Category: Fisheries

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Commemorating the Africa Day of Seas and Oceans – Fishing for the Future

    Source: APO – Report:

    .

    Today, 25 July 2025, we proudly join the continent in commemorating the Africa Day of Seas and Oceans.

    Established in 2015 as part of the 2015–2025 Decade of African Seas and Oceans, this day was first marked on 25 July during the closing of the 22nd Ordinary Session of Heads of State and Government at the African Union (AU) Headquarters in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

    Today, we reflect on how the FishGov2 Project—an EU funded initiative, continues to deliver on its mandate of supporting the sustainable use and conservation of Africa’s aquatic resources, through the implementation of key policy instruments: the PFRS & the Africa Blue Ecocomy Strategy. 

    Over the past year, FishGov2 has:
    – Strengthened governance frameworks that safeguard our seas and oceans.
    – Promoted sustainable fisheries and aquaculture management, ensuring ecosystems remain productive and resilient.
    – Shared practical tools, policy guidance, and best practices that empower Member States to protect marine biodiversity while enhancing food security, livelihoods, and the blue economy.

    Through these efforts, FishGov2 contributes to a future where Africa’s seas and oceans are managed responsibly, for the benefit of current and future generations.

    – on behalf of The African Union – Interafrican Bureau for Animal Resources (AU-IBAR).

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI USA: California advances Bay-Delta Plan Update to restore ecosystem health and improve water supply reliability

    Source: US State of California 2

    Jul 24, 2025

    Governor Newsom praises the State Water Board for incorporating the Healthy Rivers and Landscapes Program into the Bay-Delta Plan

    What you need to know: The Newsom Administration’s innovative Healthy Rivers and Landscapes Program, which improves environmental conditions and provides more water supply certainty for California’s communities, farms, and businesses, is moving forward for consideration in the Bay-Delta Plan. This comes alongside a recent legislative proposal to streamline the adoption of water quality plans through new CEQA exemptions.

    SACRAMENTO – Today, the State Water Resources Control Board (State Water Board) proposed an update to its Bay-Delta Water Quality Control Plan that will help protect the Sacramento River, the Delta and associated tributaries (Sacramento/Delta) for generations to come and safeguard water supplies for millions of Californians. The new plan update will help maintain a strong balance between protecting precious ecosystems and ensuring the state can meet the needs of Californians. If adopted, the plan will update environmental science, restore tens of thousands of acres of habitat, and incorporate a groundbreaking program developed by the Newsom administration, creating voluntary agreements with water users, including municipal water agencies, agriculture, and other water rights holders. Advancing California’s Abundance Agenda, the Governor is also introducing a legislative proposal through a separate trailer bill to create new CEQA exemptions for water quality plans. 

    “I am proud to see the Healthy Rivers and Landscapes Program represented in this plan update — it’s a testament to California’s commitment to a collaborative, science-driven approach to managing our water for the benefit of our communities, economy, and fish and wildlife. However, our work is not yet done — I have proposed legislation to create a CEQA exemption for all Water Quality Control Plans that would accelerate the time it takes to get these critical plans done by removing unnecessary and redundant process requirements. We’re done with barriers and obstacles to our state’s success. We must work together to protect our natural resources for the benefit of the habitats and people of our state.”

    Governor Gavin Newsom

    The Newsom Administration, along with state, federal, and local leaders, developed the Healthy Rivers and Landscapes (HRL) Program as an innovative alternate approach to traditional regulatory requirements to improve environmental conditions while providing more water supply certainty to communities, farms, and businesses throughout California. Now, the program has advanced to the State Water Board for consideration as an implementation pathway in the Bay-Delta Plan.

    “The State Water Board’s draft plan update marks a crucial step toward safeguarding the Bay Delta’s water quality,” said California Environmental Protection Agency Secretary Yana Garcia. “By embracing collaborative, science-driven solutions, the board is actively ensuring a more sustainable water future for communities, ecosystems, and generations to come.” 

    The Bay-Delta Plan update now includes two regulatory pathways for water users:

    • A comprehensive Healthy Rivers and Landscapes Program, which would produce ecosystem benefits through a combination of flow and habitat projects.
    • A flow-only approach for those who are not parties to the HRL program. 

