Tag Archives: Meets

Cult of the Lamb hands-on: Animal Crossing meets the dark arts

Enlarge / You know the sweet old nursery rhyme: Mary had a little lamb, but then it was resurrected by the devil and forced to create a murderous cult.

Devolver / Massive Monster

When I first played Cult of the Lamb, launching August 11 on PC and all major console families, I imagined that its demonic tone originated as an internal joke for its development team. Perhaps the creators at Massive Monster sat around looking at the sim-management likes of Animal Crossing and The Sims, then thought that the only way they’d surpass those games is by striking a deal with the devil.

Then they went ahead and made a sim game where players do exactly that. After 90 minutes spent playing the game’s expanded demo, provided by its publishers at Devolver Digital, I’m inclined to think its choices about tone, art direction, and sim-meets-Satan gameplay were the right call. (There’s currently a free public demo as well, available on Windows and MacOS, but it’s much shorter than what I’ve sampled.)

The One Who Waits

Enlarge / Seems like a trustworthy entity. Let’s make a deal for our soul.

Devolver

Cult of the Lamb begins with the game’s hero, a Disney-like cartoon lamb, being led to its slaughter as a form of religious sacrifice. But death is only the beginning in this game. In the afterlife, you meet a mysterious underground beast wrapped in chains, simply named The One Who Waits. You’re given the option to rise from your grave, grow a cult full of devout followers, expand your mastery of the demonic arts, and defeat a series of monstrous rivals. You can answer this call in one of two responses: “yes” and “absolutely.”

Enlarge / A peek at my underdeveloped cult. Notice that two of the characters have socialized and become friends. This can change their attributes in ways that are useful, but they may also get sad if one of them dies of gastrointestinal disease (which can happen).

Devolver

After battling through a top-down, Zelda-like sequence and killing your prior captors, a guide with similar demonic inclinations teaches you how to find, free, and convert down-on-their-luck woodland creatures. The game’s formal loop begins with you assigning basic tasks to your sole follower on an expansive plain that your cult calls home: gather resources, build structures, tend farms, and so on. Once your follower is occupied, enter a gate that takes you to a randomly generated series of battling rooms, where you’ll make progress on your kill list, gather rarer resources, and find and conscript more easily influenced animals to join your cult.

Enlarge / Assigning tasks, giving gifts: all in a day’s work as a cult founder.

Devolver

Bring them back to the village, and that’s when you begin the game’s leader-of-a-cult cosplay in earnest.

Everything you need to become more powerful revolves around maintaining your cultists’ faith and loyalty; the former can be exploited and drained from each cultist like an ectoplasm of sorts, while the latter sticks around as more of a permanent “experience point” meter. The time between demon-hunting battles can be spent conducting faith-draining services, spending individual time with cultists to make them happier, or learning about and resolving side quests that they ask about.

Enlarge / Just another day of teaching the good word. Today, we learned a ritual where I can kill one of my followers to claim rare items and resources. Everyone seems on board with the plan!

Devolver

That’s one way to save on resources

Unlike run-of-the-mill RPGs, however, you have an option outside of being helpful. Maybe you don’t care about certain cultists, or maybe you missed the timing window to help them resolve issues like starvation, disease, or losing faith. (The longer you’re out adventuring and battling, the more adrift certain followers may become back at the cult farm, as indicated by an always-running day-night cycle.)

Early in the game’s skill-tree system, cult leaders learn that they have the option to outright sacrifice their followers, which can bestow rare rewards on your cult. This might cost some of the admiration of your other followers, but from what I can tell, savvy cult leaders can still balance their emotional needs while feeding their lust for blood and power.

Enlarge / Each combat encounter is randomly generated, and your hero begins each with randomly assigned melee and ranged attacks. The game’s skill-tree decisions can grant you more options in terms of weapons or other completely different perks.

Devolver

Cult of the Lamb could very well have invented a half-battling, half-sim ecosystem that sounds a lot simpler or drier, and without the Satanic overtones, the game very much resembles the 1991 SNES classic Actraiser. The devs, artists, and writers at Massive Monster deserve credit for making this game fun to talk about, look at, and ponder; its systems of cult management lean in to brutality in ways that make logical sense yet add mechanical fun to the question of how players might move forward as cult leaders. One of the game’s skill trees asks a brutal question early on: Would you rather build beds for your followers or develop the ingenuity to build disease-reducing graves, instead? At first, you can’t have both. Decisions, decisions.

But this game does more than merely lift another decades-old game’s mechanics. While its randomly generated battling levels clearly draw inspiration from Binding of Isaac, Cult of the Lamb‘s upgrade system requires careful curation of the cult’s farm region, in terms of resource management, skill-tree decisions, and even side quests to unlock more “Tarot cards” (which are shuffled and randomly dealt during battling encounters to increase your chances of survival). A series of unlockable village outposts near your cult add everything from amusing new characters to side quests to mini-games, including a clever tap-to-reel fishing mode and a tricky, surprisingly engaging spin on Yahtzee.

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Prince Charles meets genocide survivors in Rwanda

In 1994, Hutu extremists in Rwanda targeted minority ethnic Tutsis and moderate Hutus in a three-month killing spree that left an estimated 800,000 people dead, though local estimates are higher.

In the basement below the church — which today stands as a memorial to the 1994 genocide — the skulls of unidentified Tutsi men are suspended above the coffin of a woman from the same ethnic group who died following an act of barbarous sexual violence.

Attackers targeted churches like this one, on the outskirts of the capital Kigali. More than 10,000 people were killed here over two days, according to the memorial’s manager Rachel Murekatete. A mass grave behind the building is the final resting place of more than 45,000 people from the surrounding area killed in the violence.

Prince Charles appeared visibly moved as he was shown around the church grounds, where even now bodies discovered elsewhere are being brought, as former attackers identify other gravesites as part of the reconciliation process that began in 1999.

