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CDC expands wastewater testing for polio to Michigan and Pennsylvania

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The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is expanding efforts to test wastewater to detect the polio virus in Philadelphia and the Detroit area, targeting communities at highest risk for the life-threatening and potentially disabling illness, officials said Wednesday.

The expansion of wastewater monitoring for polio comes amid pressure to increase efforts to fight the disease after the first U.S. polio case in nearly a decade was discovered in New York’s Rockland County in July. Ever since the unvaccinated man was diagnosed, the virus has been detected in wastewater samples from nearby communities: New York City, Orange County, Sullivan County and Nassau County on Long Island.

Wastewater testing will occur in places with low polio vaccination coverage as well as counties with possible connections to the at-risk New York communities linked to the Rockland case of paralytic polio. Logistics for the testing are being worked out between federal and state officials, but once it is underway, testing will last at least four months.

The Michigan and Philadelphia health departments are working with the CDC to identify communities that are under-vaccinated for poliovirus and have wastewater sampling locations. Other state and local health departments are also talking to the CDC about potential wastewater testing.

Polio — once one of the most feared diseases in the United States, with annual outbreaks causing thousands of cases of paralysis — was considered to be eliminated in 1979 after widespread vaccination halted routine U.S. spread. But the virus has been brought into the country by travelers.

Evidence of expanding community spread has landed the United States on a list of more than 30 countries with active circulation of a type of polio known as vaccine-derived poliovirus.

One case of paralytic polio potentially indicates that there may be hundreds of other cases, most of whom experience only mild illness. Polio paralyzes about 1 of every 200 people who contract the virus. There is no treatment other than supportive care; once someone catches polio, it is too late to prevent dire complications of the virus.

Polio has been found in the U.S. Here’s what to know.

Despite the renewed threat, a survey released Wednesday by the Annenberg Public Policy Center found that a sizable portion of Americans is unfamiliar with the risks of polio. Only one-third of U.S. adults know there is no cure for polio, and over 1 in 5 don’t know whether they’ve been vaccinated against polio.

Strains of polio virus can be shed in people’s stool without symptoms, putting unvaccinated people at risk. Finding the virus in sewage or wastewater indicates that someone in the community is shedding the virus. But wastewater data cannot be used to determine or identify who is infected or how many people or households are affected.

If the virus is detected, the CDC’s polio lab will conduct genetic sequencing to pinpoint the specific strain. The CDC is also working with state and local officials to make sure they have “the boots on the ground” to implement vaccination and education campaigns, said José R. Romero, director the CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases.

“When will we know that we’re out of the woods? When we get our vaccine rates at the national level — 93 or 94 percent — to have herd immunity in the community,” Romero said, referring to when enough individuals have been vaccinated so their collective immunity prevents the virus from circulating in that population.

In the United States, most people were vaccinated during childhood so the risk to the public is low, officials have said. Modern sewage and wastewater systems are separate from access to clean drinking water, which helps prevent viruses like polio from spreading.

But when the virus is found in communities with low vaccination rates, it can spread among unvaccinated people, putting them at risk for becoming infected and developing polio.

“Wastewater testing can be an important tool to help us understand if poliovirus may be circulating in communities in certain circumstances,” Romero said. “Vaccination remains the best way to prevent another case of paralytic polio, and it is critically important that people get vaccinated to protect themselves, their families and their communities against this devastating disease.”

There are two types of polio vaccines. The United States and many other countries use shots made with an inactivated version of the virus. But some countries where polio has been more of a recent threat use a weakened live virus that is given to children as drops in the mouth. Even though the oral vaccine is easier to administer and may give longer-lasting immunity, it has a key disadvantage: It can lead to vaccine-derived polio, a strain of which was identified in the unvaccinated Rockland County patient. Oral polio vaccine has not been used or licensed in the United States since 2000 because of that risk.

Michigan’s Oakland County, the state’s second-most populous county and part of the Detroit metropolitan area, is the state’s first location for the wastewater polio surveillance because of its low vaccination rates and because vaccine-preventable outbreaks have occurred in the past, said Joe Coyle, director of the Bureau of Infectious Disease Prevention at Michigan’s Department of Health and Human Services.

A 2019 measles outbreak in Oakland County that was started by a visitor from New York “certainly shows there’s vaccine-preventable risk in the population,” Coyle said.

In the 2019 measles outbreak, a Brooklyn man who did not know he was infected with the highly contagious respiratory virus spread it to 39 people as he stayed in private homes, attended synagogue and shopped in kosher markets. The outbreak began in ultra-Orthodox Jewish communities in the New York City region that have traditionally had low vaccination rates and have been a source of anti-vaccine misinformation. The Rockland County man diagnosed with paralytic polio in July lives in a community that was an epicenter of the 2019 measles outbreak.

Although most Americans are protected against polio if they have been fully vaccinated, declining childhood vaccination rates in some pockets of the country and the increase in parents seeking childhood immunization waivers for school entry raises the risk for more vaccine-preventable diseases, Coyle said.

Just under 80 percent of children in Oakland County have received three doses of the polio vaccine by the time they were 19 months old. A total of four shots are required for full immunity. The CDC recommends children get their first polio vaccine at two months, with follow-up shots at four months, between six and 18 months, and between ages 4 and 6.

In a few neighborhoods in South Philadelphia, fewer than 60 percent of children under 5 had received four doses of the vaccine, according to the health department.

Only about 60 percent of 2-year-olds in Rockland County have received their first three shots, according to health department data. In some communities in Rockland County, the vaccination rate is lower than 40 percent.

