Wednesday Briefing: Trump opponents push back
Plus, an interview with the Nobel laureate Han Kang.
Morning Briefing: Asia Pacific Edition

January 22, 2025

Good morning. We’re covering President Trump’s first full day in office and a deadly fire at a ski resort in Turkey.

Plus, an interview with the Nobel laureate Han Kang.

President Trump seated at a small desk on a stage inside an arena. He is holding up a folio.
President Trump signed a series of executive orders in the first hours of his term. Doug Mills/The New York Times

Trump’s opponents started pushing back

President Trump’s adversaries made their first move yesterday as 22 states sued to block him from denying citizenship rights to the children of unauthorized immigrants. It was the beginning of what was expected to be a long legal battle over immigration.

Two of America’s most prominent far-right extremists, Enrique Tarrio of the Proud Boys and Stewart Rhodes of the Oath Keepers militia, left prison. They were freed as part of Trump’s sweeping legal reprieves for all of the nearly 1,600 people charged in connection with the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

During his first full day in office, Trump was set to meet with top Republican leaders in Congress to discuss the early priorities of his term.

Here’s what else happened:

Tech: Trump was expected to announce a joint venture between OpenAI, SoftBank and Oracle to create a $100 billion A.I. initiative.

Economy: Trump proposed a new agency called the External Revenue Service, which he promised would generate “massive” revenue through tariffs. Here’s what we know so far.

Panama: The country submitted a formal letter to the U.N., rejecting Trump’s comments about reclaiming the Panama Canal during his inauguration speech.

Russia: Trump said President Vladimir Putin was “destroying Russia” by waging war in Ukraine.

Europe: Trump is pressing for much heftier European spending on defense. He has withdrawn from the Paris climate agreements and the W.H.O. In Davos, at the World Economic Forum, leaders vowed to stay the course on climate action.

Rallies: Elon Musk ignited chatter over a hand gesture he made that drew comparisons to the Nazi salute.

Analysis: Trump has an unmatched hold on Republicans. He’s rushing to take advantage.

A man amid the charred remains of a small structure with no roof.
A damaged shop in the West Bank after an attack by Israeli settlers, yesterday.  Jaafar Ashtiyeh/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Israel began an ‘extensive’ West Bank operation

Israeli security forces began a military operation yesterday in Jenin, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. Eight people were killed and dozens injured in the first hours of the operation, the Palestinian health ministry reported.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel said that the operation was aimed at “eradicating terrorism.” Israeli forces moved in shortly after President Trump rescinded sanctions against Jewish extremists and settlers accused of violence against Palestinians. Trump’s move came as Jewish extremists raided and set fires in Palestinian villages to protest a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas, Israeli and Palestinian officials said.

Related: The head of Israel’s military said he would step down over the Hamas-led Oct. 7 attack. He is the highest-ranking military leader to do so.

Orange flames burned on the top of and sides of a wooden building, with fire ladders extending into a couple of windows.
The Grand Kartal Hotel in Kartalkaya, Turkey, yesterday.  IHA, via Associated Press

At least 76 people died in Turkey in a hotel fire

A fire tore through a 12-story hotel at a ski resort in Turkey yesterday, killing at least 76 people and injuring 51 others, the authorities said. Survivors spoke of terrifying escapes made worse by a lack of alarms or fire exits.

The fire broke out before dawn in the Grand Kartal Hotel in Kartalkaya, about 290 kilometers east of Istanbul. The cause of the fire remains unclear. Six prosecutors were investigating and nine people, including the hotel’s owner, had been detained, the authorities said.

MORE TOP NEWS

A destroyed military vehicle on the side of a road.
Destroyed Ukrainian military equipment in the Kharkiv region in May 2024. Finbarr O'Reilly for The New York Times

Sports

MORNING READ

A cartoon illustration of fast-food mascots riding together in a car through a psychedelic landscape of food.
Photo illustration by Christina Lee

Fast-food restaurants, a symbol of pure Americana, are just as ubiquitous outside the United States — but there are slight twists. McDonald’s in West Africa has jollof rice; in Canada, you can order poutine; and on menus in India, it’s possible to avoid beef entirely.

These restaurants are locally owned and supplied, and patronized by locals. Travelers obsessed with finding “authenticity” should take a look.

Lives lived: Garth Hudson, the last surviving original member of the Band, the influential rock group behind hits like “The Weight,” died at 87.

CONVERSATION STARTERS

Grainy black-and-white photo of a group of people surrounding John Lennon, wearing a black peaked cap and round glasses, as he enters the back seat of a waiting car.
John Lennon’s visit to a school in Manhattan in 1975.  Christopher H. Gibbs

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ARTS AND IDEAS

Han Kang posing for a portrait looking at the camera while sitting at a desk next to a laptop computer.
Jean Chung for The New York Times

A writer mines her country’s nightmares

Han Kang, the South Korean author and Nobel laureate, has probed her country’s darkest authoritarian episodes. Her works have seemed all the more relevant since President Yoon Suk Yeol briefly imposed martial law in December.

In a rare interview, she spoke with The Times about her book “We Do Not Part” about why atrocities must be remembered. “It’s pain and it is blood, but it’s the current of life,” Han said.

Read the interview here.

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