The heir to the British throne is in Rwanda for a Commonwealth leaders’ summit later this week.

After being shown the grave site, the 73-year-old royal laid a wreath in honor of the victims buried here. On its card, a note from the royal written in the local Kinyarwanda language: “We will always remember the innocent souls that were killed in the Genocide Against the Tutsi in April 1994. Be strong Rwanda. Charles”

The royal then visited Mbyo reconciliation village, one of eight similar villages in Rwanda, where survivors and perpetrators of the genocide live alongside each other. The perpetrators publicly apologize for their crimes, while survivors profess forgiveness.

The first day of his visit to Rwanda was heavily focused on learning more about the massacres nearly three decades ago. Rwandan footballer and genocide survivor Eric Murangwa had encouraged the prince to include Nyamata during his three-day visit to the country.

“We are currently living in what we call ‘the last stage of genocide’ which is denial. And having someone like Prince Charles visiting Rwanda and visiting the memorial … highlights how the country has managed to recover from that terrible past,” he told CNN earlier this month during a Buckingham Palace reception celebrating the contributions of people from across the Commonwealth.

Earlier Wednesday, Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall met Rwanda’s President Kagame and first lady Jeannette Kagame and visited the Kigali Genocide Memorial and museum at Gisozi, where a quarter of a million people are interred.

“This memorial is a place of remembrance, a place where survivors and visitors come and pay respect of the victims of genocide against Tutsi,” says Freddy Mutanguha, the site’s director and a genocide survivor himself. “More than 250,000 victims were buried in this memorial and their bodies were collected in different places … and this place [has] become a final destination for our beloved ones, our families.”

Those families include his own, who once lived in the city of Kibuye in the country’s western province.

Mutanguha told CNN he heard as attackers murdered his parents and siblings during the genocide, saying: “I was in hiding but I could hear their voices actually until they finished. I survived with my sister, but I lost four sisters as well.”

Keeping their memory alive is now what drives his mission at the memorial.

“This is a very important place for me as a survivor because apart from being where we buried our family, my mom is down here in one of the mass graves, it’s a home for me, but also [it’s] a place where I work and I feel that responsibility. As a survivor I have to speak out, I have to tell the truth of what happened to my family, my country and to the Tutsi people,” he continues.

Mutanguha was keen to welcome Prince Charles to learn more about what happened here and help counter a growing online threat from genocide deniers, which he compares to holocaust denial.

“That’s what actually concerns me because when the Holocaust happened, people didn’t learn from the past. When the genocide against Tutsi happened, you can see the deniers of the genocide … mainly those who committed genocide — they feel they can do it again because they didn’t finish the job. So, me telling the story, working here and receiving visitors, probably we can make the ‘never again’ the reality.”

A spokesperson for Clarence House said the royal couple were struck by how important it is to never forget the horrors of the past. “But also were deeply moved as they listened to people who have found ways of living with and even forgiving the most appalling crimes,” they added.

Prince Charles arrived in Rwanda on Tuesday night — the first member of the royal family to visit the country. He is in Kigali representing the Queen at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM).

The meeting is usually held every two years but was rescheduled twice due to the pandemic. It is the first CHOGM he is attending since being selected as the organization’s next head at the 2018 gathering.

However, the royal trip to Kigali comes at a somewhat awkward time as a furor over the UK government’s radical plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda has erupted back home.

Britain’s government announced the deal with the east African country in April, however the inaugural flight a week ago was grounded after an eleventh-hour intervention by the European Court of Human Rights.

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson is also confirmed to attend the summit of Commonwealth leaders and is expected to meet with Prince Charles on Friday morning.

Sign up to CNN’s Royal News, a weekly dispatch bringing you the inside track on the royal family, what they are up to in public and what’s happening behind palace walls.

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C.D.C. Panel Meets to Vote on Covid Vaccines for Children Under 5: Live Updates

Credit…Ron Harris/Associated Press

Scientific advisers to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention began meeting on Saturday to decide whether the benefits of Covid vaccines outweigh the risks for children under 5, one of the last group of Americans to qualify for the shots.

The meeting, which is streaming live here, began at 10 a.m. Eastern time. The advisers are expected to vote yes, despite reservations about the paucity of data, especially regarding the efficacy of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine.

Earlier this week, another panel of experts advising the Food and Drug Administration unanimously backed the vaccines. The F.D.A. on Friday authorized the Moderna vaccine for children ages 6 months through 5 years, and the Pfizer vaccine for children ages 6 months through 4 years. (Pfizer-BioNTech’s vaccine has been available to children ages 5 and older since November.)

On Friday, the C.D.C.’s advisers heard evidence supporting the effectiveness of the vaccines in the youngest children. But the committee repeatedly pressed Pfizer on its estimates and noted that three doses of that vaccine would be needed to protect children, compared with two doses of the Moderna vaccine.

Both vaccines are safe, and both produced antibody levels similar to those seen in young adults. If the committee’s endorsement on Saturday is swiftly followed by a green light from the agency’s director, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, states are preparing to begin immunizing the children next week.

Among the tasks facing the C.D.C. panel on Saturday is the difficulty of recommending two very different vaccines for the same population.

“The implementation of these two rollouts is going to be incredibly challenging,” said Katelyn Jetelina, a public health expert and author of the widely read newsletter “Your Local Epidemiologist.”

“There’s going to have to be a lot of proactive communication about the difference between the two and the implications of taking one over the other,” she said.

In its clinical trials, Moderna found that two shots of its vaccine, each with one-fourth of the adult dose, produced antibody levels that were at least as high as those seen in young adults.

The company estimated the vaccine’s efficacy against symptomatic infection at about 51 percent among children ages 6 to 24 months, and 37 percent among children ages 2 through 5. The side effects were minor, although about one in five children experienced fevers.