“Since poliovirus is excreted in stool, monitoring wastewater can potentially find chains of transmission earlier, allowing actions to be taken to break the chains before anyone is paralyzed,” said Walter Orenstein, the associate director of Emory University’s Vaccine Center.

Wastewater surveillance has been critical in finding vaccine-derived polioviruses in the United Kingdom and Israel before any paralytic cases have been detected, Orenstein said.

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Dow Jones Futures: 5 Stocks Near Buy Points In Market Rally; Tesla FSD Beta Expands Widely

Dow Jones futures rose slightly Thursday afternoon, along with S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures, with U.S. markets closed for the Thanksgiving Day holiday. Apple, Microsoft and Tesla are in the news.




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The stock market rally was positive for a second straight session on Wednesday. Fed officials see slower rate hikes coming “soon,” according to Fed minutes from the November meeting released Wednesday afternoon.

The Nasdaq led, buoyed by a rebounding Tesla (TSLA). The major indexes are all up solidly so far in this holiday-shortened week. But a longer holiday for the market rally could be constructive.

Investors should be cautious about adding exposure given key technical resistance and notable economic reports up ahead.

However, Dexcom (DXCM), UnitedHealth (UNH), Neurocrine Biosciences (NBIX), Medpace Holdings (MEDP) and Shockwave Medical (SWAV) are five health care stocks showing interesting action.

DXCM stock and Neurocrine Biosciences are on IBD Leaderboard, with MEDP stock on the Leaderboard watchlist. NBIX stock and Medpace are on the IBD 50.

Tesla FSD Beta Release

Tesla CEO Elon Musk tweeted Thursday that Full Self-Driving Beta is now available to any FSD owners in North America who request it.

That could allow Tesla to recognize more deferred revenue from FSD.

Despite its name, Full Self-Driving does not offer full self-driving, but is a Level 2 driver assist system. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is investigating Autopilot and FSD safety. The Justice Department reportedly is conducting a criminal probe of Tesla’s self-driving claims.

Tesla stock jumped 7.8% to 183.20 on Wednesday, rebounding from Tuesday’s bear market lows as Citigroup upgraded the EV giant from a sell to a hold. TSLA stock is still down 19.5% so far this month and has roughly halved in 2022.

Dow Stock Deal News

In Dow Jones stock news, Apple (AAPL) reportedly is interested in buying U.K. soccer giant Manchester United (MANU). The Federal Trade Commission may try to block the Microsoft (MSFT) deal to buy Activision Blizzard (ATVI) for nearly $69 billion.

Dow Jones Futures Today

Dow Jones futures rose 0.1% vs. fair value. S&P 500 futures advanced 0.2% and Nasdaq 100 futures climbed 0.4%.

Mainland China reported more than 31,000 Covid cases, including those without symptoms, topping the mid-April levels during the Shanghai lockdown.  Covid infections with symptoms are still below April peaks.

U.S. stock exchanges will be closed Thursday for the Thanksgiving Day holiday. On Friday, U.S. exchanges will close early at 1 p.m. ET. But other exchanges around the world are open normally on Thursday and Friday.

Remember that overnight action in Dow futures and elsewhere doesn’t necessarily translate into actual trading in the next regular stock market session.


Join IBD experts as they analyze actionable stocks in the stock market rally on IBD Live


Stock Market Rally

The stock market rally had some wobbles Wednesday, but extended gains, led by techs.

Initial jobless claims rose to a three-month high while continuing claims hit an eight-month best. S&P Global’s purchasing managers indexes for U.S. manufacturing and services both signaled contraction.

The Fed minutes reinforced expectations of a 50-basis point rate hike at the Dec. 14 meeting. Markets still favor another half-point move in February, but there’s a decent chance of a quarter-point hike.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.3% in Wednesday’s stock market trading. The S&P 500 index climbed 0.6%, led by TSLA stock. The Nasdaq composite popped 1%. The small-cap Russell 2000 edged up 0.1%.

U.S. crude oil prices tumbled 3.7% to $77.94 a barrel. Natural gas futures jumped 7.2%.

The 10-year Treasury yield sank 5 basis points to 3.71%. The two-year Treasury yield, more closely tied to the Fed rate hike outlook, dipped below 4.5%.

The U.S. dollar fell significantly for a second straight session, back near recent lows.


Why This IBD Tool Simplifies The Search For Top Stocks


ETFs

The iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF (IGV) climbed 1.5%. The VanEck Vectors Semiconductor ETF (SMH) gained 0.9%.

SPDR S&P Metals & Mining ETF (XME) edged up 0.3%. U.S. Global Jets ETF (JETS) nudged 0.1% higher. SPDR S&P Homebuilders ETF (XHB) climbed 0.5%. The Energy Select SPDR ETF (XLE) fell 1.1%. The Health Care Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLV) rose 0.4%. Dow Jones giant UNH stock is the top holding in XLV.

Reflecting more-speculative story stocks, ARK Innovation ETF (ARKK) popped 2.9% and ARK Genomics ETF (ARKG) 0.9%. TSLA stock is a major holding across Ark Invest’s ETFs.


Five Best Chinese Stocks To Watch Now


Stocks To Watch

Dexcom stock advanced 1.7% to 112.92, finding support at the 21-day moving average. DXCM stock has been pausing this month after gapping up on earnings on Oct. 28. Dexcom stock arguably has a long handle with a 123.46 buy point from a seven-month consolidation. Investors could buy DXCM stock from an early entry off the 21-day line, perhaps using Tuesday’s high of 113.88 as a specific buy point.

