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Microsoft Bans Chinese Engineers from Pentagon Cloud Operations

Microsoft Bans Chinese Engineers from Pentagon Cloud Operations

Taarek Refaat
Microsoft announced on Friday that it has revised its internal practices to stop engineers based in China from providing technical support to U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) cloud clients, according to CNBC.
The change comes in response to growing concerns about national security and cybersecurity threats posed by foreign-based personnel working on sensitive U.S. government cloud infrastructure.
The announcement follows a detailed report by ProPublica earlier this week revealing the extent of the Pentagon's reliance on Chinese-based Microsoft engineers, particularly those supporting the company's Azure cloud services.
In a post on X (formerly Twitter), Microsoft's Chief Communications Officer Frank Shaw wrote: 'In response to concerns raised earlier this week regarding foreign engineers under U.S. supervision, Microsoft has made changes to our support for U.S. government clients to ensure that no engineering teams based in China are providing technical support for the Department of Defense cloud or related services.'
In 2019, Microsoft secured a $10 billion cloud contract with the Pentagon, although it was canceled in 2021 following legal disputes. A year later, the DoD awarded a combined $9 billion in cloud contracts to Microsoft, Amazon, Google, and Oracle.
According to ProPublica, Chinese Microsoft engineers working on Azure were under the supervision of U.S.-based "digital escorts", staff with lesser technical expertise tasked with overseeing foreign support teams. The report warned that this arrangement could expose the U.S. to cyber vulnerabilities, especially in light of rising geopolitical tensions with China.
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NATO has promised a spending blitz. Can its European members afford it?
NATO has promised a spending blitz. Can its European members afford it?

Egypt Independent

time24 minutes ago

  • Egypt Independent

NATO has promised a spending blitz. Can its European members afford it?

London CNN — The North Atlantic Treaty Organization, the defense alliance of 32 countries, is on a spending spree, with plans to funnel billions into their militaries and security systems over the coming decade. But it's a splurge that some European members of NATO, grappling with huge and ballooning debt burdens, can ill-afford. 'It's something unprecedented in peacetime to have such a massive increase in spending on any item – in particular, on defense,' Marcel Fratzscher, president of the German Institute for Economic Research or DIW, told CNN. Last month, NATO members agreed to boost their respective defense spending targets to five percent of gross domestic product by 2035 – more than double the current two percent target and the sort of major increase that US President Donald Trump has been demanding for many years. The pledge came as Europe's NATO members have to contend with an aggressive Russia and an America that has backed away from its long-standing role as the guarantor of the region's security. Governments have three options to meet the new spending target – cut other expenses, raise taxes or borrow more – but analysts told CNN that each is either politically unpalatable or unviable in the long term for heavily indebted European NATO countries. 'Many (European Union) countries face hard fiscal constraints,' analysts at Bruegel, a Brussels-based think tank, wrote earlier this month. 'It is unrealistic to expect countries that have struggled for decades to reach a 2 percent defense spending target to embrace credibly an ill-justified, much higher target.' Hard choices Many NATO countries have failed to meet the previous, two percent target, set in 2014. Most have increased spending in recent years in response to Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 – so much so that the European Union's executive arm expects its 23 member states belonging to NATO to meet that target this year, based on their combined GDP. But they now need to go further. The new, five percent target includes a commitment by NATO member states to spend the equivalent of 3.5 percent of their annual GDP on so-called 'core' defense requirements, such as weapons, with the remaining 1.5 percent allocated to areas supporting defense like port infrastructure. For some nations, that will mean finding tens of billions of extra dollars a year. Frank Gill, a senior sovereign credit ratings analyst for Europe, the Middle East and Africa at S&P Global Ratings, thinks that meeting the 3.5 percent target alone will require European countries, including the United Kingdom, to borrow huge sums of money. Some nations may also cut or reallocate government spending to reduce the amount they need to borrow, he said, but that could prove difficult. Two older people walk in the garden of a retirement home in Potsdam, Germany, in July 2025. Fabian Sommer/dpa/picture-alliance/AP 'A lot of (European governments) are facing other fiscal pressures… not least aging populations, which are essentially leading to even higher pension spending,' Gill told CNN. 'Politically, (that) is very challenging to cut.' Fratzscher at DIW in Germany agrees. For most NATO countries, he argued, cutting spending is 'utterly impossible.' 'Europe is aging quickly,' he said. 'It's completely illusionary to believe that… governments in Europe could save on public pensions, on healthcare, on care more generally.' The only sustainable way to finance the 'kind of magnitude of extra (defense) spending' now pledged by NATO is to hike taxes, he argued. Yet there exists neither the political will nor the public support to spend 'in such a dramatic way in this direction… and actually accept the consequences.' Crushing debt Simply borrowing more is a similarly tricky option in Europe where a number of governments are already saddled with debts close to, or larger than, the size of their country's entire economy. All else remaining equal, meeting just the 3.5 percent 'core' defense spending target could add roughly $2 trillion to the collective government debt of NATO's European members, including the UK, by 2035, according to a recent analysis by S&P Global Ratings. That compares with combined GDP of $23.1 trillion for the EU – a proxy for European NATO members – and Britain, based on World Bank data for 2024. The extra debt would be particularly hard to swallow for countries such as Italy, France and Belgium. These NATO members had some of the highest public debt-to-GDP ratios at the end of 2024, at 135 percent, 113 percent and 105 percent respectively, according to the EU's statistics office. Countries such as France, where this photo was taken, are grappling with huge government debt burdens. Sameer Al-Doumy/AFP/Getty Images Those are already heavy burdens. On Tuesday, French Prime Minister François Bayrou said the EU's second-largest economy risks a 'crushing by debt.' He warned that, should nothing change, just the interest France pays on its debt will swell to €100 billion ($117 billion) in 2029, becoming the government's largest single expense. He still supports splashing the cash on defense, while reining in other government spending. The EU is trying to make it easier for member states to invest in their security. Brussels has exempted defense expenditure from its strict rules on government spending and pledged to create a €150 billion fund from which countries can borrow, at favorable interest rates, to invest in their defense. However, there is another option for EU NATO members, according to Guntram Wolff, a senior fellow at Bruegel. 'Just not doing it. Not spending more,' he told CNN. Already, Spain has said it will not meet the five percent target, arguing that doing so would compromise its spending on welfare. Last year, the southern European nation spent only 1.28 percent of its GDP on defense, based on NATO estimates. Wolff said the 'best predictor for the increase in defense spending is (a country's) distance to Moscow – much more than any pledges at the NATO summit.'

