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    A serviceman of the 24th Mechanised Brigade fires an Easel Antitank Grenade Launcher SPG9 towards Russian position at Chasiv Yar, Donetsk region, Ukraine.

    How Ukraine pulled off its biggest gamble: invading Russia

    Kyiv’s troops say they found a Russian unit calmly drinking coffee as they crossed the border.

    • Christopher Miller
    Israel

    US ready for Iran attack on Israel ‘as soon as this week’

    “We share the same concerns and expectations that our Israeli counterparts have with respect to potential timing,” national security spokesman John Kirby says.

    • Trevor Hunnicutt and Michael Martina

    Russian reveals Ukraine’s successes before Putin cuts him off

    The frankness from Alexey Smirnov, the acting regional governor of the Kursk region, in a televised address was too much for Vladimir Putin.

    • Updated
    • Daryna Krasnolutska

    Wildfire menaces Athens suburbs, forcing residents to flee

    Hundreds have fled as flames as high as 25 metres spread in to the Greek capital’s suburbs, fuelled by gale-force winds.

    • Angelos Tsatsis and Renee Maltezou

    Pelosi welcomes Harris home as West Coast donors raise $18m

    The former House speaker appeared with the Democratic presidential nominee in San Francisco at an event the Harris campaign said raised more than $18 million.

    • Jeff Mason

    Russia evacuates another border region amid threats from Ukraine

    Russia has imposed a sweeping security regime in the Kursk, Bryansk and Belgorod regions, while ally Belarus says it is bolstering troop numbers at its border.

    • Guy Faulconbridge and Lidia Kelly

    Opinion & Analysis

    Trump calling Harris a communist shows he’s desperate

    The vice president is a social democrat, but that doesn’t mean she believes in state control of the economy.

    Paul Krugman

    Contributor

    Paul Krugman

    Like a French film, it was genius and difficult, but a fitting end

    The closing ceremony was slow, and some people walked out, but the fans stayed until the end and only the Hollywood part was a bit off.

    Matthew Drummond

    AFR Magazine editor

    Matthew Drummond

    Why Musk’s antics now appear to be hurting his bottom line

    After a string of inflammatory remarks on social media, Elon Musk seems to be turning off the most obvious customers for his cars.

    Pilita Clark

    Columnist

    Pilita Clark

    Australia should focus on rules, not ‘rules-based order’, in Asia

    Support for the transition from a US-led world to a multipolar world is gaining traction.

    Anthony Milner

    South East Asia expert

    Anthony Milner

    From the Financial Times

    A serviceman of the 24th Mechanised Brigade fires an Easel Antitank Grenade Launcher SPG9 towards Russian position at Chasiv Yar, Donetsk region, Ukraine.

    How Ukraine pulled off its biggest gamble: invading Russia

    Kyiv’s troops say they found a Russian unit calmly drinking coffee as they crossed the border.

    • Christopher Miller

    Investors hit pause on Biden’s manufacturing renaissance

    Companies said deteriorating market conditions, slowing demand, and lack of policy certainty in a high-stakes election year have caused them to change their plans.

    • Amanda Chu, Alexandra White and Rhea Basarkar

    Why Musk’s antics now appear to be hurting his bottom line

    After a string of inflammatory remarks on social media, Elon Musk seems to be turning off the most obvious customers for his cars.

    • Updated
    • Pilita Clark
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    More From Today

    Former president Donald Trump speaking at a campaign rally in Bozeman, Montana, last week.

    Trump calling Harris a communist shows he’s desperate

    The vice president is a social democrat, but that doesn’t mean she believes in state control of the economy.

    • Paul Krugman

    Yesterday

    Nina Kennedy celebrates her win of in the women’s pole vault, to become the first Australian woman to win gold in an athletics field event.

    The five charts that show it really was our best Games ever

    Australia won 53 medals across 20 different sports. Outgoing IOC vice president John Coates says we can win even more.

    • Zoe Samios
    President Joe Biden briefly talks with reporters as he heads to Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, Monday, July 29, 2024. Biden is traveling to the LBJ Presidential Library in Austin, Texas, to mark the 60th anniversary of the Civil Rights Act enacted under President Lyndon Johnson. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

    Investors hit pause on Biden’s manufacturing renaissance

    Companies said deteriorating market conditions, slowing demand, and lack of policy certainty in a high-stakes election year have caused them to change their plans.

    • Amanda Chu, Alexandra White and Rhea Basarkar
    The guided-missile submarine USS Georgia.

    US orders armed submarine to Middle East as tensions mount

    US Secretary of Defence Lloyd Austin also ordered the Abraham Lincoln strike group to hasten its deployment to the region, as Israel prepares for Iran’s attack.