    Following a public comment period, the plan will advance before the State Water Board for final consideration.  The plan, developed with extensive public input, including public water agencies, environmental nonprofits, tribal partners, and local governments, is a win for all Californians.

    Streamlining Government to Work Better 

    The Bay-Delta Plan for the Sacramento/Delta has not been meaningfully updated since 1995. Continuing to operate under a plan that does not reflect the most current science, a growing population, or a changing climate is a disservice to California’s communities and ecosystems. In 2022, Governor Newsom brought together local, state, and federal partners to submit an actionable framework for the Voluntary Agreements, later named the Healthy Rivers and Landscapes Program, to the State Water Board.

    If adopted by the State Water Board, the HRL program would dedicate a large quantity of water to the environment and restore more than 45,000 acres of aquatic habitat for fish and other animals. In addition, Governor Newsom secured funding commitments totalling $2.9 billion to implement the HRL program over the next 8 years.

    “This program will improve the health of our rivers by both restoring river flows and revitalizing habitat,” said California Natural Resources Secretary Wade Crowfoot. “After all, fish and wildlife need both to thrive. It also improves coordination and collaboration among public agencies charged with improving river conditions and will enable real-time, science-based decision making that we desperately need to better manage our river systems.”

    “The Healthy Rivers and Landscapes Program will allow for a more collaborative and scientifically sound way to balance conflicting demands for water in an extremely complex watershed. We’re grateful to the State Water Board for embracing this approach as a potential pathway within their regulatory framework,” said California Department of Water Resources Director Karla Nemeth. “Working together, we will find new solutions to the old problem of balancing the needs of ecosystems and economies.”

    “The inclusion of voluntary agreements in the development of this plan will be a big win for California, and will help provide more opportunities for our partners across the state to support California’s irreplaceable fish populations and habitats,” said California Department Fish and Wildlife Director Charlton H. Bonham. “By focusing on the science of restoration, and prioritizing additional flows to support healthy habitats, we can ensure the best possible outcomes for California’s precious natural resources, now and in years to come.”

    Furthering the administration’s agenda to reduce barriers to progress and move projects that Californians need forward, Governor Newsom has also introduced trailer bill language to streamline the adoption of water quality control plans and create new exemptions for water projects under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). This would expedite the potential adoption of the Bay-Delta Plan and the ecosystem benefits it would provide, while still allowing for vital public process and input.

    More information about the proposed Bay-Delta Plan update is available on the State Water Board’s website

    Press releases, Recent news

    Recent news

    News Sacramento, California – Governor Gavin Newsom issued the following statement today on a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit striking down California’s ammunition background check law, which was passed by voters in 2016: Strong…

    News What you need to know: Through Governor Newsom’s support of local government efforts and state investments, California is reversing decades of inaction on homelessness. Last year’s 2024 point-in-time count showed California had outperformed the nation by slowing…

    News SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom today approved the predeployment of firefighting resources in Nevada, Sierra, and Plumas counties in response to critical fire weather conditions forecasted to impact Northern California starting Wednesday, July 23, through…

    MIL OSI USA News

  • India–UK FTA will boost Indian manufacturing, services: RBI Governor

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor Sanjay Malhotra on Friday said the India–UK Free Trade Agreement (FTA) is expected to provide a boost to multiple sectors of the Indian economy, including manufacturing and services.

    Speaking at an event in Mumbai, Malhotra said that with multilateralism losing momentum globally, such bilateral agreements are becoming increasingly important for India’s trade strategy.

    “The UK FTA is the way forward, because unfortunately, multilateralism appears to have taken a back seat,” Malhotra said, adding that trade negotiations with the United States are also at an advanced stage.

    Malhotra also noted that India is actively pursuing several other trade agreements, many of which are currently under negotiation.

    The RBI Governor’s remarks came a day after Union Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal said India is expanding its trade relations across geographies, following the signing of the landmark FTA with the UK.

    “Very good talks are going on with New Zealand, Oman, Chile, Peru, and the European Union. And on the bilateral trade agreement (BTA), good discussions are also underway with the United States,” Goyal told IANS in London. “I firmly believe that all these negotiations will lead to positive outcomes.”