Palestine requests extraordinary session of Arab League Council Tuesday - War on Gaza
Palestine requests extraordinary session of Arab League Council Tuesday - War on Gaza

Al-Ahram Weekly

time24 minutes ago

  • Al-Ahram Weekly

Palestine requests extraordinary session of Arab League Council Tuesday - War on Gaza

In a statement, Al-Aklouk said the request comes in response to the catastrophic humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip, where Palestinians are facing starvation, a siege, and the systematic killing of civilians lured to inhumane aid distribution points. He stressed that Israel's deliberate weaponization of starvation against the Palestinian people is a tool of genocide. He noted that approximately 1,000 Palestinians have been killed while waiting for food at the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) aid distribution sites. He stated that these aid sites are a new method of killing Palestinians under a false humanitarian cover. Al-Aklouk added that the call for the urgent session also stems from the continued targeting of Islamic and Christian holy sites by the occupying state. This includes a recent move to strip Hebron Municipality of its authority over the Ibrahimi Mosque and surrounding areas, transferring control instead to the so-called 'Religious Council' of Israeli settlements in the city. He warned that this constitutes an attempt to alter the historical, legal, and religious status of the site, to fully Judaize it—calling it a dangerous precedent and a flagrant violation of international law and relevant United Nations (UN) resolutions, including those of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). The ambassador also condemned the targeting of the historic Latin Monastery Church in Gaza, one of the world's oldest churches, which currently houses hundreds of displaced civilians, calling the attack a crime and a clear violation of international humanitarian law. According to Al-Aklouk, Palestine's request for the emergency session aims to initiate coordinated political, legal, and diplomatic action at the Arab and international levels to address these grave and unprecedented violations.

Palestine Calls for Emergency Arab League Session to Address Israeli Aggression
Palestine Calls for Emergency Arab League Session to Address Israeli Aggression

See - Sada Elbalad

timean hour ago

  • See - Sada Elbalad

Palestine Calls for Emergency Arab League Session to Address Israeli Aggression

Mohamed Mandour The State of Palestine has formally requested an emergency session of the Arab League Council at the level of permanent representatives, scheduled for Tuesday, to discuss political, legal, and diplomatic measures in response to what it described as 'unprecedented and dangerous Israeli aggression' in the occupied Palestinian territories. Palestine's Permanent Representative to the Arab League, Ambassador Muhannad Al-Aklouk, said Monday that the urgent request comes amid what he called catastrophic conditions in Gaza, including a deadly blockade and widespread starvation. Al-Aklouk accused Israel of systematically using hunger as a weapon of genocide, deliberately targeting starving civilians gathering at aid distribution points. 'Nearly 1,000 Palestinians have been killed while waiting for food for their children and families,' he said, describing the situation as a deliberate attempt to impose famine under the guise of humanitarian assistance. 'What is being offered in the name of relief is being weaponized against the Palestinian people under a false humanitarian cover.' The session aims to coordinate a unified Arab stance and explore concrete steps to address the worsening humanitarian crisis and escalate efforts at the international level. read more Gold prices rise, 21 Karat at EGP 3685 NATO's Role in Israeli-Palestinian Conflict US Expresses 'Strong Opposition' to New Turkish Military Operation in Syria Shoukry Meets Director-General of FAO Lavrov: confrontation bet. nuclear powers must be avoided News Iran Summons French Ambassador over Foreign Minister Remarks News Aboul Gheit Condemns Israeli Escalation in West Bank News Greek PM: Athens Plays Key Role in Improving Energy Security in Region News One Person Injured in Explosion at Ukrainian Embassy in Madrid News Israeli-Linked Hadassah Clinic in Moscow Treats Wounded Iranian IRGC Fighters Arts & Culture "Jurassic World Rebirth" Gets Streaming Date News China Launches Largest Ever Aircraft Carrier Videos & Features Tragedy Overshadows MC Alger Championship Celebration: One Fan Dead, 11 Injured After Stadium Fall Lifestyle Get to Know 2025 Eid Al Adha Prayer Times in Egypt Arts & Culture South Korean Actress Kang Seo-ha Dies at 31 after Cancer Battle News "Tensions Escalate: Iran Probes Allegations of Indian Tech Collaboration with Israeli Intelligence" Sports Get to Know 2025 WWE Evolution Results Business Egyptian Pound Undervalued by 30%, Says Goldman Sachs News Flights suspended at Port Sudan Airport after Drone Attacks

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