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As Trump Heads to Beijing, China Is ‘Locked and Loaded’ for a Fight
business

As Trump Heads to Beijing, China Is ‘Locked and Loaded’ for a Fight

Beijing is signaling that it is ready for a trade showdown, and it is building up a legal arsenal in preparation.

By Alexandra Stevenson and Murphy Zhao
Lawmakers Urge Trump to Move Ahead on Delayed Arms Sale to Taiwan
us

Lawmakers Urge Trump to Move Ahead on Delayed Arms Sale to Taiwan

The Trump administration has held up the sale for months ahead of President Trump’s meeting this week with President Xi Jinping of China.

By Robert Jimison
What Middle Powers Fear About the Trump-Xi Summit
world

What Middle Powers Fear About the Trump-Xi Summit

Asian nations worry that the president might trade security commitments for better economic terms with China during his planned meeting with Xi Jinping this week.

By Damien Cave
Buy Less Gold and Skip Foreign Trips, Modi Urges Indians
world

Buy Less Gold and Skip Foreign Trips, Modi Urges Indians

Under pressure from the economic fallout of the war in Iran and politically emboldened, Prime Minister Narendra Modi asks Indians to sacrifice.

By Alex Travelli
Iran defends its demands after Trump’s rejection.
world

Iran defends its demands after Trump’s rejection.

By Aaron Boxerman and Sanam Mahoozi
Jailed Iranian Nobel Peace Prize Winner Is Transferred to Tehran Hospital
world

Jailed Iranian Nobel Peace Prize Winner Is Transferred to Tehran Hospital

Narges Mohammadi, a prominent human rights activist who has spent much of her adult life in and out of prison, will undergo treatment in Tehran after collapsing earlier this month, a foundation run by her family said.

By Amelia Nierenberg
American Passengers Exposed to Hantavirus Land in U.S.
us

American Passengers Exposed to Hantavirus Land in U.S.

Seventeen Americans from a cruise ship that faced a hantavirus outbreak arrived in Nebraska and will be monitored at a quarantine center. One tested positive for the Andes virus, health officials said.

By Sonia A. Rao and Jin Yu Young
Where Passengers From the Hantavirus-Struck Cruise Ship Go Now
world

Where Passengers From the Hantavirus-Struck Cruise Ship Go Now

Nearly two dozen countries are repatriating citizens who were aboard the MV Hondius, where three passengers died in a hantavirus outbreak.

By Jin Yu Young
What to Know About the Hantavirus Outbreak on a Cruise Ship
world

What to Know About the Hantavirus Outbreak on a Cruise Ship

The health authorities are working to calm fears and contain the rare virus. Three passengers died after traveling on the ship, and several others fell ill or tested positive.

By Amelia Nierenberg, Claire Moses and Jin Yu Young
How Israel Turned Eurovision’s Stage Into a Soft Power Tool
world

How Israel Turned Eurovision’s Stage Into a Soft Power Tool

Israel’s efforts to influence Eurovision’s vote were broader and started years earlier than previously known.

By Mara Hvistendahl and Alex Marshall
How to Win Eurovision With Just a Few Hundred Voters
world

How to Win Eurovision With Just a Few Hundred Voters

Exclusive voting data shows that, despite Eurovision’s assurances, an Israeli campaign could easily have influenced last year’s contest.

By Alex Marshall and Mara Hvistendahl
The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City in 2026
dining

The 100 Best Restaurants in New York City in 2026

The annual list is back. Our new chief critic ranks her favorite places to dine in all five boroughs.

By Ligaya Mishan
Trends at the Table: Field Notes From New York’s Best Restaurants
dining

Trends at the Table: Field Notes From New York’s Best Restaurants

Hip crustaceans, dessert trends and the never-ending reservation battle were among the things our chief critic took note of.

By Ligaya Mishan
5 Standout Neighborhoods for the Best Restaurants in New York City
dining

5 Standout Neighborhoods for the Best Restaurants in New York City

Great meals can be found in virtually any corner of the five boroughs, but here are some areas that stood out to our critic.

By Ligaya Mishan
A List of 100 Best Restaurants? For These Marathon Eaters, It’s a Dare.
dining

A List of 100 Best Restaurants? For These Marathon Eaters, It’s a Dare.

As rankings proliferate, a cadre of completists have made it their mission to sample every single place on them.

By Pete Wells
Man Charged With Assassination Attempt at Press Gala Pleads Not Guilty
us

Man Charged With Assassination Attempt at Press Gala Pleads Not Guilty

Cole Tomas Allen faces four counts in what prosecutors say was a plot to kill President Trump and other top officials at the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner.

By Zach Montague
They Were Promised New Septic Tanks. Trump Called It ‘Illegal DEI.’
us

They Were Promised New Septic Tanks. Trump Called It ‘Illegal DEI.’

The Justice Department ended a deal that had helped fund a solution to the sewage crisis in rural Alabama. “Almost like we are starting all over again,” one activist said.

By Bernard Mokam
The Hole in the Ice at the End of the Earth
climate

The Hole in the Ice at the End of the Earth

Ten people. Eight weeks. Three thousand feet to pierce a fast-melting Antarctic glacier.

By Raymond Zhong and Chang W. Lee
A Single Infusion Could Suppress H.I.V. for Years, Study Suggests
health

A Single Infusion Could Suppress H.I.V. for Years, Study Suggests

A study of a few patients, to be presented this week, showed promise for a type of therapy that has already cured some blood cancers.