    India and the US recently concluded the fifth round of BTA negotiations in Washington, DC.

    The Trade and Economic Partnership Agreement (TEPA) between India and the European Free Trade Association (EFTA) is set to come into effect on October 1. The agreement is projected to generate around one million direct jobs in India.

    The India–UK FTA, now officially termed the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA), is being viewed as a key milestone in India’s global trade policy, with the potential to unlock billions of dollars in trade and investment.

    —IANS

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Fisheries and Seafood Scheme 2025 closed following strong demand

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    Fisheries and Seafood Scheme 2025 closed following strong demand

    The latest round of the Fisheries and Seafood Scheme (FaSS) closes following high demand and interest from across the seafood and marine sectors.

    Since re-opening in June, the Fisheries and Seafood Scheme (FaSS) has once again attracted a high volume of interest from across the seafood and marine sectors in England. Due to the number and total value of applications received, the scheme is now closed to new applications.

    This year’s £6 million funding allocation builds on the more than £35 million already committed through FaSS to over 1,700 projects, supporting innovation and growth across the catching, aquaculture, processing, charity and recreational sectors, as well as efforts to enhance the marine environment.

    Applications to FaSS are processed on a first-come, first-served basis. All applications submitted before the closure date are currently being reviewed. Applicants who have received an acknowledgement from the MMO’s grants team will continue through the assessment process. The team will also contact any recent applicants who have not yet received confirmation to advise them of next steps.

    Paul Errington, Acting Director of Finance and Resources at MMO, said:

    We’re pleased to see another strong response to FaSS this year, with applications that demonstrate the sector’s drive to innovate, build a resilient seafood sector and grow sustainably. The projects that FaSS supports will help boost local economies in our coastal communities and create long-term opportunities across the seafood supply chain.

    Applications submitted after 5pm on 25 July 2025 will not be considered. The FaSS panel will meet in September to assess all eligible applications for projects with total costs of £150,000 or more that were submitted before the 21 July 2025 deadline.

    All funded projects must be completed by 31 March 2026. All applicants will be notified directly, once all projects have been considered.

    Further information

    For more information about FaSS, please visit: www.gov.uk/guidance/fisheries-and-seafood-scheme

    Updates to this page

    Published 25 July 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI: No Credit Check Loans “Guaranteed Approval” Searches Surge: RadCred Launches Bad‑Credit Loan Soft‑Pull for Borrowers with Poor Credit Scores

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Glendale, California, July 25, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — RadCred, an online loan marketplace (not a lender), today announced an expanded soft‑pull pre‑qualification flow for Americans aggressively searching no credit check loans guaranteed approval.” The upgraded experience connects applicants only to state‑ or tribal‑licensed direct lenders, shows APR, fees, total repayment, and estimated funding speed up front, and can enable same‑day loans when verification and bank cut‑offs permit. Final approval, APRs, loan amounts, and timing vary by lender, income, and state law.

    Google Trends indicates sustained growth in intent phrases including no credit check loans, online loans no credit check, payday loan online no credit check, 1 hour payday loans no credit check, and online payday loans for bad credit all signals that borrowers with poor or sub‑580 credit scores are seeking faster, softer‑impact paths to funding. RadCred’s marketplace reframes those risky search terms into licensed, transparent, soft‑pull comparisons that reduce confusion and help consumers avoid unlicensed or predatory operators.

    Why No Credit Check Loans” Searches are Spiking

    Rising living costs, volatile gig‑economy income, and tighter bank underwriting have squeezed household budgets. The Federal Reserve’s most recent Survey of Household Economics and Decisionmaking (SHED) again shows many adults would struggle to cover a $400 emergency without borrowing, selling assets, or leaning on credit cards. In that gap, searches for payday loans online, online loans for bad credit, payday loans online same day, same‑day payday loans, $255 payday loans online same day, and small payday loans online no credit check continue to climb.

    Unfortunately, many of the pages ranking for those phrases over‑promise with “instant” or “guaranteed” language that licensed lenders simply cannot make.

