations in the 21st Century. It is a landscape that fosters a sense of insecurity.

Testoni also points to another factor: “We are living in a time of great technological revolution. History shows that these revolutions are often quickly adopted by the military.” The rise of artificial intelligence and its combination with robotic and automated technologies opens new possibilities, and that leads to imbalances and sparks races to adapt to the changes.

Vicente Palacio, director of foreign policy at the Fundación Alternativas, highlights another important factor: military spending as an economic stimulus. “At a time of not only geopolitical tensions but also economic difficulties, the military dimension is seen as a new source of growth and reindustrialization. That ranges from Germany to Russia, and includes the United States, France and many other countries.”

Another notable feature of the current arms race is the near absence of international agreements capable of constraining it. New START, which set limits on nuclear arsenals between the United States and Russia, expired last February and there is no clear prospect of a replacement being negotiated. More broadly, it is worrying that, a few weeks ago, the review conference of the Treaty on the Non‑Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons once again ended without any agreement. The nuclear realm is another area of heavy investment, according to SIPRI. While there is no significant increase in the number of nuclear warheads, the nuclear powers are making huge investments to renew their arsenals.

The defense industry naturally benefits from all this. The 100 largest companies in the sector have grown sharply. Between 2002 and 2025, revenues in constant dollars doubled, reaching $680 billion.

And during this decade of rapidly expanding military spending, new types of companies have entered the sector in a major way, with Palantir serving as a prominent example. Palantir does not sell weapons. Instead, it provides AI-based operating systems and other digital capabilities. Its importance has become extraordinary. Its technical capabilities are evident, but so too are its political and cultural implications.

Alex C. Karp, the company’s co-founder, has long advocated for greater involvement by Silicon Valley as a whole in national security matters, and has criticized the tech sector’s tendency to focus on maximizing profits through consumer gadgets.

Peter Thiel, the company’s leading figure, recently argued that the Pope, by calling for regulation of AI, is inadvertently acting like a ”Chinese communist agent.”

The forces driving the rearmament spiral are numerous and powerful. Arms races do not automatically lead to conflict. NATO’s history demonstrates this. During the Cold War, the alliance maintained very high levels of military spending, and the result was deterrence rather than direct conflict. Proxy wars did occur between the two blocs in other regions, but in Europe — the alliance’s primary theater — not a single shot was fired between NATO and the Soviet bloc.

Nevertheless, that does not eliminate concern. The rapid growth in military spending, occurring amid geopolitical tensions and the erosion of international institutions and norms, creates a scenario that many observers find deeply unsettling.

But that does not mean that the rise in military spending, amid conflict and the erosion of international institutions and norms, is not a worrying development.

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