Based on those data, the F.D.A. authorized two shots of the Moderna vaccine, spaced four weeks apart.

The Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine also produced a strong immune response, but only after three doses, company officials told the scientific advisers on Friday.

Two doses of the vaccine were inadequate, they said — justifying the F.D.A.’s decision in February to delay authorizing the vaccine until regulators had data regarding three doses. Two doses may not have been enough because the company gave the children just one-tenth of the adult dose in each shot, some advisers said.

The vaccine has an overall efficacy of 80 percent in children under 5, Pfizer’s scientists claimed on Friday. But that calculation was based on just three children in the vaccine group and seven who received a placebo, making it an unreliable metric, the C.D.C.’s advisers noted.

“We should just assume we don’t have efficacy data,” said Dr. Sarah Long, an infectious diseases expert at Drexel University College of Medicine. But Dr. Long said she was “comfortable enough” with other data supporting the vaccine’s potency.

Three doses of the Pfizer vaccine produced antibody levels comparable to those seen in young adults, suggesting that it is likely to be just as effective.

“The Pfizer is a three-dose series, but as a three-dose series, it’s quite effective,” said Dr. William Towner, who led vaccine trials for both Moderna and Pfizer at Kaiser Permanente in Southern California.

Either vaccine would be better than none, Dr. Towner added. He predicted that some parents may opt for Moderna because bringing children to a pediatrician for two shots is easier than arranging for them to receive three doses.

The Pfizer vaccine was authorized for children 5 to 11 in November, but fewer than 30 percent in that age group have received two shots. Parents of the youngest children may be more willing to opt for a Covid vaccine if it can be offered alongside other routine immunizations, Dr. Towner said.

“That’s the area that a lot of people are not sure of right now,” he said. “I’m hoping there’ll be some guidance offered around that.”

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John Cena meets Ukraine war refugee with Down syndrome after teen’s mom used his idol as motivation to escape

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A Ukrainian teenager met with his idol, famed WWE star and actor John Cena, this weekend after his mother used a fantasy of meeting him as a motivational tool to flee the war-torn town of Mariupol.

Liana Rohozhyna, the mother of Misha Rohozhyn, a 19-year-old who has Down Syndrome and is unable to speak, repeatedly told her son they were constantly on the move in Ukraine to go and find John Cena — when in reality the family was fleeing a devastating war front and a Russian siege on their hometown, the Wall Street Journal reported.

“Misha is an example for moving toward your dream by believing in it,” she said, per the report.

MIAMI GARDENS, FL – APRIL 1: John Cena looks on before his match against Dwayne ”The Rock” Johnson during WrestleMania XXVIII at Sun Life Stadium on April 1, 2012 in Miami Gardens, Florida.
(Ron Elkman/Sports Imagery/Getty Images)

The family’s journey was not easy as they reportedly traversed minefields, came into contact with Russian soldiers, faced artillery strikes, and crossed several national borders.

MARIUPOL OFFICIALS FEAR OUTBREAK FROM INFECTED WATER SUPPLY COULD KILL THOUSANDS

But, the idea of meeting the iconic wrestler motivated the teen to keep pushing.

According to the report, Misha and his mother arrived safely in the Netherlands last month but they still never fulfilled the motivational fantasy of meeting Cena.

MORE THAN 1,000 MARIUPOL, UKRAINE FIGHTERS TRANSFERRED TO RUSSIA FOR ‘INVESTIGATION’: REPORT

On Saturday, that fantasy became a reality when the hulking superstar paid Misha and his mother a visit to their new home in Huizen.

“I didn’t want a son to think of his mom in a different light just because she did whatever she had to do to get him to safety,” Cena said, per the WSJ.

In this handout photo taken from video released on Wednesday, May 4, 2022 by Donetsk People’s Republic Interior Ministry Press Service, Smoke rises from the Metallurgical Combine Azovstal in Mariupol, in territory under the government of the Donetsk People’s Republic, eastern Ukraine. (Donetsk People’s Republic Interior Ministry Press Service via AP)
(Donetsk People’s Republic Interior Ministry Press Service via AP)

Cena gave Misha a hat and t-shirt featuring his WWE mantras and the two ate a Ukrainian honey cake.

“If I have cake, will Misha have cake with me?” Cena asked the family through a translator, the WSJ reported. Misha excitedly accepted.

RUSSIA CLAIMS UPPER HAND IN EASTERN UKRAINE, BUT ANALYSTS SUGGEST PROGRESS ‘COSTLY,’ POWER ‘DECLINING’

Seeing his idol was the first time Misha smiled since the war began, Rohozhyna told the outlet.

She also said Misha’s room in their Ukrainian home was covered in Cena’s wrestling posters.

LOS ANGELES, CA – JULY 21: John Cena, dressed as Peacemaker from “The Suicide Squad”, is seen at “Jimmy Kimmel Live” on July 21, 2021 in Los Angeles, California. 
(Photo by RB/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images)

That home, however, became the target of Russian mortar fire on February 24, the first day of the Ukrainian-Russian war, and the two were forced to flee. They arrived at a shelter but after it lost electricity, they were again forced to leave, the WSJ reported.

JOHN CENA TALKS POTENTIAL RETURN TO WWE FOR HIS 20TH ANNIVERSARY

According to the report, Misha had a panic attack so his mother decided against hiding out in an underground facility. The two stayed at a day center, which could have been subjected to Russian artillery strikes, before they fled to the Netherlands.

A member of Russia’s Emergencies Ministry walks near a destroyed residential building in Mariupol, Ukraine, on Thursday, May 11.
(Reuters/Alexander Ermochenko)

Before concluding the visit on Saturday, Cena let Misha wear a WWE championship belt and encouraged the family.