    Why $500 Loans Dominate Financial Searches in 2025

    In 2025, $500 loans sit at the sweet spot between urgent need and realistic repayment. Inflation has pushed routine surprises car repairs, utility reconnections, insurance deductibles, last‑minute travel squarely into the $300–$700 band, and many households still report they’d struggle to cover even a $400 bill without borrowing. Add gig‑economy income volatility, tighter bank underwriting, and thin or sub‑580 credit files, and it’s clear why consumers are typing queries like “no credit check loans,” “payday loans online same day,” and “$255 payday loans online same day.”

    A $500 principal is small enough to be approved quickly (often via a soft‑pull pre‑qualification) yet large enough to bridge the month without stacking multiple advances. Marketplaces like RadCred translate those high‑intent searches into licensed, transparent offers whether a short‑term payday advance or a multi‑payment installment plan so borrowers can compare APR, total repay, and funding speed before committing, rather than accepting opaque, rollover‑heavy terms at a storefront.

    What is No Credit Check Loans and What  does it really Means 

    In everyday advertising, “no credit check loans” (often phrased as “online loans no credit check” or “payday loans online no credit check guaranteed approval”) suggests you can borrow money without anyone looking at your credit  and that approval is automatic. In regulated lending, that’s not accurate.

    Here’s what it actually means when you see the term used responsibly:

    • Soft credit inquiry first. Legitimate marketplaces like RadCred let you pre‑qualify with a soft pull, so you can view potential rates and terms without an immediate impact on your FICO score.
    • Verification still happens. Before funding, licensed direct lenders typically run a hard inquiry, verify your identity, review income/bank deposits, and assess ability to repay.
    • No true “guaranteed approval.” At best, it indicates a high preliminary match rate for eligible applicants, not a universal yes.
    • State law controls what’s offered. Some states cap APRs or restrict payday‑style products; compliant platforms filter out unlicensed or prohibited offers automatically.

    How RadCred’s No Credit Check Loans Marketplace Works

    RadCred is an online loan marketplace not a lender. It turns that no credit check loans into a compliant, transparent process that starts with a soft credit inquiry (so viewing offers won’t immediately affect your score) and ends with licensed, clearly priced options from direct lenders only. Here’s the flow:

    1. Soft‑pull pre‑qualification
      You complete a short, mobile‑friendly form. RadCred runs a soft inquiry to let you preview rates, terms, and amounts (e.g., small emergency loans such as $255) without an immediate FICO impact.
    2. ZIP‑code licensing filter
      The platform automatically filters out unlicensed or prohibited products, showing only state‑ or tribal‑licensed lenders that can legally serve your location.
    3. Income‑first matching
      Lenders assess real cash flow (pay stubs, benefits, bank deposits) and alternative datahelpful for online loans for bad credit or thin credit files.
    4. Transparent offer cards
      Each matched offer discloses APR, fees, total repayment, term length, and estimated funding speed including same day funding when verification and bank cut‑offs allow.
    5. E‑sign, verify, and fund
      If you accept an offer, the lender may conduct a hard credit pull and request documents before issuing funds via ACH.
    6. Secure handling & compliance
      RadCred employs encryption and vetting standards, while lenders set all final approval, APR, amount, and timing in line with federal, state, or tribal law.

    Step‑by‑step Guide to Apply for Bad credit loans Instant Approval without Hurting Credit Score

    1. Check your credit reports for errors before applying—especially if you’re considering payday loans online, online loans for bad credit, or small payday loans online no credit check.
    2. Pre‑qualify on RadCred with a soft credit check (often marketed as online loans no credit check) to preview direct lenders only offers for same day loans, online payday loans for bad credit, or installment options without an immediate FICO impact.
    3. Compare APRs, fees, and total repay—not just the monthly payment across payday loans online same day, bad credit payday loan options, and multi‑payment installment plans.
    4. Upload verification documents (pay stubs, bank‑deposit screenshots) if you accept an offer most licensed lenders require this before funding, even when ads say “1 hour payday loans no credit check.”
    5. E‑sign all disclosures (Truth‑in‑Lending, state notices) so you fully understand costs, terms, and any state limits tied to no credit check loans search results.
    6. Receive funds—often the same day when verification clears early and bank cut‑offs permit; popular amounts include $255 payday loans online same day and other small online loans.
    7. Repay on schedule (many lenders allow early payoff with no penalty), which can help you avoid rollovers and, when reported, may support rebuilding credit after using payday loans or other emergency products.