    • Idrees Ali and Phil Stewart
    Vice President Kamala Harris at a campaign rally in Las Vegas.

    Frustrated Trump claims large crowds at Harris rallies are fake

    The former president, in a series of social media posts, said Vice President Kamala Harris had used AI technology to create images of crowds at her events.

    • Shane Goldmacher
    Advertisement
    Dylan Alcott

    Paris changes as the Paralympics get ready to arrive

    Four-time Paralympic gold medallist Dylan Alcott just attended his first Olympics. It’s given him a taste of what’s to come, and how the city has changed accessibility.

    • Zoe Samios
    The closing ceremony of the Paris Olympics 2024.

    Like a French film, it was genius and difficult, but a fitting end

    The closing ceremony was slow, and some people walked out, but the fans stayed until the end and only the Hollywood part was a bit off.

    • Matthew Drummond
    Tesla has suffered a raft of other pressures, from higher interest rates to supply chain glitches.

    Why Musk’s antics now appear to be hurting his bottom line

    After a string of inflammatory remarks on social media, Elon Musk seems to be turning off the most obvious customers for his cars.

    • Pilita Clark
    Southern Water, which is largely owned by Macquarie, faces higher compensation costs.

    Macquarie-owned water company must double payouts to angry customers

    The UK government proposes forcing Southern Water and other utilities to pay more for poor service, after water shortages and polluted supplies.

    • Jessica Shankleman
    The Paris Olympics are coming to a close after two spectacular weeks.

    Tom Cruise dives into star-studded Paris closing ceremony

    With golden fireworks, celebrities and thousands of athletes partying into the night, the closing ceremony put a final flourish to Paris’ first Games in a century.

    • John Leicester
    Kamala Harris and Donald Trump.

    Harris more trusted on US economy than Trump: poll

    The Michigan Ross poll shows a Democratic candidate leading on the key issue for the first time in nearly a year.

    • Lauren Fedor and Eva Xiao

    The good, the bad and the ridiculous: We’ll always have Paris 2024

    Sporting triumph and tragedy, a blockbuster Aussie medal haul, controversy, bad food, Gina Rinehart, Snoop Dogg. Here’s what you missed in the past fortnight.

    • Hans van Leeuwen

    This Month

    Ezi Magbegor scored 30 points and had 15 rebounds.

    Opals win bronze in emotional send-off for talisman Jackson

    The women’s basketball team lifted Australia’s total medal tally to the highest since Sydney 2000, and made a fitting finale for the game’s five-time medallist.

    • Hans van Leeuwen
    Protesters march against the far right outside the London offices of the Reform UK party.

    White supremacists turn UK riots into online recruiting pitch

    Hard-line organisations previously designated by the UK as domestic terrorists are calling for an overthrow of the British government.

    • Jeff Stone
    Russian President Vladimir Putin.

    Russia pushes back at Ukraine’s cross-border assault

    One of the strikes on Ukrainian troops involved a thermobaric missile that causes a blast wave and suffocates those in its path, the Russian Defence Ministry said.

    • Kim Barker
    Advertisement
    Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin in Beijing earlier this year. In China, Russia and many parts of the Global South there is suspicion that the rules-based order is really a liberal order crafted after the Second World War, largely to suit the purposes of Western powers.

    Australia should focus on rules, not ‘rules-based order’, in Asia

    Support for the transition from a US-led world to a multipolar world is gaining traction.

    • Anthony Milner
    caption

    Multinationals sound alarm over weak demand in China

    Weak demand in China has been a feature of half-year earnings across much of the global consumer goods sector.

    • Edward White and Thomas Hale
    Kamala Harris in Nevada as the final stop of a battleground blitz in which their party has shown new energy.

    Harris courts Latino vote with tax pledge, leads Trump in key states

    In a dramatic turn for the Democrats, the vice president is ahead of the Republican candidate by 4 percentage points in Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Michigan.

    • Darlene Superville and Josh Boak
    Former President Donald J. Trump during a campaign rally in Harrisburg, Pa., last month. Mr. Trump has struggled to regain his footing after President Biden suspended his re-election campaign and elevated Vice President Kamala Harris to the top of the ticket.Credit...

    Inside the worst three weeks of Donald Trump’s campaign

    People around the former and would-be president see a candidate knocked off his bearings, disoriented by his new contest with Kamala Harris and unsure of how to take her on.

    • Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan
    Tehran has long threatened to retaliate against Donald Trump over the 2020 drone strike he ordered that killed prominent Revolutionary Guard General Qassem Soleimani.

    Trump’s campaign says its emails were hacked

    The former president’s team accused Iran of stealing sensitive internal documents, a day after Microsoft warned of foreign interference in the US election.

    • Bill Barrow