Medpace stock fell 1.3% to 218.81 on Wednesday. Shares have been consolidating near record highs since skyrocketing 38% on Oct. 25 following earnings. Since then, MEDP stock has been forging a messy handle on a deep, yearlong cup base. While shares have had some big intraday swings, MEDP stock is currently on track to forge a three-weeks-tight pattern by Friday’s close. Investors might use the Nov. 15 close of 226.57 as an early entry, above the bulk of recent trading.

NBIX stock sank 1.5% to 118.97. Shares are consolidating near multiyear highs, extended from an October breakout. Despite a plunge to the 50-day line last week, Neurocrine stock has a three-weeks-tight pattern that’s on track to go for a fourth week. Technically, that has a 126.09 buy point, though investors may want to wait for some quieter action.

Shockwave stock popped 4.7% to 264.06 on Wednesday, back above its 21-day line but hitting resistance at the 50-day line. After a failed breakout in late October and sharp sell-off that continued through earnings, SWAV stock has bounced back over the past week. A new base will take more time, but aggressive investors could use a strong move above the 50-day as an early entry.

UNH stock climbed 1.3% to 529.71, rebounding above its 50-day and 21-day lines after briefly undercutting its 200-day line last week. UnitedHealth stock used to be an IBD Long-Term Leader and still shares many characteristics. Investors could use a bounce from the 50-day line as either an early entry or a Long-Term Leader entry. UNH stock needs to forge a new base after a breakout from a cup-with-handle base quickly failed last month.


Tesla Vs. BYD: Which EV Giant Is The Better Buy?


Market Rally Analysis

The stock market rally added to Tuesday’s gains. The S&P 500 just topped its Nov. 15 intraday high and closed within 1% of its 200-day line.

The Russell 2000 came right up to its 200-day line.

The Nasdaq added to Tuesday’s rebound from the 21-day moving average, though it’s still below its Nov. 15 short-term high and well below its 200-day.

The Dow Jones came within 20 points of its Aug. 16 intraday high.

The S&P 500 moving decisively above its 200-day line — which coincides roughly with a yearlong declining-tops trendline — is a huge test for the market rally.

A slew of economic data could swing Fed rate expectations and thus the stock market. On Wednesday, Nov. 30, the October JOLTS report will show job openings, with Fed chief Jerome Powell speaking later in the day. On Thursday, the PCE price index, the Fed’s favorite inflation gauge, will be released, along with jobless claims and the ISM manufacturing index. The November jobs report is due on Friday, Nov. 2.

Ideally, the market would move sideways for a few days, letting at least the 21-day line catch up, heading into those economic reports.


Time The Market With IBD’s ETF Market Strategy


What To Do Now

The market rally has shown some nice gains this week, with more stocks flashing buy signals in the past few days. Investors could have added a little more exposure as a result.

But they may want to be cautious about making significant new buys with the S&P 500 hovering below its 200-day line and so much Fed-critical economic due next week.

Also consider taking some partial profits in stocks that run up quickly. Stocks have been making short-lived advances amid a choppy uptrend and sector rotation.

Still, investors should be working hard on their investing shopping lists, looking for set ups and actionable names across a variety of sectors.

Read The Big Picture every day to stay in sync with the market direction and leading stocks and sectors.

Please follow Ed Carson on Twitter at @IBD_ECarson for stock market updates and more.

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Nintendo Expands Its Switch Online N64 Library With Two More Games

Nintendo’s latest N64 games for the Switch Online + Expansion Pack service are now officially available. Yes, that’s right – Mario Party and Mario Party 2 have arrived!

As previously noted, the first game arrived here in the west in 1998/99 and the second title followed up on the same platform in 1999 in Japan, and the year 2000 locally. These new versions are both supported by the Switch Online functionality and four-player multiplayer.

Here’s the PR about both:

Mario Party:

Mario Party launched for the Nintendo 64 system in 1999 and was the original party-starter for the series! In this classic four-player party game, you’ll join Mario and friends across nine action-packed Adventure Boards and 56 minigames in colorful multiplayer* (or solo!) competition.

Mario Party 2:

Keep the party going with Mario Party 2 and celebrate like it’s the year 2000 all over again! Mario and his Mushroom Kingdom friends return for another round of Bowser-bashing board-game action, complete with fancy costumes, new Adventure Boards and minigames

Japan’s Switch Online + Expansion Pack service also received Mario Party and Mario Party 2 this week.

Will you be returning to these games on the Switch Online + Expansion Pack service? Tell us below.



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Nintendo Expands Its Switch Online N64 Service With Two More Titles

Nintendo has announced it will be adding the original Mario Party game and Mario Party 2 to the Nintendo Switch N64 service on November 2nd. Here’s the rundown about each game from Nintendo’s official PR:

Mario Party:

Mario Party launched for the Nintendo 64 system in 1999 and was the original party-starter for the series! In this classic four-player party game, you’ll join Mario and friends across nine action-packed Adventure Boards and 56 minigames in colorful multiplayer* (or solo!) competition.

Mario Party 2:

Keep the party going with Mario Party 2 and celebrate like it’s the year 2000 all over again! Mario and his Mushroom Kingdom friends return for another round of Bowser-bashing board-game action, complete with fancy costumes, new Adventure Boards and minigames.

Of course, to join in on the fun, you’ll need to have a subscription to Nintendo’s Switch Online + Expansion Pack membership. This gives you access to N64 games, Sega Mega Drive / Genesis titles and also additional DLC content in certain Switch games. Japan will also be receiving the same two games on November 2nd.