    What U.S. Borrowers Are Really Using Quick Loans For in 2025 — RadCred Research

    RadCred’s 2025 research shows most quick‑loan requests are small, urgent stopgaps not long‑term financing.

    • Rent or mortgage gaps
    • Utility shut‑off notices
    • Car repairs to stay working
    • Medical/dental bills & prescriptions
    • Covering bank overdrafts/fees
    • Emergency travel for family needs
    • Childcare or school expenses
    • Insurance deductibles after accidents

    What U.S. Borrowers Want Before Applying for “No Credit Check” Loans—and How RadCred Solves It

    What people want

    • No hit to their credit score just to see offers (soft check first, not a hard pull)
    • Clear costs up front — APR, fees, total they’ll pay back, and due dates
    • Real speed — honest timelines for same‑day funding (no empty “instant” promises)
    • Licensed, legit lenders only (legal in their state)
    • Small, emergency amounts (often $255–$500) and longer installment options when needed
    • Easy, secure online process with strong data protection
    •  Straight talk on what “no credit check” and “guaranteed approval” really mean

    How RadCred solves it

    • Uses a soft credit check so you can compare offers without hurting your score
    • Shows only state‑ or tribal‑licensed direct lenders that can legally lend to you
    • Puts APR, fees, total repayment, term, and funding speed on every offer car
    • Matches based on income and bank deposits, helping people with bad credit or thin files
    • Can fund the same day when verification clears and bank cut‑offs allow
    • Protects your info with bank‑grade encryption and vetted partners
    • Explains that a hard pull may happen only if you accept an offer—no “guaranteed approval” hype
    •  Points to safer alternatives (credit‑union PALs, credit‑builder loans) when they make more sense

    How Does Instant No Credit Check Loans Process Works

    It starts with a quick, mobile‑first application. You enter basic details income source, active checking account, employment or benefits status, and contact info on the RadCred marketplace. Instead of triggering a hard inquiry, RadCred begins with a no credit check loan, which is what most people mean when they search “no credit check loans” or “payday loans online same day.”

    After you submit, RadCred’s engine instantly routes your request only to state‑ or tribal‑licensed direct lenders that operate legally in your ZIP code. Within minutes, you may see multiple online loans for bad credit offers including small payday loans online no credit check amounts such as $255 payday loans online same day presented side by side with APR, fees, total repay, term length, and estimated funding speed.

    If you choose an offer, you finish directly with the lender. At that point, the lender may run a hard inquiry and request verification documents (pay stubs, bank‑deposit screenshots, ID). Approved loans can fund the same day (or next business day) via ACH, depending on verification speed and bank cut‑offs often as fast as ads promising “1 hour payday loans no credit check.”

    Crucially, RadCred is not a lender; it’s a compliant connector that converts risky search terms into transparent, licensed choices. Approval, APR, loan amount, and timing always vary by lender, income, and state law so you can compare first, then decide what’s affordable.

    FAQ

    Will applying through RadCred hurt my credit?
    Pre‑qualification uses a soft credit inquiry, which does not affect your score. A hard pull may follow if you accept and finalize an offer.

    How fast can I receive funds?
    Some lenders can fund the same day once verification clears and bank cut‑offs allow; later submissions often fund next business day.

    Are “no credit check loans” legal in every state?
    No. Some states cap APRs, restrict payday‑style products, or prohibit them. RadCred’s licensing filter hides offers not permitted in your ZIP code.

    What APRs should I expect with a sub‑580 score?
    APRs vary widely by state, lender, and risk. Sub‑prime loans typically carry higher rates compare total repay before committing.

    Can on‑time payments help my credit?
    Potentially. Some lenders report repayment to credit bureaus, which can help improve a thin or damaged file when payments are made on time.

