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Daily News Brief

February 13, 2026

Welcome to CFR’s Daily News Brief. Today we’re covering federal plans to draw down the U.S. immigration enforcement surge in Minnesota, as well as...

  • The results of Bangladesh’s first election following mass protests
  • A report on U.S. efforts to maintain internet access in Iran
  • Details of a U.S.-Taiwan trade agreement

Our daily coverage of the 2026 Milan-Cortina Olympics continues today. Scroll down for the latest in the attire controversy that derailed a Ukrainian athlete’s Olympic hopes, plus an Olympic first in snow sports.

 
 

Top of the Agenda

An immigration enforcement mission that deployed thousands of U.S. federal agents to Minnesota will conclude, White House border czar Tom Homan announced yesterday. Alleged due process violations and aggressive enforcement by agents, including fatal shootings of two U.S. citizens, sparked broad public outcry. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said it had arrested thousands of people during the mission. Homan took credit for proposing ending the enforcement surge to President Donald Trump, who then agreed. 

 

A closer look. Trump brought Homan on to oversee the operation last month, replacing then-Border Patrol commander Greg Bovino, after U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents fatally shot nurse Alex Pretti. The operation sent some three thousand immigration officers into the Minneapolis and St. Paul area at its peak, but was reduced earlier this month under Homan. Homan said yesterday many of the remaining federal agents in Minnesota would be reassigned, but did not give an exact timeline. 

 

What comes next. Trump remains committed to mass deportations, Homan said. Still, opposition to the actions of federal immigration agents has fueled a showdown over a DHS funding bill in Congress. Some Democratic lawmakers have called for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) reforms, including requiring agents stop wearing masks and end warrantless searches, in order to support the bill. Minnesota state officials testified in the Senate yesterday that they are still seeking a full accounting of people detained by ICE.

 
 

“It’s not just ICE conducting immigration enforcement—you also have Customs and Border Protection working in the interior of the United States…They have widened the net of enforcement.”

—the Migration Policy Institute’s Kathleen Bush-Joseph tells CFR editors

 

It Is Decision Time for NATO

The new NATO headquarters building is pictured in Brussels, Belgium, May 7, 2018.

Francois Lenoir/Reuters

The Munich Security Conference is a fork in the road for the transatlantic relationship. One possible path is a lasting recalibration of NATO with a strong Europe at its core, while the other is continued transatlantic infighting, CFR President Michael Froman writes in the New York Times.

 
 

Across the Globe

Bangladesh’s post-protest election. The Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) swept to victory in the first parliamentary elections since mass youth-led protests in 2024 toppled the previous government. A coalition of mostly Islamist parties will form the main opposition, with a combined 77 seats in the legislature to the BNP coalition's 212, according to official results. Bangladeshis also approved constitutional changes in a referendum, including term limits for prime ministers and measures to boost women’s political participation.

 

Report on Starlink in Iran. The United States reportedly sent around six thousand of the company’s satellite internet kits to the country in recent weeks, in a secret effort to help dissidents withstand government restrictions on internet access, unnamed U.S. officials told the Wall Street Journal. The White House did not comment on the report, but had publicly said in January that Trump spoke to Starlink owner Elon Musk about ensuring connectivity in Iran. 

 

Weighing the cost of tariffs. The Trump administration is considering reducing its duties on steel and aluminum against the backdrop of rising domestic prices, the Financial Times reported today. Yesterday, economists from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and Columbia University published research that found that U.S. firms and consumers bore nearly 90 percent of the cost of tariffs that the Trump administration has imposed since early last year.

 

Taiwan-U.S. trade details. The U.S. Trade Representative’s office published details yesterday of a U.S.-Taiwan trade agreement reached last month. The deal lowers Taiwan’s base U.S. tariff rate to 15 percent—less than rates for many of its neighbors in Asia—while committing Taiwan to removing or lowering 99 percent of its tariffs on U.S. goods. Taiwan pledged to buy around $85 billion of U.S. goods, including liquefied natural gas and crude oil, aircraft, and power-generation equipment by 2029. It also won tariff exemptions for more than two thousand products, President Lai Ching-te wrote on social media. The deal requires Taiwanese congressional approval.