The remaining titles in Nintendo’s current batch of N64 NSO games include Mario Party 3, Pokémon Stadium, Pokémon Stadium 2, 1080 Snowboarding, Excitebike 64 and also GoldenEye 007. Japan will be getting Harvest Moon 64, too.

Here’s the list of games still on the way to the service in 2022 and 2023:

Image: Nintendo

What do you think of the latest games announced for the Switch Online service? Tell us in the comments.



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Bank of England Further Expands Bond-Market Rescue to Restore U.K.’s Financial Stability

LONDON—The Bank of England extended support targeted at pension funds for the second day in a row, the latest attempt to contain a bond-market selloff that has threatened U.K. financial stability.

The central bank on Tuesday said it would add inflation-linked government bonds to its program of long-dated bond purchases, after an attempt on Monday to help pension funds failed to calm markets.

“Dysfunction in this market, and the prospect of self-reinforcing ‘fire sale’ dynamics pose a material risk to U.K. financial stability,” the BOE said.

The yield on a 30-year U.K. inflation-linked bond has soared above 1.5% this week, up from 0.851% on Oct. 7, according to

Tradeweb.

Just weeks ago, the yield on the gilt, as U.K. government bonds are known, was negative. Because yields rise as prices fall, the effect has been punishing losses for bond investors.

Turmoil in the U.K. bond market created a feedback loop that left investors like pension funds short on cash and rippled out into other markets. WSJ’s Chelsey Dulaney explains the type of investment at the heart of the crisis. Illustration: Ryan Trefes

On Tuesday, after the BOE expanded the purchases, the yield on inflation-linked gilts held mostly steady but at the new, elevated levels. The central bank said it bought roughly £2 billion, equivalent to about $2.21 billion, in inflation-linked gilts, out of a £5 billion daily capacity.

The bank’s bond purchases, however, are meant to run out on Friday. The Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association, a trade body that represents the pension industry, urged the central bank on Tuesday to extend its purchases until the end of the month.

The near-daily expansion of the Bank of England’s rescue plan highlighted the challenges facing central banks in stamping out problems fueled by a once-in-a-generation increase in inflation and interest rates. It also raised questions about whether the BOE was providing the right medicine to address the problem.

The turmoil sparked fresh demands on Monday for pension funds to come up with cash to shore up LDIs, or liability-driven investments, derivative-based strategies that were meant to help match the money they owe to retirees over the long term.

LDIs were at the root of the bond selloff that prompted the BOE’s original intervention. Pension plans in late September saw a wave of margin calls after Prime Minister

Liz Truss’s

government announced large, debt-funded tax cuts that fueled an unprecedented bond-market selloff.

The BOE launched its original bond-purchase program on Sept. 28, but it only restored calm for a couple of days before selling resumed. An expansion of the program on Monday backfired, with yields again soaring higher.

The selloff on Monday was “very reminiscent of two weeks ago,” said

Simeon Willis,

chief investment officer of XPS, a company that advises pension plans.

LDI strategies use leveraged financial derivatives tied to interest rates to amplify returns. The outsize moves in U.K. bond markets last month led to huge collateral calls on pensions to back up the leveraged investments. The pension funds have sold other assets, including government and corporate bonds, to meet those calls, adding to pressure on yields to rise and creating a spiral effect on markets.

Pensions are typically big holders of inflation-linked government bonds, which help protect the plans from both inflation and interest-rate changes. But these weren’t eligible in the BOE’s bond-buying program until Tuesday.

The U.K. helped pioneer bonds with payouts linked to inflation, sometimes referred to as linkers, in the 1980s. Linkers were originally sold exclusively to pensions, but the U.K. opened them to other investors over the years.

Pensions remain a dominant force in the market because the bonds offer long-term protection against both inflation and interest-rate changes. Their outsize role left the market vulnerable to shifts in pension-fund demand like that seen in recent weeks.

Adam Skerry, a fund manager at Abrdn with a focus on inflation-linked government bonds, said his firm has struggled to trade those assets in recent days.

“We were trying to sell some bonds this morning, and it was virtually impossible to do that,” he said. “The LDI issue that’s facing the market, the fact that the market is moving to the degree that it did, particularly yesterday, suggests that there’s still an awful lot [of selling] there.”

Pensions have also appeared hesitant to sell their bonds to the BOE, reflecting a mismatch in what the central bank is offering and what the market needs.

“The way that the bank has structured this intervention is they can only buy assets if people put offers into them, but nobody is putting offers in,” said Craig Inches, head of rates and cash at Royal London Asset Management. He said the pension funds would rather sell their riskier assets, including corporate bonds or property.

Mr. Willis of XPS said many pensions want to hold on to their government bonds because it helps protect pensions against changes in interest rates, which impact the way their liabilities are valued.

“If they sell gilts now, they’re doing it in the likelihood that they’ll need to buy them back in the future at some point and they might be more expensive, and that’s unhelpful,” he said.

Also plaguing the program: Pension funds are traditionally slow-moving organizations that make decisions with multidecade horizons. The market turmoil has hurtled them into the warp-speed-style moves usually reserved for traders at swashbuckling hedge funds.

To make decisions about the sale of assets, industry players describe a game of telephone playing out among trustees, investment advisers, fund managers and banks. Pension funds spread their assets among multiple managers, which are in turn held by separate custodian banks. Calling everyone for the necessary signoffs is creating a lengthy and involved process.