    Conclusion

    As searches for “no credit check loans guaranteed approval” surge, RadCred offers a compliant alternative: soft‑pull pre‑qualification, licensed direct lenders only, transparent APR and fee disclosures, and same day payday loan funding potential all designed to give borrowers with poor credit scores (580 or below) a clearer, safer way to access emergency cash.

    About RadCred

    RadCred is an online loan marketplace for no credit check guaranteed approval , not a lender. The platform connects U.S. consumers to a vetted network of state‑licensed and tribal direct lenders offering payday, installment, and emergency personal loans typically from $255 to $5,000. RadCred emphasizes income‑first underwriting, soft‑pull access, encrypted processing, and clear cost disclosures to expand responsible access to small‑dollar credit for underserved borrowers.

    Disclaimer

    RadCred is not a lender and does not make credit decisions. Loan approval, APR, fees, loan amounts, and funding speed are determined solely by participating lenders and governed by applicable federal, state, or tribal law. Offers begin with a soft inquiry; a hard credit pull may occur before funding. Not all applicants will qualify. Borrow responsibly—only what you can comfortably repay.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: No Credit Check Loans “Guaranteed Approval” Searches Surge: RadCred Launches Bad‑Credit Loan Soft‑Pull for Borrowers with Poor Credit Scores

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Glendale, California, July 25, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — RadCred, an online loan marketplace (not a lender), today announced an expanded soft‑pull pre‑qualification flow for Americans aggressively searching no credit check loans guaranteed approval.” The upgraded experience connects applicants only to state‑ or tribal‑licensed direct lenders, shows APR, fees, total repayment, and estimated funding speed up front, and can enable same‑day loans when verification and bank cut‑offs permit. Final approval, APRs, loan amounts, and timing vary by lender, income, and state law.

    Google Trends indicates sustained growth in intent phrases including no credit check loans, online loans no credit check, payday loan online no credit check, 1 hour payday loans no credit check, and online payday loans for bad credit all signals that borrowers with poor or sub‑580 credit scores are seeking faster, softer‑impact paths to funding. RadCred’s marketplace reframes those risky search terms into licensed, transparent, soft‑pull comparisons that reduce confusion and help consumers avoid unlicensed or predatory operators.

    Why No Credit Check Loans” Searches are Spiking

    Rising living costs, volatile gig‑economy income, and tighter bank underwriting have squeezed household budgets. The Federal Reserve’s most recent Survey of Household Economics and Decisionmaking (SHED) again shows many adults would struggle to cover a $400 emergency without borrowing, selling assets, or leaning on credit cards. In that gap, searches for payday loans online, online loans for bad credit, payday loans online same day, same‑day payday loans, $255 payday loans online same day, and small payday loans online no credit check continue to climb.

    Unfortunately, many of the pages ranking for those phrases over‑promise with “instant” or “guaranteed” language that licensed lenders simply cannot make.

    Why $500 Loans Dominate Financial Searches in 2025

    In 2025, $500 loans sit at the sweet spot between urgent need and realistic repayment. Inflation has pushed routine surprises car repairs, utility reconnections, insurance deductibles, last‑minute travel squarely into the $300–$700 band, and many households still report they’d struggle to cover even a $400 bill without borrowing. Add gig‑economy income volatility, tighter bank underwriting, and thin or sub‑580 credit files, and it’s clear why consumers are typing queries like “no credit check loans,” “payday loans online same day,” and “$255 payday loans online same day.”

    A $500 principal is small enough to be approved quickly (often via a soft‑pull pre‑qualification) yet large enough to bridge the month without stacking multiple advances. Marketplaces like RadCred translate those high‑intent searches into licensed, transparent offers whether a short‑term payday advance or a multi‑payment installment plan so borrowers can compare APR, total repay, and funding speed before committing, rather than accepting opaque, rollover‑heavy terms at a storefront.

    What is No Credit Check Loans and What  does it really Means 

    In everyday advertising, “no credit check loans” (often phrased as “online loans no credit check” or “payday loans online no credit check guaranteed approval”) suggests you can borrow money without anyone looking at your credit  and that approval is automatic. In regulated lending, that’s not accurate.

