Friday Briefing: Putin speaks on Ukraine cease-fire
Plus, Siberia’s bone hunters.
Morning Briefing: Asia Pacific Edition

March 14, 2025

Good morning. We’re covering Russia signaling openness to a cease-fire and more U.S. tariff threats against Europe.

Plus, Siberia’s bone hunters.

President Vladimir Putin and the Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko sit next to each other at the Grand Kremlin Palace in Moscow.
President Vladimir Putin of Russia, right, yesterday. Pool photo by Maxim Shemetov

Putin appeared open to a cease-fire with Ukraine

President Vladimir Putin of Russia yesterday seemed to voice preliminary support for a cease-fire, but made it clear he was in no hurry. He said he wanted to continue negotiating with President Trump, but told reporters in Moscow that Russia was in favor of a 30-day truce — with numerous conditions.

Among the questions he hopes to address, Putin said, is whether Kyiv would continue getting arms shipments during the truce, and how the cease-fire would be monitored and enforced. He said that Ukrainian forces occupying land in the Kursk region wouldn’t be allowed to peacefully withdraw. Kyiv could instead order them “to simply surrender.” He did not repeat his demand that Kyiv cede land from four regions in exchange for a cease-fire.

Trump said yesterday that the U.S. and Ukraine had been discussing land that Kyiv would have to give up as part of an agreement to end the war, and told reporters that “a lot of the details of a final agreement have actually been discussed.”

Quote: President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine said that Putin only wanted to continue the war and had set so many preconditions “that nothing will work out at all or that it will not work out for as long as possible.”

Front lines: Russia claimed to have retaken Sudzha, the main population center in the part of the Kursk region of Russia that Ukraine captured last summer. Here’s what to know.

Ripple effects: Israel-Hamas cease-fire talks were in limbo as the U.S. turned its attention to talks with Russian officials in Moscow over the war in Ukraine.

James Hill for The New York Times

Trump threatened Europe with a 200% alcohol tariff

President Trump escalated his trade war with the E.U. yesterday, announcing he would “shortly place” 200 percent tariffs on European wine and champagne if the bloc did not reverse its own U.S. tariffs planned for April 1.

The S&P 500 fell 1.4 percent, slipping into correction territory and underscoring investors’ souring mood over Trump’s policies.

European leaders have made it clear that they would rather make a deal with Trump than enact tariffs. In an interview yesterday, Howard Lutnick, the U.S. commerce secretary, warned other countries against retaliating. “If you make him unhappy, he responds unhappy,” Lutnick said of Trump.

What’s next: The E.U. trade commissioner will have calls with his U.S. counterparts in Washington today, a spokesman said.

Vineyards: A 200 percent tariff “would kill the business totally,” said an owner of a small Champagne house that exports 10 to 12 percent of its annual production to the U.S.

More on Trump

A man with graying hair stands in an apartment that is missing its front wall.
Samir Jaloot has slowly been making repairs to his home, clearing out the rubble and debris. Laura Boushnak for The New York Times

For many Syrians, a return home is a return to nothing

During 13 years of civil war, more than six million Syrians left the country and some seven million have been displaced within its borders. After President Bashar al-Assad was ousted last year, the interim leader has said millions can return. But after more than a decade of fighting, rubble is all that’s left of thousands of homes.

Some people have chosen to live in their homes, no matter how damaged. Many others have decided to remain outside Syria for the time being, including in camps in Turkey and Jordan. They watch as recent sectarian violence plays out on the country’s coast.

MORE TOP NEWS

People standing around a yellow Xiaomi car.
A Xiaomi SU7 ultra electric car. Manaure Quintero/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
  • China: Tesla is getting crushed in its most important market outside the U.S., one that it had dominated for years.
  • India: Elon Musk’s Starlink signed deals with the country’s two biggest telecom players, improving his odds of breaking into an enormous market.
  • Labor: Four Indonesian fishermen are suing the maker of Bumble Bee tuna, saying the company was aware of forced labor practices by its suppliers.
  • Yemen: Hydrogen fuel cell components smuggled into the country will allow Houthi fighters to build faster, stealthier combat drones, a report said.
  • Video games: The company behind Pokémon Go said it agreed to sell its video game business for $3.5 billion to a company owned by the Saudi sovereign wealth fund.
  • U.S.: Mahmoud Khalil, the Columbia University graduate detained by the government last weekend, sued the school and lawmakers to keep activists’ names a secret.

Sports

MORNING READ

Bags of rice are piled high in a warehouse.
Kazuhiro Nogi/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Japan held a rare auction this week, but not for art or antique cars. On the table were nearly 150,000 metric tonnes of rice from the government’s emergency stockpile, sold off to drive down prices during a national shortage. Nobody is quite sure what caused the problem, but experts think that speculators may be hoarding the grain in anticipation of rising prices.

An official called the crisis “truly unthinkable.”

Lives lived: James Reason, a British professor who became an authority on the psychology of human error through his Swiss cheese model for failure, died at 86.

CONVERSATION STARTERS

A side by side image of the same woman, with red hair and blue eyes, styled differently. More casual on the left, and more formal on the right.
Britt Lower as Helly R. (left) and Helena, two sides of the same person in “Severance.” Apple TV+

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DISCOVERY

A man with a flashlight dives in a river, searching the bottom for bones.
Maxim Arbugaev for The New York Times

The bone hunters of Siberia

Mammoths and other ice age creatures once roamed the Yakutia region of Russia, and the freezing climate has kept their fossils hidden under permafrost for centuries. Now, explorers are diving in the ice-covered Adycha River for skulls and tusks that are thousands of years old.

Temperatures can reach brutal lows, and success is unpredictable. Sometimes the river gives a lot, and sometimes nothing.

“The world under the water is so strange and mysterious,” one diver said. “It looks like this ancient cemetery.”

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