To give themselves more time, pension funds are pushing the BOE to extend the bond-buying program at least to the end of the month. That is when the U.K.’s Treasury chief,

Kwasi Kwarteng,

is expected to lay out the government’s borrowing plans for the coming year.

The Institute for Fiscal Studies, a nonpartisan think tank that focuses on the budget, warned Tuesday that borrowing is likely to hit £200 billion in the financial year ending March, the third highest for a fiscal year since World War II and £100 billion higher than planned in March of this year. Increased borrowing increases the supply of bonds and generally causes bond yields to rise.

Mr. Kwarteng on Tuesday declared his confidence in BOE Gov. Andrew Bailey as he faced questions from lawmakers for the first time in his new job.

“I speak to the governor very frequently and he is someone who is absolutely independent and is managing what is a global situation very effectively,” he said.

Write to Chelsey Dulaney at Chelsey.Dulaney@wsj.com, Anna Hirtenstein at anna.hirtenstein@wsj.com and Paul Hannon at paul.hannon@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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Russia Expands Use of Iranian Combat Drones in Ukraine

Ukraine shot down more than a dozen Iranian combat drones across the front lines this week as Russia expands the use of a foreign-weapons system that Ukrainian commanders say has inflicted serious damage on their forces.

In his nightly address on Friday, Ukrainian President

Volodymyr Zelensky

said his country’s antiaircraft forces had shot down Iranian drones in the eastern Dnipropetrovsk region and the southern city of Odessa, including the nearby Pivdennyi port, used for exporting grain.

In Russia, renewed protests against President

Vladimir Putin’s

order to mobilize new forces to bolster his flagging offensive in Ukraine led to hundreds of detentions across the country on Saturday.

The Ukrainian Air Force identified the weapons shot down as Shahed-136 unmanned kamikaze drones, or loitering munitions, and Mohajer-6 drones that can carry missiles and be used for reconnaissance. It published a video showing one of the drones it shot out of the sky in the Dnipropetrovsk region.

The Iranian drones are relatively small and fly at a very low altitude, making it hard for Ukrainian air-defense systems to detect them. At least one of the drones made it past Ukrainian defenses, hitting the navy’s headquarters in Odessa on Friday. Ukraine’s southern military command said one civilian was killed and an administration building in the port area was destroyed.

A drone that Ukrainian authorities consider to be an Iranian-made Shahed-136 flew over the city of Odessa on Friday.



Photo:

STRINGER/REUTERS

Footage broadcast by Ukrainian news channels showed soldiers unsuccessfully trying to shoot it down with small arms before it crashed in a ball of fire. Soldiers can be heard shouting, “Where the hell is air defense?”

Another online video showed one of the downed drones being towed in the water to shore.

The air force said it had destroyed seven more Iranian drones, including four Shahed-136s, in the southern Mykolaiv region on Thursday, and another one on Tuesday.

Shahed-136 delta-wing drones, repainted in Russian colors and rebranded as Geranium 2, started appearing this month over Ukrainian armor and artillery positions in the northeastern Kharkiv region, said Col.

Rodion Kulagin,

commander of artillery of Ukraine’s 92nd Mechanized Brigade.

Ukrainian servicemen in the Mykolaiv region, where Ukraine says it shot down several Russian-operated drones this week.



Photo:

genya savilov/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

In his brigade’s operational area alone, the Iranian drones—which usually fly in pairs and then slam into their targets—have destroyed two 152-mm self-propelled howitzers and two 122-mm self-propelled howitzers, as well as two BTR armored infantry vehicles, Col. Kulagin said.

Russia’s use of Shahed-136 drones in Ukraine represents the most challenging expansion of Tehran’s arsenal beyond the Middle East, where Iran has used its unmanned aerial vehicles to pressure the U.S. and its allies in the region. It also highlights the deficiencies in Russia’s own drone program, which hasn’t been able to match the firepower of armed UAVs deployed by Ukraine.

The immediate battlefield impact of the introduction of Iranian drones into Ukraine war is difficult to assess, but the deployment gives Tehran an opportunity to test out its products against North Atlantic Treaty Organization defense systems, said

Bernard Hudson,

former counterterrorism director for the Central Intelligence Agency.

“This allows Tehran a risk-free path to improve their drone technology and tactics and to make them more capable and lethal. The lessons of Ukraine will inform how Iran will later use these systems in the Middle East,” said Mr. Hudson, founder and chied executive of Looking Glass Global Services, which works in the drone sector in Eastern Europe and the Middle East.

Late Friday, Mr. Zelensky said Ukraine had revoked the accreditation of the Iranian ambassador and had reduced the number of diplomatic personnel at the Iranian Embassy in Kyiv in response to Iran sending the drones. He said he had tasked the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry with developing a response to Iranian support of Russia: “The world will know about every fact of collaboration with evil.”

Kremlin-orchestrated referendums to annex territory Russia controls in Ukraine started in four regions on Friday. People in Russia said goodbye to their loved ones after President Vladimir Putin’s call-up for troops to fight in Ukraine. Photo: Associated Press

Israel and the West have accused Iran and its proxies of flying armed drones to attack Saudi Arabia’s oil industry, the capital of the United Arab Emirates and American soldiers in Syria, as well as tankers in the Gulf of Oman in recent years. Iran-backed Houthi forces in Yemen have repeatedly used delta-wing drones to carry out attacks on neighboring Saudi Arabia.

