Thursday, May 1, 2025

Friday Briefing: A White House shake-up

Plus, the actors up for a Tony Award.
Morning Briefing: Asia Pacific Edition

May 2, 2025

Good morning. We're covering a shake-up of Trump's top aides and the Ukraine-U.S. minerals deal.

Plus, the actors up for a Tony Award.

Michael Waltz walks across a tarmac on his way to board Air Force One in Maryland. He is carrying a bag and looking at a group of people.
Michael Waltz boarding Air Force One on Tuesday. Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times

Trump removed his national security adviser

President Trump announced yesterday that he was removing his national security adviser, Michael Waltz, naming Secretary of State Marco Rubio as his interim replacement. It was the first major personnel overhaul of top White House aides, and the kind of move he had wanted to avoid in his second term.

Waltz had been on thin ice since he organized a group chat on the app Signal to discuss a sensitive military operation in Yemen and accidentally included a journalist. Trump has nominated Waltz to be U.S. ambassador to the U.N.

But even before the group chat leak, most of Trump's advisers viewed Waltz as too hawkish to work for a president who was eager to reach a nuclear deal with Iran and normalize relations with Russia.

Rubio will hold both positions for now, something that no other official has done simultaneously since Henry Kissinger held the titles under the Nixon and Ford administrations.

What's next: The selection of the next national security adviser will be a critical one, at a moment when the president's top aides have differed sharply on how to handle China, Russia and Iran.

More on Trump

Two people seated at a table sign documents that are on a table. An American flag and a Ukrainian flag are behind them.
Scott Bessent, the U.S. treasury secretary, and Yulia Svyrydenko, the Ukrainian economy minister. U.S. Department of the Treasury

Here's what's in the Ukraine-U.S. minerals deal

The U.S. and Ukraine signed a deal late Wednesday allowing the U.S. to receive future revenue from Ukraine's natural resources. Ukraine hopes it will clear the way for continued U.S. support.

The agreement, the text of which was made public yesterday, did not mention security guarantees, which Kyiv had wanted. Under this bargain, U.S. military aid in the future would have to be matched with Ukraine's resource wealth. The deal also appears to keep the door open for Ukraine to eventually join the E.U. Here's what we know.

What's next: Ukraine's parliament still has to ratify the agreement, which will probably happen in the next two weeks, lawmakers said yesterday.

Analysis: It's not clear how the deal will work in practice. It could bring untold money into a joint investment fund, but the resources will take years to extract and yield profits.

Men in camouflage uniforms standing with guns on a road lined with trees.
Indian security forces guarded the way to Pahalgam, Kashmir, on Wednesday.  Atul Loke for The New York Times

Working to calm India-Pakistan tensions

Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Wednesday spoke separately with Pakistan's prime minister and India's foreign minister as tensions soared after a terrorist attack last week in Kashmir left 26 people dead. Rubio said the U.S. was committed to "cooperation with India against terrorism," but urged the two countries, which are both nuclear powers, to work together. The U.N. offered to mediate.

Pakistan has claimed it has "credible intelligence" that India is planning to attack, and promised a forceful response. India has not commented on any such plans.

Kashmir: A tourist on a zip-line filmed the attack. See the video and read more about the territory.

MORE TOP NEWS

A man and a woman walking outside a church that is being temporarily used as a polling station.
A polling station in Rickmansworth, England, yesterday. Suzanne Plunkett/Reuters

Business and finance

Vietnam War 50th Anniversary

SPORTS NEWS

  • Tennis: Tyra Grant, a rising star who until now has played for the U.S., has decided to represent Italy, of which she is a citizen.

MORNING READ

A whale carcass on a seabed with blurry undersea lights helping illuminate it.
Jules Jacobs

Earlier this year, a diver found the 2,000-pound carcass of a baby gray whale in the waters off San Diego. Just a few weeks later, it had vanished. Where did it go?

Lives lived: Ted Kotcheff, a Canadian director whose films included "First Blood" with Sylvester Stallone and "Weekend at Bernie's," died at 94.

CONVERSATION STARTERS

A man standing on the street in baggy jeans and a leather jacket.
Simbarashe Cha/The New York Times

ARTS AND IDEAS

George Clooney, in a gray suit, reads from a piece of paper into an old-fashioned microphone.
George Clooney in "Good Night, and Good Luck." Sara Krulwich/The New York Times

Screen stars are up for Broadway's highest honor

Tony Award nominations were announced yesterday, as Broadway celebrated an unusually starry season. George Clooney, Mia Farrow, Sarah Snook and Sadie Sink all picked up nominations.

But many A-listers didn't get in the game — among them Denzel Washington and Jake Gyllenhaal, who both got shut out for "Othello." The winners will be announced June 8. Read about the picks, and the snubs and surprises.

RECOMMENDATIONS

A bowl of noodles garnished with sliced cucumber and crushed peanuts.
Craig Lee for The New York Times

Cook: These classic sesame noodles are better than takeout.

Read: Our critics preview 24 new books coming out this month.

Watch: The alien-invasion series "The Eternaut" gives new life to a 1950s comic strip from Argentina.

Move: Sitting all day is hard on your hips. Try this simple routine for better mobility.

Travel: These tips will help you save time and money at the airport.

Game: Despelote revisits Ecuador's 2001 soccer frenzy from a child's perspective.

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

That's it for today. Have a good weekend. — Emmett

P.S. On Day 4 of our poetry challenge, use the verse to greet the day.

We welcome your feedback. Send us your suggestions at briefing@nytimes.com.

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