Iran protests flare as Trump issues warning

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Weekend Briefing

Weekend Briefing

From Reuters Daily Briefing

 

By Robert MacMillan, Reuters.com Weekend Editor

Welcome to the Weekend Briefing, which is looking less brief thanks to a surfeit of news. I’ll skip the palaver and direct you to the roundup below. Thanks for reading.

 

New video emerges of Minnesota shooting

 
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REUTERS/Brian Snyder

  • ‘I’m not mad at you’: The White House posted video on social media from the mobile phone of an ICE officer who shot a 37-year-old woman to death in her car. State and local officials accused the U.S. of not working with them on the shooting investigation. Civil-liberties and migrant-rights groups called for national protests this weekend. We look at the increasingly violent consequences of Trump’s showy immigration-enforcement campaign.
  • Twenty seconds: Our graphics team assembled this analysis of the ICE officer’s shooting of Renee Nicole Good. Read more on Trump’s history of broadsides against Minnesota’s Democratic leaders and its Somali community, as well as a U.S. investigation into money laundering in the state.

Iran protests flare, Revolutionary Guards try to quell unrest

  • Warning: The Guards said they would protect public property and that safeguarding security was a “red line” as unrest across the country stretched into another night. Rights groups say dozens of people have been killed over the past two weeks. Tehran cut Internet service and President Trump expressed support for protesters. He’s also taking a more cautious approach. U.S. intelligence assessments determined that the protests are not big enough to prompt regime change. Trump also has not offered support to the late Shah’s son and crown-prince-in-exile Reza Pahlavi.
  • Red Sea and Africa: Yemen’s UAE-backed main separatist group appeared to split – though they deny it. China’s top diplomat was supposed to visit Somalia in a diplomatic boost after Israel recognized the breakaway region of Somaliland, but he went to Tanzania – a region with its own problems – instead. The U.S. paused aid to Somalia. Pakistan may supply weapons and jets to Sudan. And 53 Congolese refugees have died in Burundi.
 

Venezuela looks risky to Republicans

  • Frustration: Donald Trump’s capture of Nicolas Maduro and focus on Venezuela and foreign affairs are worrying his aides and Republican lawmakers who think he should pay more attention to domestic problems. Oil companies summoned to the White House to discuss Venezuela are trying to balance Trump’s enthusiasm for the task with the concerns of their investors. Exxon Mobil’s CEO called the country “uninvestable” absent big changes.
  • Another one: The U.S. seized a fifth vessel targeted in recent weeks as Washington tries to curb Venezuelan oil exports. The CIA is not backing up Trump’s assertion that the U.S. action in Venezuela will cause Cuba’s government to fall. And China is not ready to copy the Venezuela playbook for a seizure of Taiwan’s leaders, experts say.
 

Putin sends a message with a missile

  • Intimidation: Russia’s launch of an Oreshnik hypersonic missile, a weapon it’s kept in reserve since 2024, appears aimed at sending a signal of military might to Europe and the U.S as Britain and France said they would deploy troops to Ukraine if a ceasefire happens and as Washington engages in diplomacy with Kyiv.
  • Precipitation: The weather across Europe is proving intimidating all on its own. A strong winter storm cut power to thousands of homes, crippled public transport and trapped drivers in snow. Kyiv turned off its power, water and heat systems for repairs after Russian attacks. Temperatures reached lows of -10C, or 14F.
 

How Trump’s tariffs are hitting business owners

  • From the field: We visited a business park northwest of Los Angeles to learn how the U.S. trade war is affecting smaller businesses. They will have to wait at least a week to find out whether the Supreme Court will allow those tariffs to stand. If the justices strike them down, there will be a big fight over how to get refunds on the $150 billion companies have already paid.
  • Money: Trump said the administration will ban Wall Street firms from buying up single-family homes in a bid to reduce house prices. He also ordered his “representatives” to buy $200 billion in mortgage bonds to lower housing costs and proposed a one-year cap on credit-card interest rates at 10%. The efforts are meant to appeal to struggling American voters, but it’s not clear if they will work.
 

U.S. ditches advice to limit alcoholic drinks

  • Make it a double: Officials at the Department of Health & Human Services were working on a proposal to halve the recommended limit for men’s alcohol consumption. Then the Trump administration killed it.
  • Make it a single: The CDC now recommends that U.S. children