“I tried to let [Misha] know today that in every journey we’ve got good days and bad days,” Cena said Saturday afternoon, per the report. “I hope he gets more good ones.”

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“I wanted to tell him today personally that his story really touched me,” the wrestler added.

Cena visited the family from London, where he was filming.

Mariupol remains under Russia’s control after they successfully seized it last month.



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Biden Races to Expand Coalition Against Russia but Meets Resistance

WASHINGTON — Even before the start of the war in Ukraine, an international alliance to rally the world against a Russian invasion came together so quickly that President Biden later marveled at the “purpose and unity found in months that we’d once taken years to accomplish.”

Now, with the conflict in its fourth month, U.S. officials are facing the disappointing reality that the powerful coalition of nations — stretching from North America across Europe and into East Asia — may not be enough to break the looming stalemate in Ukraine.

With growing urgency, the Biden administration is trying to coax or cajole countries perceived by Washington as neutral in the conflict — including India, Brazil, Israel and the Gulf Arab states — to join the campaign of economic sanctions, military support and diplomatic pressure to further isolate Russia and bring a decisive end to the war. So far, few if any of them have been willing, despite their partnerships with the United States on other major security matters.

Mr. Biden is making an extraordinary diplomatic and political gamble this summer in planning to visit Saudi Arabia, which he had called a “pariah.” And on Thursday, he met with President Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil on the sidelines of the Summit of the Americas in Los Angeles. Mr. Bolsonaro visited Moscow the week before Russia invaded Ukraine and declared “solidarity” with President Vladimir V. Putin.

In Los Angeles, Mr. Bolsonaro pre-empted any push by Mr. Biden on Russia, saying that while Brazil remained open to helping end the war, “given our reliance on certain foreign players, we have to be cautious.”

“I have a country to manage,” he said.

U.S. officials acknowledge the difficulties in trying to convince countries that they can balance their own interests with the American and European drive to isolate Russia.

“One of the biggest problems that we are facing today is the fence-sitter problem,” Samantha Power, the head of the U.S. Agency for International Development, said on Tuesday after giving a speech about the administration’s efforts to reinforce free speech, fair elections and other democratic systems against authoritarian leaders worldwide.

She said she was hopeful that Russian atrocities committed in Ukraine would persuade neutral states to join the coalition against Moscow, “given our collective interest in rules of the road that all of us would wish to see observed, and none of us would wish to see used against our citizens.”

Russia and its partners, notably China, have denounced the U.S. government’s efforts to expand the coalition, which in addition to European nations also includes Canada, Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand.

“In the modern world, it is impossible to isolate a country, especially such a huge one as Russia,” Mr. Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said on Thursday, according to state media.

In Beijing, Zhao Lijian, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman, said on Monday that the United States “forced countries to take sides in the conflict between Russia and Ukraine and wantonly threatened to impose unilateral sanctions and long-arm jurisdiction.” He added: “Isn’t this coercive diplomacy?”

Russia’s currency, the ruble, cratered shortly after Mr. Putin launched the invasion of Ukraine in February. But it has since bounced back as Russia continues earning hard currency from exporting energy and other goods to many nations, including China, India, Brazil, Venezuela and Thailand.

For some countries, the decision of whether to align with the United States can have life-or-death consequences. Washington has warned drought-stricken African nations not to buy grain that Russia stole from Ukraine at a time when food prices are rising and possibly millions of people are starving.

“Key strategic middle powers such as India, Brazil and South Africa are consequently treading a very sharp line in an attempt to preserve their strategic autonomy and cannot be expected to simply sidle up to the U.S.,” said Michael John Williams, a professor of international relations at Syracuse University and a former adviser to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.

“Washington believes this war will be won in the West,” Mr. Williams said, “but the Kremlin believes it will be won in the East and the Global South.”

In a vote in March on a United Nations resolution condemning Russia’s aggressions against Ukraine, 35 countries abstained, mostly from the Middle East, Africa and South Asia. That alarmed American officials and their allies, who nonetheless noted that 141 of 193 states censured Russia. Only five states — including Russia — voted against the measure.

Brazil voted to condemn Russia, and Mr. Bolsonaro has pressed for negotiations to end the war. But his country continues to import fertilizer from Russia and Belarus, an ally of Moscow.

India and South Africa both abstained from the U.N. vote. India has a decades-long strategic partnership with Russia and relies on it for oil, fertilizer and military equipment. The Biden administration has had little luck getting India to join its coalition.

Indian officials say their Russian imports are modest. During a visit to Washington in April, India’s foreign minister, Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, dismissed questions on the subject, saying that “probably our total purchases for the month would be less than what Europe does in an afternoon.”

“So you might want to think about that,” he said.

But Europe is now slashing its energy imports, in a partial embargo of Russian oil, while India is reportedly in talks with Moscow to further increase its already growing purchases of crude oil.

South Africa’s ties to Russia go back to the Cold War, when the Soviet Union supported the anti-apartheid movement that transformed the nation’s internal power dynamics.

Trade between the two countries is modest, but South Africa, like many other nations, has long been suspicious of Western colonialism and the United States as an unrivaled superpower. President Cyril Ramaphosa of South Africa has accused NATO of provoking Russia into war and has called for renewed diplomatic talks. In a phone call in April, Mr. Biden urged him to accept “a clear, unified international response to Russian aggression in Ukraine,” according to a White House statement.

A month later, Mr. Ramaphosa lamented the impact that the conflict was having on “bystander” countries that he said “are also going to suffer from the sanctions that have been imposed against Russia.”

Brazil, India and South Africa — along with Russia and China — are members of a group of nations that account for one-third of the global economy. At an online meeting of the group’s foreign ministers last month, Moscow offered to set up oil and gas refineries with its fellow partners. The group also discussed expanding its membership to other countries.