    Here’s what it actually means when you see the term used responsibly:

    • Soft credit inquiry first. Legitimate marketplaces like RadCred let you pre‑qualify with a soft pull, so you can view potential rates and terms without an immediate impact on your FICO score.
    • Verification still happens. Before funding, licensed direct lenders typically run a hard inquiry, verify your identity, review income/bank deposits, and assess ability to repay.
    • No true “guaranteed approval.” At best, it indicates a high preliminary match rate for eligible applicants, not a universal yes.
    • State law controls what’s offered. Some states cap APRs or restrict payday‑style products; compliant platforms filter out unlicensed or prohibited offers automatically.

    How RadCred’s No Credit Check Loans Marketplace Works

    RadCred is an online loan marketplace not a lender. It turns that no credit check loans into a compliant, transparent process that starts with a soft credit inquiry (so viewing offers won’t immediately affect your score) and ends with licensed, clearly priced options from direct lenders only. Here’s the flow:

    1. Soft‑pull pre‑qualification
      You complete a short, mobile‑friendly form. RadCred runs a soft inquiry to let you preview rates, terms, and amounts (e.g., small emergency loans such as $255) without an immediate FICO impact.
    2. ZIP‑code licensing filter
      The platform automatically filters out unlicensed or prohibited products, showing only state‑ or tribal‑licensed lenders that can legally serve your location.
    3. Income‑first matching
      Lenders assess real cash flow (pay stubs, benefits, bank deposits) and alternative datahelpful for online loans for bad credit or thin credit files.
    4. Transparent offer cards
      Each matched offer discloses APR, fees, total repayment, term length, and estimated funding speed including same day funding when verification and bank cut‑offs allow.
    5. E‑sign, verify, and fund
      If you accept an offer, the lender may conduct a hard credit pull and request documents before issuing funds via ACH.
    6. Secure handling & compliance
      RadCred employs encryption and vetting standards, while lenders set all final approval, APR, amount, and timing in line with federal, state, or tribal law.

    Step‑by‑step Guide to Apply for Bad credit loans Instant Approval without Hurting Credit Score

    1. Check your credit reports for errors before applying—especially if you’re considering payday loans online, online loans for bad credit, or small payday loans online no credit check.
    2. Pre‑qualify on RadCred with a soft credit check (often marketed as online loans no credit check) to preview direct lenders only offers for same day loans, online payday loans for bad credit, or installment options without an immediate FICO impact.
    3. Compare APRs, fees, and total repay—not just the monthly payment across payday loans online same day, bad credit payday loan options, and multi‑payment installment plans.
    4. Upload verification documents (pay stubs, bank‑deposit screenshots) if you accept an offer most licensed lenders require this before funding, even when ads say “1 hour payday loans no credit check.”
    5. E‑sign all disclosures (Truth‑in‑Lending, state notices) so you fully understand costs, terms, and any state limits tied to no credit check loans search results.
    6. Receive funds—often the same day when verification clears early and bank cut‑offs permit; popular amounts include $255 payday loans online same day and other small online loans.
    7. Repay on schedule (many lenders allow early payoff with no penalty), which can help you avoid rollovers and, when reported, may support rebuilding credit after using payday loans or other emergency products.

    What U.S. Borrowers Are Really Using Quick Loans For in 2025 — RadCred Research

    RadCred’s 2025 research shows most quick‑loan requests are small, urgent stopgaps not long‑term financing.

    • Rent or mortgage gaps
    • Utility shut‑off notices
    • Car repairs to stay working
    • Medical/dental bills & prescriptions
    • Covering bank overdrafts/fees
    • Emergency travel for family needs
    • Childcare or school expenses
    • Insurance deductibles after accidents

    What U.S. Borrowers Want Before Applying for “No Credit Check” Loans—and How RadCred Solves It

    What people want

    • No hit to their credit score just to see offers (soft check first, not a hard pull)
    • Clear costs up front — APR, fees, total they’ll pay back, and due dates
    • Real speed — honest timelines for same‑day funding (no empty “instant” promises)
    • Licensed, legit lenders only (legal in their state)
    • Small, emergency amounts (often $255–$500) and longer installment options when needed
    • Easy, secure online process with strong data protection
    •  Straight talk on what “no credit check” and “guaranteed approval” really mean