In an interview published Saturday by French newspaper Ouest-France, Mr. Zelensky said he regretted that Israel hadn’t provided Ukraine with antiaircraft defenses. “This shocks me because at the same time Israel exports its armaments to other countries,” he said, blaming Russian influence in Israel. Israel has previously said that it opposed Russia’s invasion of Ukraine but that it will provide humanitarian rather than military aid.

Ukraine has asked Western allies, which have already supplied billions of dollars’ worth of military equipment, to supply more advanced antidrone and air-defense technologies.

In a separate incident, Ukraine’s southern military command said Saturday that an unmanned aircraft had dropped a poisonous chemical substance on Ukrainian positions, without specifying the location. It said there were no significant casualties.

In Russia, Col. Gen.

Mikhail Mizintsev,

who was sanctioned by the European Union in June for overseeing the bombardment of the strategic Ukrainian port city of Mariupol, was promoted to deputy defense minister for logistics on Saturday. Since the beginning of the war, Russia’s army has struggled with supplying and maintaining its troops in the field and providing them with adequate equipment, critically hobbling Moscow’s invasion plans.

A heavily damaged Russian tank near Kupyansk, a northeastern city recently recaptured by Ukraine.



Photo:

sergey kozlov/Shutterstock

Russians on Saturday turned out to protest in more than a dozen cities nationwide against Mr. Putin’s order to mobilize hundreds of thousands of people to fight in Ukraine. Also Saturday, Mr. Putin signed into law fresh legislation punishing soldiers who refuse to fight, desert the army or surrender with up to 10 years in prison.

In Moscow, riot police detained protesters en masse and with force, carrying them by their limbs and the scruff of their necks and stuffing them into police wagons. Most protesters weren’t able to pull out placards before they were detained.

The rallies were the second this week after protests broke out in the wake of Mr. Putin’s directive on Wednesday. That evening demonstrators chanted “Let our children live!” and “Send Putin to the trenches!” Officers detained more than 1,400 people across the country and handed draft notices to some protesters right at the police station, according to the independent Russian OVD-Info rights monitor and interviews by The Wall Street Journal.

As of Saturday evening, another nearly 750 people had been detained, according to OVD-Info.

Write to Stephen Kalin at stephen.kalin@wsj.com and Evan Gershkovich at evan.gershkovich@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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Poliovirus outbreak expands in NY: Third county has vaccination rate of 62%

Enlarge / A polio vaccine box is displayed at a health clinic in Brooklyn, New York on August 17, 2022.

A third county in New York with a low vaccination rate has detected poliovirus in its wastewater, suggesting that spread of the dangerous virus is expanding, which continues to pose a significant threat to anyone unvaccinated.

Wastewater sampling in Sullivan County detected poliovirus twice in July and twice in August, the New York State Health Department announced. Genetic sequencing determined that the positive samples are linked to the case of paralytic polio reported from Rockland County in July, which was genetically linked to viruses circulating in London and Israel.

Sullivan Country joins nearby Rockland County, Orange County, and New York City in having poliovirus detected in sewage. At least 13 sewage samples from Rockland and eight from Orange have tested positive since April. The three counties are all in a northwest-pointing line from New York City, along the state’s southern border. Earlier this month, New York City also announced finding poliovirus in wastewater surveillance

All three counties have low vaccination rates against polio, the state’s health department notes. In the US, children are advised to get three doses of inactivated polio vaccine by 24 months, which is 99 percent effective at preventing paralytic disease. Statewide, about 79 percent of New York children have gotten their three polio shots by 24 months. But that vaccination rate is 62 percent in Sullivan County, 59 percent in Orange County, and 60 percent in Rockland County.

Those low county-wide averages suggest pockets of even lower vaccination rates. For instance, health officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention noted in a recent polio report that some zip codes in Rockland County have vaccination rates as low as 37 percent. In such communities, the highly contagious poliovirus can easily spread, increasing the risk of more paralytic polio.

“One New Yorker paralyzed by polio is already too many, and I do not want to see another paralytic case,” State Health Commissioner Dr. Mary Bassett said in a statement. “The polio in New York today is an imminent threat to all adults and children who are unvaccinated or not up to date with their polio immunizations. Every New Yorker, parent, guardian, and pediatrician must do everything possible to ensure they, their children, and their patients are protected against this dangerous, debilitating disease through safe and effective vaccination.”

Local, state, and federal health officials have been making urgent calls for vaccination for weeks now, setting up vaccination clinics. But the rates of people signing up for immunizations are far from what’s needed to reach the state’s goal of “well over 90 percent” vaccinated.

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Pentagon expands use of shipping to deliver weapons for war in Ukraine

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SCOTT AIR FORCE BASE, Ill. — The Pentagon has expanded its use of maritime shipping to deliver weapons for the war in Ukraine, U.S. defense officials said, after relying heavily on aircraft early in Russia’s invasion to get arms to Kyiv as quickly as possible.

The Defense Department began sending some items by sea a few weeks after the invasion but significantly broadened the effort this spring, as the United States began providing Ukraine with howitzer artillery and other heavy weapons that require a steady flow of large-caliber ammunition, U.S. defense officials said here at the headquarters of U.S. Transportation Command, as Deputy Defense Secretary Kathleen Hicks visited recently.

“Once we started to provide them howitzers, we knew that we were going to need more ammunition,” said Army Col. Steven Putthoff, the deputy director of operations at U.S. Transportation Command. “So, we could plan ahead a little bit more, and then we could start to use more sealift to provide that support and to get it there sometimes even ahead of the request.”