Other nations that abstained from the United Nations vote, including Uganda, Pakistan and Vietnam, have accused the U.S.-led coalition against Russia of shutting down any chance of peace talks with its military support of Ukraine. U.S. and European officials maintain that the weapons and intelligence it has provided serves only to help Ukraine defend itself from Russia’s military.

The growing urgency in the Biden administration is embodied in the president’s plans to visit Saudi Arabia, despite his earlier denunciations of its murderous actions and potential war crimes. Mr. Biden’s effort, which is already being criticized by leading Democrats, is partly aimed at getting Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates to help on the margins with Ukraine. One goal is to have those nations coordinate a substantial increase in oil production to help bring down global prices while the United States, Europe and others boycott Russian oil.

U.S. officials have been disappointed by the proclaimed neutrality of the two Gulf Arab nations, which buy American weapons and lobby Washington for policies against Iran, their main rival.

Israel, which also buys American weapons and is the United States’ closest ally in the Middle East, has expressed solidarity with Ukraine. At the same time, however, it has resisted supporting some sanctions and direct criticism of Russia.

Until Mr. Biden offered to meet with him in Los Angeles, Mr. Bolsonaro had signaled he would not go to the summit of most of the hemisphere’s heads of state. It took a direct appeal by former Senator Christopher J. Dodd of Connecticut, a special adviser to the summit, to convince Brazil to attend.

Valentina Sader, a Brazil expert at the Atlantic Council, said the Biden administration was expected to continue talking to Mr. Bolsonaro about Brazil’s ties with Russia and China.

But, she said, it was unlikely that Mr. Bolsonaro would edge away from Mr. Putin. “Brazil is taking its own interests into account,” Ms. Sader said.

American officials have come to the same conclusion about China, which is Russia’s most powerful strategic partner. They say China has clearly chosen to stand with Russia — as evidenced by the constant reiteration by Chinese officials of Mr. Putin’s criticisms of the United States and NATO and their spreading of disinformation and conspiracy theories that undermine the United States and Ukraine.

On Feb. 4, three weeks before Russia began its full-scale invasion, Mr. Putin and President Xi Jinping of China met in Beijing while the two governments declared a “no limits” partnership.

In late May, China and Russia held their first joint military exercise since the war in Ukraine began — flying strategic bombers over the seas of northeast Asia while Mr. Biden was visiting Japan.

But China has also held back from giving economic or military aid to Russia, despite requests from Moscow, U.S. officials say. Mr. Biden warned Mr. Xi in a video call in March that there would be “consequences” if China gave material aid to Russia, and Chinese officials and business executives fear that their companies could be hit with sanctions if the firms give Russia substantial support.

“Secondary sanctions do bite, and China doesn’t want this to affect their companies,” said Alexander Gabuev, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace who was recently based in Moscow. “Many Russian sources tell me they talk to the Chinese and are not hearing anything back.”

Michael Crowley contributed reporting.

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A ‘Dynamite’ guest at the White House: BTS meets with Biden on anti-Asian discrimination

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A horde of eager journalists began to crowd the aisles of the White House briefing room Tuesday long before the daily parrying session with reporters would begin — and they weren’t there for Brian Deese.

For one afternoon, the White House became an exclusive stage for global K-pop phenomenon BTS, with each of the 49 briefing room seats becoming the most coveted tickets in town. The group had been invited by the administration to raise awareness of the prevalence of anti-Asian discrimination.

“We are BTS,” said RM, whose formal name is Kim Nam-Joon and is considered the megagroup’s de facto leader, as he stepped up to the briefing room lectern. “It is a great honor to be invited to the White House today to discuss the important issues of anti-Asian hate crimes, Asian inclusion and diversity.”

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre, who opened up for the group, noted that while “many of you many know BTS as Grammy-nominated international icons, they also play an important role as youth ambassadors, promoting a message of respect and positivity.”

The other group members then took turns delivering their own messages in Korean. Later, an interpreter summed up their various messages, such as: “equality begins when we open up and embrace all of our differences” and “we hope today is one step forward to respecting and understanding each and every one as a valuable person.”

Then RM returned to the lectern.

“Lastly, we thank President Biden and the White House for giving this important opportunity to speak about the important causes,” he said. “Remind ourselves of what we can do as artists.”

After their star turn in the briefing room, BTS headed to the Oval Office to meet with the president himself on the last day in May, designated as Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander Heritage Month. Before joining the news briefing, BTS filmed content with the White House digital team and got a tour of the grounds, according to a White House official.

The group’s visit with Biden — which, somewhat inexplicably, was closed to press coverage — was the latest example of this White House leveraging the power of celebrities to bring attention to key priorities.

Last July, the administration enlisted singer Olivia Rodrigo to promote coronavirus vaccinations. And just last week, the White House brought actress and singer Selena Gomez to highlight mental health, with Gomez appearing in a three-minute video with Biden, first lady Jill Biden and Vivek H. Murthy, the surgeon general, to discuss the issue.

But at some points Tuesday, the anti-discrimination message the administration wanted to convey was a bit overshadowed by the sheer hysteria inside the briefing room — and outside the White House gates.

Outside, hundreds of fans — mostly young girls — gathered in hopes of snagging a distanced glance at the K-pop group, and as they waited in the scorching sun, they chanted the names of the seven members and screamed, “BTS! BTS!”

Inside, scores of interested journalists, many of them of Korean descent, packed the aisles at least a half-hour before the briefing was supposed to begin — making the already cramped room even more stifling. Veteran journalists quipped that the briefing room hadn’t been that crowded since the days of Sean Spicer as press secretary, when the sessions became must-see TV for all the wrong reasons, at least for the Donald Trump administration.