 

A two-speed Europe. At a conference yesterday on improving EU integration, leaders including European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and French President Emmanuel Macron proposed allowing some members to deepen market integration without waiting for full consensus across the bloc. The practical details of the proposal are being drawn up ahead of a European Council summit next month. 

 

Kenya-Somalia border reopening. The countries will reopen their border in April, almost fifteen years after it was closed due to regional attacks by militant group al-Shabaab, Kenyan President William Ruto announced. He said the measure would increase bilateral trade. Ruto said his country would deploy troops alongside the border opening for extra security, as Somalia-based al-Shabaab remains active in Kenya.

 

Israel’s Polymarket scandal. Israeli authorities said yesterday they had arrested and charged an army reservist and a civilian for allegedly using classified information to inform bets on Israeli strikes on Polymarket. Authorities did not provide further details about the bets, but Israeli public broadcaster Kan reported authorities were investigating a bet placed on the opening strikes of Israel’s war with Iran last year. “No operational harm” was caused, the Israeli Defense Forces said. 

 
 

Open Questions After the U.S.-Taiwan Deal

A wafer can be seen as taiwanese chip giant TSMC holds a ceremony to start mass production of its most advanced 3-nanometer chips in the southern city of Tainan, Taiwan December 29, 2022.

Ann Wang/Reuters

The new reciprocal trade agreement should provide welcome stability to bilateral economic ties, but differences over the trade balance, semiconductor manufacturing, and currency intervention will remain, CFR expert David Sacks and CFR’s Steven Honig write for Asia Unbound.

 
 

What’s Next

  • Today, the Munich Security Conference begins in Germany.

  • Today, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni attends an Italy-Africa summit in Ethiopia.

  • Sunday, an African Union summit concludes in Ethiopia. 

 
 

What You Missed: 2026 Milan-Cortina

Media count tracker.

Every morning the Daily News Brief team will share the latest highlights from the 2026 Winter Olympics! Without further ado, here’s what you might have missed since yesterday. 

 

Ukraine’s helmet controversy… The International Olympic Committee (IOC) disqualified Ukrainian skeleton racer Vladyslav Heraskevych yesterday over his plans to wear a helmet honoring his country’s war dead. Heraskevych had rejected an IOC compromise that he wear a black arm-band instead. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy yesterday praised Heraskevych and criticized the IOC, thanking Heraskevych for his conviction and adding that “courage is worth more than any medal.” He later awarded Heraskevych Ukraine’s Order of Freedom. His office said that 660 Ukrainian athletes and coaches have been killed since the war began. 

 

…and the question of sports neutrality. “[If] we have no rules, we have no sport,” an IOC spokesperson said regarding the decision to disqualify Heraskevych. Another athlete was disqualified for violating the ban on political messages as recently as the 2024 Paris Olympics: an Afghan breakdancer who revealed a cape that said “Free Afghan Women.” The IOC has, however, deemed political matters including the Russia-Ukraine war significant enough to override the tournament’s neutrality commitment. Russian athletes have been banned from competing under their national flag since 2022 due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, though the IOC president has signaled that the country may return as soon as 2028. 

 

Mentorship across borders. American snowboarding phenomenon Chloe Kim hoped to win her third gold medal in the half-pipe at this Olympics—and wowed audiences with feats such as entering backwards into a two-flip trick at yesterday’s final. She earned silver and was edged out from gold by South Korea’s Gaon Choi, who both took off and landed backwards for a trick on her final run. Kim has mentored Choi for years, and expressed pride in her win. Seeing Choi compete was a “full-circle moment,” Kim said earlier at the tournament, and “a mirror reflection of myself and my family.” Choi is now the first female Korean athlete to win a medal in snow sports.

 
 

The House’s Vote to Rein in Tariffs

A transport truck drives across the U.S.-Canada border at Fort Erie Ontario, Canada, April 2, 2025.

Carlos Osorio/Reuters

The passage of the resolution revoking the president’s national emergency declaration is a symbolic victory that shows why Congress struggles to constrain presidents, CFR expert James M. Lindsay writes in this article.