The expansion underscores a new phase in the campaign, after a Russian assault on Kyiv was repelled and Ukraine and its partners settled in for what is expected to be a grinding war that could continue for months more and possibly years. The Biden administration has approved $12.9 billion of military assistance for Ukraine since the Feb. 24 invasion and pledged an additional $2.98 billion of support Wednesday, on Ukraine’s independence day.

Battle for Kyiv: Ukrainian valor, Russian blunders combined to save the capital

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky spoke to The Washington Post on Aug. 8 in Kyiv about getting high-tech, modern weapons from Europe and the United States. (Video: Whitney Leaming/The Washington Post)

U.S. military officials declined to detail specific routes used to get weapons to Ukraine but said that some of the weapons coming from the continental United States find their way directly to the battlefield, while others are being used to replenish American stocks elsewhere in Europe from which U.S. military officials withdrew supplies to arm Ukraine.

While aircraft can reach Europe from the United States much more quickly, ships can haul vast quantities of cargo that could allow Ukraine to build up a larger arsenal for future campaigns in the war.

The effort comes a year after the United States carried out a harrowing evacuation of more than 124,000 people from Afghanistan, taxing the Pentagon’s fleet of cargo jets. At the height of the operation, a C-17 was landing at Hamid Karzai International Airport at least once per hour. That heavy schedule required the Transportation Command to suspend other operations until the evacuation was completed and then catch up aircraft on maintenance, Putthoff said.

During the evacuation, Putthoff said, “everything else on the world kind of went on hold, what we call ‘broken glass.’ We had to go back in and clean that up the next few months.”

The weapons deliveries to Ukraine are different, he said. While virtually all flights landing in Kabul during the evacuation were military jets, the Pentagon has relied heavily on chartered aircraft and ships to move equipment for Ukraine, leaving the U.S. military free to carry out a variety of other transport missions.

At Transportation Command, Hicks met Aug. 18 with military officials including Air Force Gen. Jackie Van Ovost, the command’s top officer. Van Ovost said that anticipating possible needs and setting routes as quickly as possible is key. Equipment usually moves from a military depot by train or truck to an airport or seaport, and then arrives in a second location from where it often must be moved again.

“We’re not graded on getting it to a location where it’s not being used,” Van Ovost said, speaking to Hicks, the Pentagon’s No. 2 official. “We’re getting graded on end-to-end.”

Van Ovost said that the manual calculations that U.S. military officials had to do in the past to move equipment took days.

“Now we have systems that allow us to perfect it,” she said. “It’s less airplanes, in the right locations, at the right times. And it’s done by the press of a button, and three or four seconds later we have three or four options.”

Hicks credited Transcom officials with carrying out an “impressive ballet” to move everything that is needed. She told reporters that she wants to make sure that the military has the ability to sustain its fleets and keep them appropriately sized.

“Ukraine, as challenging as it is, does not compare really to the level of lift and mobility and refueling that need to be done in a major conflict,” Hicks said.

Among the weapons that the Pentagon has delivered to Ukraine so far are more than 1,400 antiaircraft Stinger missiles, 8,500 Javelin anti-armor missiles (critical in destroying Russian tanks), 700 Switchblade drones and 142 pieces of howitzer artillery with more than 900,000 rounds.

On Wednesday, senior Pentagon officials said that they expect even more military assistance to flow to Ukraine after the recent $3 billion commitment.

“This may be our largest security assistance package to date, but let me be clear: It will not be our last,” said Colin Kahl, the undersecretary of defense for policy, in a news briefing. “We will continue to closely consult with Ukraine on its near-, mid- and long-term capability needs.”

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China expands military drills, escalates threats against Taiwan

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China has announced additional live-fire drills in the Bohai and Yellow Seas, as Beijing broadcasts its fury over a visit to Taiwan by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) with military exercises near the island.

China’s Ministry of Defense did not announce the purpose of the expanded exercises, which come as the visit frayed U.S.-China relations, but they come as Beijing is putting on its greatest show of force around Taiwan since the last cross-strait crisis of 1995 to 1996 — in what it calls a warning to “provocateurs” who challenge Beijing’s claims over Taiwan, the self-governing democracy of 23 million.

China’s Maritime Safety Administration on Saturday announced five exclusion zones in the Yellow Sea where exercises would take place from Aug. 5 to 15, as well as an additional four zones in the Bohai Sea where a month of unspecified Chinese military operations would take place from Aug 8.

Although China officially seeks what it calls “peaceful reunification” with Taiwan — which has never been ruled by the Chinese Communist Party — it also consistently threatens to take the island by force if the government in Taipei declares formal independence.

From the one-China policy to the Taiwan Relations Act, here’s what to know

Diplomatic fallout from visit escalated sharply on Friday when Beijing imposed sanctions on Pelosi and her immediate family, canceled military dialogues and suspended climate talks and other bilateral cooperation on issues including transnational crime.

The White House summoned Chinese Ambassador Qin Gang over “irresponsible” military actions, including firing missiles into the waters around Taiwan. Secretary of State Antony Blinken called the drills an “extreme, disproportionate and escalatory military response.”

White House summons Chinese ambassador as crisis escalates

But China has shown no sign of slowing the pace of military drills. The Eastern Theatre Command of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) on Sunday said it would continue joint air and navy exercises in the areas around Taiwan as planned, focusing on long-distance strikes against targets in the sky.

After a record number of Chinese warplanes flew close to Taiwan’s airspace on Friday, 14 jets crossed the median line of the Taiwan Strait on Saturday as 14 Chinese warships were active nearby. Three years ago, crossings of the informal boundary that divides the waterway were unheard off.