Tuesday’s live stream of the White House briefing usually attracts a few hundred interested viewers. But well ahead of the start of the 2:30 p.m. session, about 11,000 had settled in for the show. Ten minutes before the briefing, about 71,000 were online. A couple minutes after the official start of the briefing — which started a few minutes behind schedule — a whopping 197,000 were watching.

More than 300,000 were still on the live stream as Deese, the White House’s director of the National Economic Council, stepped up to the lectern and began to speak. (The viewership numbers declined precipitously the longer Deese talked about inflation.)

“Okay, so I get to go home and tell my kids that BTS opened for me,” Deese said, as reporters laughed. “I did not expect that when I woke up this morning. And I know that you’re all here to talk about trimmed mean inflation, and you’re as excited about that as you are for them.”

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China meets banks to discuss protecting assets from US sanctions

Chinese regulators have held an emergency meeting with domestic and foreign banks to discuss how they could protect the country’s overseas assets from US-led sanctions similar to those imposed on Russia for its invasion of Ukraine, according to people familiar with the discussion.

Officials are worried the same measures could be taken against Beijing in the event of a regional military conflict or other crisis. President Xi Jinping’s administration has maintained staunch support for Vladimir Putin throughout the crisis but Chinese banks and companies remain wary of transacting any business with Russian entities that could trigger US sanctions.

The internal conference, held on April 22, included officials from China’s central bank and finance ministry, as well as executives from dozens of local and international lenders such as HSBC, the people said. The ministry of finance said at the meeting that all large foreign and domestic banks operating in China were represented.

They added that the meeting began with remarks from a senior finance ministry official who said Xi’s administration had been put on alert by the ability of the US and its allies to freeze the Russian central bank’s dollar assets.

The officials and attendees did not mention specific scenarios but one possible trigger for such sanctions is thought to be a Chinese invasion of Taiwan, which China claims as its territory and has threatened to invade it if Taipei refuses to submit to its control indefinitely

“If China attacks Taiwan, decoupling of the Chinese and western economies will be far more severe than [decoupling with] Russia because China’s economic footprint touches every part of the world,” said one of the people briefed on the meeting.

Andrew Collier, managing director of Orient Capital Research in Hong Kong, said the Chinese government was right to be concerned “because it has very few alternatives and the consequences [of US financial sanctions] are disastrous”.

Senior regulators including Yi Huiman, president of the China Securities Regulatory Commission, and Xiao Gang, who headed the CSRC from 2013 to 2016, asked bankers in attendance what could be done to protect the nation’s overseas assets, especially its $3.2tn in foreign reserves.

China’s vast dollar-denominated holdings range from more than $1tn US Treasury bonds to New York office buildings. State-owned Dajia Insurance Group, for example, owns the Waldorf Astoria New York.

“No one on site could think of a good solution to the problem,” said another person briefed on the meeting, “China’s banking system isn’t prepared for a freeze of its dollar assets or exclusion from the Swift messaging system as the US has done to Russia.”

HSBC did not respond to a request for comment.

Some bankers suggested that the central bank could require exporters to exchange all of their foreign exchange revenues for renminbi to increase its onshore dollar holdings. Exporters are currently allowed to retain a portion of their foreign exchange earnings for future use.

Others suggested a “significant” cut to the $50,000 quota that Chinese nationals are allowed to purchase every year for overseas travel, education and other offshore purchases.

When one official asked Chinese bankers if they could diversify into more yen or euro-backed assets, they replied that the idea was not practical.

Some bankers present, however, doubted whether Washington could ever afford to cut economic ties with China given its status as the world’s second-largest economy, huge holdings of dollar assets and close trade relationship with the US.

“It is difficult for the US to impose massive sanctions against China,” agreed Collier. “It is like mutually assured destruction in a nuclear war.”

Additional reporting by Tabby Kinder in Hong Kong

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Ukraine-Russia War Live Updates: Biden Meets With G7 Leaders

President Biden’s trip to Europe includes a rare day of three back-to-back global summits on Thursday as the world’s leaders gather in a variety of forums to discuss their response to Russia’s war in Ukraine.

NATO: On Thursday morning, Mr. Biden was joining leaders of the 30 countries that make up the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, a group formed after World War II to promote a common defense. On the agenda: Whether, and how, to provide more robust weapons to Ukraine and how to shore up NATO’s own defenses in Poland and along the eastern front with Russia.

Mr. Biden and the others were also to discuss the grim scenarios of a possible further expansion of Russian attacks into NATO countries, and how the alliance would respond.

G7: After the NATO gathering, Mr. Biden will join the leaders of the Group of 7, the world’s largest wealthy democracies, to continue the discussion about Ukraine. The meeting, which includes the leaders of Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States, was called by Chancellor Olaf Scholz of Germany, who is the current president of the G7.

The group is expected to confront the refugee crisis sparked by millions of Ukrainians fleeing Russia’s forces, and to discuss what more the world can do to punish President Vladimir V. Putin for his aggression.

European Council: Mr. Biden will then cross Brussels to join the 27 leaders of European Union member states. The summit, known as a European Council, was the long-planned regular meeting of E.U. leaders that happens every quarter, but Mr. Biden was invited in view of the bloc’s close coordination with the United States on sanctions and all other measures responding to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

The group is likely to focus on expanding sanctions as well as a push by Mr. Scholz to enhance enforcement measures to ensure that Russia is not able to evade the pain of the sanctions. The E.U. leaders will continue their meeting on Friday, after Mr. Biden has left for Poland.

Overlapping memberships: NATO and the European Union both have their headquarters in Brussels and their origins in the years after World War II, but the differences between them are important. NATO was built as a military bulwark against Soviet power, while the European Union is a political and economic bloc that grew from efforts to unite the formerly warring nations of Western Europe through trade.

