Sunday, April 6, 2025

Monday Briefing: Trump’s team defends tariffs

Plus, meet a robot butler.
Morning Briefing: Asia Pacific Edition

April 7, 2025

Good morning. We're covering Trump's team rushing to defend his tariffs and chemical weapons in Syria.

Plus, meet a robot butler.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent in a suit at the White House.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent at the White House on Wednesday. Doug Mills/The New York Times

Trump's team defended tariffs in the face of anger

President Trump's top aides yesterday appeared on various media outlets to defend his global tariffs that went into effect over the weekend. Some said that they had already heard from foreign nations that are seeking to strike a deal. His top economic advisers dismissed the turmoil in financial markets around the world, insisting that the trade war would ultimately improve America's economic fortunes.

Like Brexit, Trump's tariffs struck a hammer blow at the established order, Mark Landler, our London bureau chief, writes in an analysis. But the U.S.'s position as the fulcrum of global commerce means that Trump's move is having a much wider effect. Also like Brexit, the ultimate ramifications are unsettled: Trump could yet reverse himself. And the E.U., optimists point out, did not unravel after Britain's departure.

But more significantly, economists said that free trade's rise may be irreversible, and its benefits so powerful that the rest of the world could find a way to keep the system going, even without its star player.

What's next: The tariffs were much higher than expected and plunged corporate America into chaos. We asked economists, investment researchers and other experts to help make sense of what lies ahead. Wall Street, still reeling from last week's fallout, is bracing for more chaos.

More on Trump

People lifting a gurney with a covered body toward an ambulance.
Aid workers last Monday carrying the bodies of rescue workers killed in Gaza. Eyad Baba/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

A video shed new light on aid workers killed in Gaza

The Israeli military said on Saturday that there were flaws in its initial accounts of its troops' involvement in the killing of 15 people last month in Gaza. The U.N. said the 15 people were paramedics and rescue workers.

The admission came a day after a video obtained by The Times appeared to contradict a key part of the military's earlier version of events. The military had insisted that its troops had opened fire as a convoy approached them in the dark "without headlights or emergency signals." But the video showed clearly marked ambulances and a fire truck with their emergency lights on.

Here's what else we know.

The video: The footage was discovered on the cellphone of a paramedic who was found in a mass grave.

Three people wearing helmets, gas masks and gloves gather near a plastic bag.
Investigating a possible chemical weapons attack site in Syria in 2013.  Reuters

There may be unsecured chemical weapons in Syria

More than 100 chemical weapons sites are suspected to remain in Syria after the fall of Bashar al-Assad, according to the world's leading chemical weapons watchdog. The number is far higher than any previous estimate.

The watchdog organization is now seeking to assess what remains of the deadly stockpile, and how much of it is secure. The chemicals, including sarin, mustard and chlorine gas, represent a major test for Syria's caretaker government. Last month, the group said it would destroy any weapons that remain, but it has yet to appoint an ambassador to the watchdog, a key first step.

MORE TOP NEWS

A portrait of a family in a medical treatment tent.
As a civil war in Sudan enters its third year, it only seems to be getting worse. Daniel Vergara for The New York Times

Sports

MORNING READ

Jehuda Lindenblatt with his family.
Jehuda Lindenblatt with his wife and three daughters. Elinor Carucci for The New York Times

The father of a childhood friend had for decades asked Taffy Brodesser-Akner, a reporter for The New York Times magazine, to tell his story of surviving the Holocaust. She refused — until a piece of news changed her mind. Read the story she said she wouldn't write.

Lives lived: Theodore McCarrick, a high-ranking cardinal who was accused of abuse and was stripped of his priesthood by Pope Francis, died at 94.

CONVERSATION STARTERS

A woman with graying dreads sits in a field of yellow flowers, smiling and clapping her hands together while wearing a light button-up shirt, jeans and a dark blazer.
Nicholas Albrecht for The New York Times

TECH

A .gif of a robot called a humanoid that walks past and waves.
David B. Torch for The New York Times

Meet your new robot butler

A.I. is driving cars, writing essays and coding. Now, humanoids — machines built to resemble humans — are getting ready to move in and help with daily chores. The engineer Bernt Børnich hopes to put his version, called Neo, in more than 100 homes by the end of the year.

Our tech reporter, Cade Metz, visited Børnich's home, where he shook hands with a prototype. The humanoid then went to the refrigerator for a bottle of water, but it needed some help from a human technician to do so. "Robots are still learning to navigate the world on their own," Cade writes. "And they need a lot of help doing it. At least, for now." Read more here.

RECOMMENDATIONS

Top down view of Miso Chile Asparagus with Tofu
Christopher Testani for The New York Times

Cook: Broiled asparagus and tofu pair well with a spicy miso sauce.

Watch: In "Dying for Sex," a terminally ill woman knows how she wants to spend her remaining days.

Read: The novel "Flesh," by David Szalay, offers scenes from a rags-to-riches life.

Relationships: Giving someone the silent treatment is not the answer you think it is, experts say.

Play: Spelling Bee, the Mini Crossword, Wordle and Sudoku. Find all our games here.

That's it for today. See you tomorrow. — Emmett

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