Taiwan’s Defense Ministry described Chinese drills on Saturday morning as a “simulated attack on Taiwan’s main island.”

Taiwan has also reported drones and unidentified objects flying over Kinmen and Matsu, two Taiwan-ruled islands closest to the coast of China’s Fujian province. The Kinmen Defense Command on Saturday fired warning flares at three drones that flew above its restricted waters.

Meng Xiangqing, a professor at the PLA-affiliated National Defense University, told state broadcaster China Central Television in an interview published on Sunday that the drills aimed to “completely smash the so-called median line” and demonstrate China’s ability to prevent foreign intervention in a conflict by blockading and controlling the Bashi Channel, an important waterway between the western Pacific Ocean and the South China Sea.

Military analysts have said the Chinese live-fire drills that started on Thursday and took place on all sides of Taiwan simulate a potential blockade of the island, but Taiwan’s government has said that disruption to shipping routes and flights has so far been limited.

Pelosi ended the congressional delegation’s Asia tour on Friday by vowing that China would not succeed in isolating Taiwan.

The Chinese Communist Party has for decades pursued a global pressure campaign to diplomatically isolate Taiwan’s democratically elected government by poaching its diplomatic partners and fiercely opposing exchanges between Taipei and foreign officials.

Pelosi’s Taiwan visit ushers in new phase of China’s pressure campaign

China accuses the United States of hollowing out its “one China” policy — which neither challenges nor endorses Beijing’s claims over the island — with steps to shore up its unofficial relationship with Taiwan including the first House Speaker visit in 25 years. The White House maintains the policy is unchanged.

Despite the unprecedented military pressure, the Taiwanese public has remained largely calm in the face of intensifying Chinese threats. President Tsai Ing-wen said Thursday, “We are calm and will not act in haste. We are rational and will not act to provoke.”

Annual drills by the Taiwanese military conducted the week before Pelosi’s visit were not altered despite increasingly angry warnings from Beijing. As drills started, local media reported that tourists visiting Xiaoliuqiu, a small island off the southwest coast of mainland Taiwan, flocked to the shore to see if they could catch a glimpse of Chinese missiles landing in nearby waters.

The Taiwan Stock Exchange had recovered from a brief midweek dip by Friday.

Pei Lin Wu in Taipei contributed to this report.

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Jan. 6 committee interviewed Mnuchin and expands interest into 25th Amendment

The panel has interviewed former President Donald Trump’s former Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, sources tell CNN.

Sources tell the CNN the committee is negotiating terms for a potential interview with former Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe. Given the classified nature of Ratcliffe’s former role, there are unique issues the two sides have to work out.

The committee will also interview former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo as soon as this week and is speaking with former acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney on Thursday.

Several former Cabinet officials are known to have met with the committee already, including Labor Secretary Eugene Scalia, Acting Defense Secretary Chris Miller and Acting Attorney General Jeff Rosen.

The committee also met with former Attorney General Bill Barr, but he had left the administration prior to the events of January 6th.

The committee has also previously interviewed Ken Cuccinelli and reached out to Chad Wolf, two top officials from the Trump-era Department of Homeland Security, CNN reported last year.

The interest in the 25th Amendment and activities following the Capitol attack comes after former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson testified last month about a “large concern” that the Cabinet and then-Vice President Mike Pence could attempt to remove the President from office.

“There was a large concern of the 25th Amendment potentially being invoked, and there were concerns about what would happen in the Senate if it was,” Hutchinson testified.

But Mark Short, former chief of staff to former Vice President Mike Pence, said on CNN Thursday that he doesn’t “recall there being any serious conversation” about invoking the 25th Amendment, saying that using it would have been impractical.

“The reality is there was 10 days left in the administration,” Short said. “This was a political ploy. And, further, you know, when they designed the 25th Amendment, it has higher standards, higher hurdles than even impeachment does. Whereas impeachment requires a simple majority in the House and a supermajority in the Senate, this requires approval by a Cabinet, plus a supermajority in the House, plus a supermajority in the Senate.”

Short added: “That wasn’t happening in 10 days in the administration … This was really just a political ploy by Nancy Pelosi and Democrats in Congress to try to put pressure to exert this and it was never going anywhere in our White House.”

A select committee spokesperson declined to comment.

CNN has reached out to Mnuchin for comment.

ABC News was first to report the Mnuchin interview.

DOJ criminal investigation heating up

The separate Justice Department criminal investigation into the plots to subvert the 2020 election is also heating up.

CNN previously reported that Hutchinson is cooperating with DOJ’s criminal investigation, a source with knowledge of the discussions confirmed to CNN. The extent of that cooperation isn’t clear. Hutchinson was a star witness for the committee.

DOJ also obtained a second warrant to search the cell phone of right-wing lawyer John Eastman as part of its criminal inquiry, prosecutors said in a court filing Wednesday.

Investigators seized Eastman’s phone earlier this month in New Mexico after receiving a warrant to take the device. Agents needed a second warrant to search the contents of the phone, which they received on July 12.

The warrant is a critical step in the Justice Department’s intensifying investigation into January 6, where investigators have seemingly zeroed in on the conduct of Trump and his close allies’ efforts to overturn the 2020 election.

Eastman has been a key figure in the committee’s investigation in the plot to subvert the election results. A federal judge has previously said that Eastman and Trump “more likely than not” planned a crime as they sought to disrupt the January 6 congressional certification of the presidential election.

This story has been updated with additional details.

CNN’s Devan Cole contributed to this report.

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