Twenty-one countries now belong to both, including a swath that once fell under the Soviet sphere of influence. But the 27 E.U. members include several countries that have stayed outside NATO, often because of traditions of neutrality, like Austria, Ireland and Sweden. The 30 NATO members include the United States, by far its dominant military partner, and Canada, alongside several countries that have left or declined to join the European Union (Britain, Iceland, Norway) or have applied to join it (Albania, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Turkey).

The Group of 7, meanwhile, was formed during the economic upheavals of the 1970s to facilitate discussions between the leaders of the Western world’s most powerful economies; it now includes European Union leaders, alongside those from Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States.

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Biden Meets NATO Allies Seeking More Support for Ukraine

BRUSSELS—President Biden met with NATO leaders Thursday to agree on new measures to help Ukraine battle Russia’s invasion and address growing concerns Moscow might use chemical, biological or other unconventional weapons in its monthlong war.

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization’s emergency summit is the first in a day-long string of gatherings Mr. Biden has planned with European allies and other world leaders, as they map out their next steps helping Ukraine defend against the attack launched last month by Russian President

Vladimir Putin.

With Russian forces facing unexpectedly strong and lethal opposition from Ukrainian forces, Western leaders say they are increasingly worried Mr. Putin may resort to using weapons of mass destruction. NATO officials are grappling with the question of what actions by Russia would count as red lines that could prompt more direct involvement by the alliance.

The potential for chemical warfare in the conflict was “a real threat,” Mr. Biden said Wednesday as he left Washington.

“Any use of chemical weapons would fundamentally change the nature of the conflict,” NATO Secretary-General

Jens Stoltenberg

said as he arrived to kick off the summit. He warned of widespread and serious consequences of such action, but declined to say it was a red line.

NATO has been walking a tightrope of providing Ukraine with weapons and other support, without being directly drawn into the fighting. Mr. Stoltenberg said direct NATO involvement, such as establishing a no-fly zone over Ukraine, could carry high risks for the war to broaden.

Ukrainian President

Volodymyr Zelensky

addressed the NATO gathering, continuing weeks of outreach with politicians abroad to rally support for his country. Mr. Zelensky repeated his requests for more security assistance for Ukraine, but he did not revive his appeal for NATO membership or for a no-fly zone, according to senior Biden administration officials.

Ukraine targeted a port facility used by Russian forces, hitting a naval ship; Biden meets world leaders in Brussels to discuss next steps with Russia; the Ukrainian president called for global rallies to mark one month of war. Photo: Ukrainian Armed Forces

In his remarks at the NATO gathering, Mr. Biden stressed the need to strengthen NATO’s eastern flank and said he welcomed pledges of increased defense spending from various countries, officials said.

Russia’s potential use of chemical weapons was raised in the discussion among NATO leaders, officials said, adding that there was recognition that the alliance needed to continue to prepare for and respond to different contingencies.

Accidental release of chemical agents is also worrying some members. “We are concerned when Russian aggression forces are shelling chemical plants and similar facilities,” Slovenia’s Prime Minister

Janez Janša

said ahead of the NATO summit. “This could trigger a disaster of large scale.”

Allies also brought up the need to call on China to not support Russia in its war against Ukraine, officials said.

Mr. Stoltenberg on Wednesday said aid to Ukraine could cover a variety of areas.

“I expect allies will agree to provide additional support, including cybersecurity assistance, as well as equipment to help Ukraine protect against chemical, biological and radiological and nuclear threats,” Mr. Stoltenberg said.

Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaking to the media in Brussels.



Photo:

evan vucci/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

Mr. Biden, who arrived in Brussels Wednesday, will also be meeting with leaders of the European Union and the Group of Seven leading industrial countries. Japanese Prime Minister

Fumio Kishida

and Canadian Prime Minister

Justin Trudeau

have flown to Brussels for the meetings.

The U.S. and EU have imposed the biggest coordinated package of sanctions ever levied against a major economy in the aftermath of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan said Mr. Biden and G-7 leaders would discuss the economic spillover effects of the conflict and announce an agreement on coordinating sanctions enforcement. The U.S. also plans to impose a new round of sanctions on political figures and oligarchs, he said, without providing more details.

According to U.S. officials and documents viewed by The Wall Street Journal, Mr. Biden is preparing to unveil sanctions on more than 300 members of the Russian State Duma, the lower house of parliament, as soon as Thursday.

During his meeting with the European Council, which groups EU national leaders, Mr. Biden will discuss the humanitarian crisis resulting from the war in Ukraine, the next steps on sanctions and their approach to China, especially as it relates to Russia’s invasion, Mr. Sullivan said.

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS

What do you hope to see come out of today’s NATO summit? Join the conversation below.

Mr. Biden will consult with leaders throughout the day on the possibility of cyberattacks by Russia against the U.S. or its allies and the potential use of chemical or biological weapons in Ukraine, he said.

The U.S. is expected to make an announcement on Friday on enhancing European energy security and reducing the continent’s dependence on Russian natural gas, Mr. Sullivan said.

Ahead of Thursday’s meeting, NATO released estimates indicating Russia may have lost as much as a fifth of its combat forces in about a month of fighting in Ukraine. U.S. military analysts have estimated lower casualty figures.

Up to 40,000 Russian troops have been killed, wounded, taken prisoner or are missing in Ukraine, a senior NATO military official said. Russia may also have lost 10% of its equipment, impairing Moscow’s ability to maintain its pace of operations, another NATO official said. Moscow hasn’t released updated casualty figures since acknowledging on March 2 the deaths of 498 troops in Ukraine.

Write to Tarini Parti at Tarini.Parti@wsj.com and Robert Wall at robert.wall@wsj.com

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First Call: Report says Steelers would ‘pounce’ on Baker Mayfield on open market; Mike Tomlin meets with Malik Willis

Wednesday’s “First Call” delves into a report that actually connects the Steelers to Browns quarterback Baker Mayfield.