By Apoorva Mandavilli
G.O.P. Plant? Democratic Ruse? Accusations Fly in Nebraska’s Senate Race
us

G.O.P. Plant? Democratic Ruse? Accusations Fly in Nebraska’s Senate Race

One Democrat is accused of being a Republican in disguise. Another plans to drop out to boost an independent. It’s primary eve in one of the country’s most unusual midterm contests.

By Kellen Browning
Already Facing a Challenge, a Republican Is Accused of Self-Dealing
nyregion

Already Facing a Challenge, a Republican Is Accused of Self-Dealing

Several entities tied to Representative Mike Lawler, New York’s most endangered House Republican, paid a political consulting firm he once owned, raising ethics concerns.

By Jeffery C. Mays and Grace Ashford
Inside the Courtroom Circus With Elon Musk and Sam Altman
technology

Inside the Courtroom Circus With Elon Musk and Sam Altman

The tech leaders, with combined net worths exceeding $670 billion, have brought props to court and traded icy stares as their legal dispute reaches a denouement.

By Mike Isaac
Google Says Criminal Hackers Used A.I. to Find a Major Software Flaw
us

Google Says Criminal Hackers Used A.I. to Find a Major Software Flaw

The company said that it had identified, for the first time, hackers using artificial intelligence to discover an unknown bug. The attempted attack represents “a taste of what’s to come,” one expert said.

By Dustin Volz
The Astounding Discovery That Could Link Eastern and Western Medicine
magazine

The Astounding Discovery That Could Link Eastern and Western Medicine

The detection of another circulatory system in the human body could have enormous scientific implications.

By Avraham Z. Cooper
Fed Up, Zelensky Takes Gloves Off With the Trump Administration
world

Fed Up, Zelensky Takes Gloves Off With the Trump Administration

With peace talks on ice and Ukraine now more self-reliant, President Volodymyr Zelensky seems to be stepping away from the United States.

By Kim Barker, Constant Méheut and Maria Varenikova
Putin’s Forces Are Barely Inching Along on the Battlefield
world

Putin’s Forces Are Barely Inching Along on the Battlefield

The Russian military has yet to solve a fundamental problem: how to make big advances in eastern Ukraine when drones are everywhere.

By Paul Sonne, Cassandra Vinograd and Milana Mazaeva
Wordle to Become Prime-Time TV Show, With Savannah Guthrie as Host
business

Wordle to Become Prime-Time TV Show, With Savannah Guthrie as Host

The word puzzle published by The New York Times is the inspiration for a game show that will begin airing next year. Jimmy Fallon is a producer.

By Michael M. Grynbaum
Gisèle Pelicot’s Memoir Said Something Taboo About Victimhood. We Didn’t Listen.
magazine

Gisèle Pelicot’s Memoir Said Something Taboo About Victimhood. We Didn’t Listen.

A book by the world’s most famous survivor of sexual violence has been read as a manifesto or a cry of pain. What she wrote is far more complicated.

By Parul Sehgal
The Fight to Euthanize Pablo Escobar’s Hippos in Colombia
world

The Fight to Euthanize Pablo Escobar’s Hippos in Colombia

Colombia is planning to cull a population of wild hippos, the offspring of the drug lord’s pets, dividing a town where hippos are the main draw.

By Luis Ferré-Sadurní and Esteban Vanegas
The Silence That Meets the Rape of Palestinians
opinion

The Silence That Meets the Rape of Palestinians

Male and female Palestinians describe brutal sexual abuse at the hands of Israel’s prison guards, soldiers, settlers and interrogators.

By Nicholas Kristof
‘Bill Cassidy Sold His Soul to the Devil, and He Didn’t Get Anything for It’
opinion

‘Bill Cassidy Sold His Soul to the Devil, and He Didn’t Get Anything for It’

A doctor and senator who voted to confirm Robert Kennedy still was snubbed by Trump in the Republican primary in Louisiana.

By Gary Sernovitz
It’s All Connected
briefing

It’s All Connected

We look into the body’s circulatory systems.

By Sam Sifton
Tell Us About Your Games Streak
crosswords

Tell Us About Your Games Streak

We need your help for an upcoming article.

By New York Times Games
Kansas City, a Car Town, Spends Millions on World Cup Transit
us

Kansas City, a Car Town, Spends Millions on World Cup Transit

Security and other expenses are piling up for host cities. In the smallest metro area staging games, the bill includes temporary bus systems in two states.

By Mitch Smith
As Coal Rebounds, More Toxic Mercury Is in the Air
climate

As Coal Rebounds, More Toxic Mercury Is in the Air

Coal-burning power plants released more mercury last year, according to an analysis by The Times. It reverses a downward trend of emissions of a metal that interferes with brain development.

By Irena Hwang and Hiroko Tabuchi
Starmer Promises Urgent Change as He Battles to Save Premiership
world

Starmer Promises Urgent Change as He Battles to Save Premiership

Prime Minister Keir Starmer of Britain used a speech to attempt to quell a mutiny in the Labour Party after last week’s dire election results.

By Michael D. Shear
Retailers Are Making Expensive Bets That Shoppers Still Want to Go to Stores
business

Retailers Are Making Expensive Bets That Shoppers Still Want to Go to Stores

Walmart, Target and Dollar General are among those investing in remodeling thousands of existing stores, even as shoppers take their dollars online.

By Kim Bhasin