The Steelers still seem interested in Liberty quarterback Malik Willis. Even after the signing of Mitch Trubisky.

We get an update on Aaron Donald’s contract situation.

And the NHL’s Metropolitan Division had a busy night.


Steelers to ‘pounce’ on Baker Mayfield

With former Houston Texans quarterback Deshaun Watson heading to the Browns, everyone is wondering what is next for Cleveland’s incumbent starter, Baker Mayfield.

The former No.1 pick has already penned his goodbye letter to the city. Now it appears it’s just a matter of if the Browns will trade Mayfield or cut him. Should the latter occur, Cleveland.com Browns beat writer Mary Kay Cabot said that the Steelers would “pounce” at the chance to sign him.

“As of Thursday, the phone was not ringing off the hook for Baker Mayfield, and this might get a little bit challenging. But I had somebody tell me that the Steelers will pounce on Baker Mayfield if he becomes available. If (the Browns) cut him and he is just out there as a street free agent. They would take him in a minute,” Cabot said in a video chat. “I’m sure a lot of people would. If you could get him for nothing, and the Browns have to eat that money? Then, certainly, somebody would go grab him in that scenario.”

Some have tried to connect the Carolina Panthers to Mayfield. Cabot said she is hearing nothing in that regard but is keeping an eye on the Seattle Seahawks as a possible trade destination.

As far as the Steelers go, I can’t see it. I’ve never gotten the impression that the Steelers as an organization — and coach Mike Tomlin specifically — are all that high on Mayfield. Every time Mayfield’s name comes up during a Tomlin press conference in advance of a Browns game, he is quick to shift the conversation away from Mayfield’s quarterback play and back to Cleveland’s running game and offensive line.

Although Tomlin, at least on occasion, has been complimentary of Mayfield’s prowess in the play action, rollout and bootleg aspect of quarterback play. Those things are allegedly areas of coordinator Matt Canada’s offense that have yet to be unfurled thanks to Ben Roethlisberger’s lack of mobility in recent years.

I still don’t buy it, though. The quarterback room is cluttered enough with Mitch Trubisky, Mason Rudolph and Dwayne Haskins. Why add Mayfield to the mix when the team still might be tempted to draft a QB this year or in 2023?

That being said, nothing would give me greater pleasure than seeing every Steelers fan and team-friendly media member, who has bad-mouthed Mayfield for his shortcomings for four years, suddenly twist themselves into pretzels to justify and praise the signing.

Trust me. I’ll be scouring Twitter to grab receipts.

Can you imagine after Trubisky’s first interception next year, the chants of “Ba-Ker, Ba-Ker” cascading down from the stands at Heinz Field?

It will be glorious. These are the end times, people. And you may live to see them with your own eyes.


Meeting Malik

While we’re on the topic of the Steelers quarterback situation — and when aren’t we? — Tomlin, Canada and general manager Kevin Colbert were all at the Liberty football team’s Pro Day featuring Malik Willis.

The quarterback prospect certainly had his arm strength and mobility on display.

According to Joe Person of The Athletic, Tomlin and Carolina’s Matt Rhule were the only head coaches at Willis’ pro day.

Willis also apparently had dinner with Tomlin Monday night. Chicken wings, if you are curious.

ESPN’s Mel Kiper has the Steelers selecting Willis at pick No. 20 in his latest mock draft.

Again, my mind is wandering to Trubisky’s first interception and Willis sitting there on the bench and how every Steelers honk on Twitter is going to go from praising the Trubisky signing to kicking him to the curb in the span of 15 minutes of football.

The football gods can’t be that kind to me. Can they?


Donald’s deal

There’s still nothing official on a reworked contract extension for former Pitt Panther star Aaron Donald.

The Los Angeles Rams defensive lineman hinted that retirement may be coming if his team won the Super Bowl over the Cincinnati Bengals, which it did.

That conversation has cooled in recent weeks and has shifted toward how the franchise may reconfigure a contract for the former NFL Defensive Player of the Year.

Los Angeles general manager Les Snead seems optimistic about the prospect of keeping Donald on the field.

“We definitely have chatted with Aaron, his representation, and we’re trying to come up with a win-win solution to reward Aaron but still definitely be able to continue trying to compete as a team at the highest level,” Snead said via the Los Angeles Daily News. “So, we’re in progress there.”

According to Spotrac.com, Donald has a $22.5 million average salary on a $135 million contract. It runs through 2024. The Penn Hills native is the highest paid NFL defensive tackle but is just 25th among players at all positions.

“I know Aaron’s articulated to us that he would like to be back, and he would definitely like to continue to try to do special things not only as an individual player but as a team,” Snead said.


Metro movement

While the Penguins were roasting the Columbus Blue Jackets 5-1 Tuesday night, there were plenty of other developments in the Metropolitan Division.

The division-leading Carolina Hurricanes held off the two-time Stanley Cup champion Tampa Bay Lightning 3-2. The New York Rangers allowed five goals in the second period and dropped a 7-4 fireworks show in New Jersey. Jack Hughes had a pair of goals 70 seconds apart for the Devils. Those were career points No. 100 and 101 for Hughes.

Meanwhile, the Washington Capitals dropped a 5-2 decision in St. Louis as Pine-Richland product Brandon Saad had a beauty of a goal for his 19th of the season.

All of that information means the Hurricanes (90 points) maintain a three-point cushion on the Penguins (87 points) for first place in the Metro. The New York Rangers (85 points) are two back in third. The Capitals have 80 points, that’s good enough for fourth place in the division and the Eastern Conference’s second wild card spot.

The idle Boston Bruins hold the top wild card spot with 83 points in the Atlantic Division.

Tim Benz is a Tribune-Review staff writer. You can contact Tim at tbenz@triblive.com or via Twitter. All tweets could be reposted. All emails are subject to publication unless specified otherwise.



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