    How RadCred solves it

    • Uses a soft credit check so you can compare offers without hurting your score
    • Shows only state‑ or tribal‑licensed direct lenders that can legally lend to you
    • Puts APR, fees, total repayment, term, and funding speed on every offer car
    • Matches based on income and bank deposits, helping people with bad credit or thin files
    • Can fund the same day when verification clears and bank cut‑offs allow
    • Protects your info with bank‑grade encryption and vetted partners
    • Explains that a hard pull may happen only if you accept an offer—no “guaranteed approval” hype
    •  Points to safer alternatives (credit‑union PALs, credit‑builder loans) when they make more sense

    How Does Instant No Credit Check Loans Process Works

    It starts with a quick, mobile‑first application. You enter basic details income source, active checking account, employment or benefits status, and contact info on the RadCred marketplace. Instead of triggering a hard inquiry, RadCred begins with a no credit check loan, which is what most people mean when they search “no credit check loans” or “payday loans online same day.”

    After you submit, RadCred’s engine instantly routes your request only to state‑ or tribal‑licensed direct lenders that operate legally in your ZIP code. Within minutes, you may see multiple online loans for bad credit offers including small payday loans online no credit check amounts such as $255 payday loans online same day presented side by side with APR, fees, total repay, term length, and estimated funding speed.

    If you choose an offer, you finish directly with the lender. At that point, the lender may run a hard inquiry and request verification documents (pay stubs, bank‑deposit screenshots, ID). Approved loans can fund the same day (or next business day) via ACH, depending on verification speed and bank cut‑offs often as fast as ads promising “1 hour payday loans no credit check.”

    Crucially, RadCred is not a lender; it’s a compliant connector that converts risky search terms into transparent, licensed choices. Approval, APR, loan amount, and timing always vary by lender, income, and state law so you can compare first, then decide what’s affordable.

    FAQ

    Will applying through RadCred hurt my credit?
    Pre‑qualification uses a soft credit inquiry, which does not affect your score. A hard pull may follow if you accept and finalize an offer.

    How fast can I receive funds?
    Some lenders can fund the same day once verification clears and bank cut‑offs allow; later submissions often fund next business day.

    Are “no credit check loans” legal in every state?
    No. Some states cap APRs, restrict payday‑style products, or prohibit them. RadCred’s licensing filter hides offers not permitted in your ZIP code.

    What APRs should I expect with a sub‑580 score?
    APRs vary widely by state, lender, and risk. Sub‑prime loans typically carry higher rates compare total repay before committing.

    Can on‑time payments help my credit?
    Potentially. Some lenders report repayment to credit bureaus, which can help improve a thin or damaged file when payments are made on time.

    Conclusion

    As searches for “no credit check loans guaranteed approval” surge, RadCred offers a compliant alternative: soft‑pull pre‑qualification, licensed direct lenders only, transparent APR and fee disclosures, and same day payday loan funding potential all designed to give borrowers with poor credit scores (580 or below) a clearer, safer way to access emergency cash.

    About RadCred

    RadCred is an online loan marketplace for no credit check guaranteed approval , not a lender. The platform connects U.S. consumers to a vetted network of state‑licensed and tribal direct lenders offering payday, installment, and emergency personal loans typically from $255 to $5,000. RadCred emphasizes income‑first underwriting, soft‑pull access, encrypted processing, and clear cost disclosures to expand responsible access to small‑dollar credit for underserved borrowers.

    Disclaimer

    RadCred is not a lender and does not make credit decisions. Loan approval, APR, fees, loan amounts, and funding speed are determined solely by participating lenders and governed by applicable federal, state, or tribal law. Offers begin with a soft inquiry; a hard credit pull may occur before funding. Not all applicants will qualify. Borrow responsibly—only what you can comfortably repay.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Yuri Trutnev: Volcanoes, ocean and man: Kamchatka is preparing for the exhibition “Far East Street” within the framework of the VEF

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Government of the Russian Federation – Government of the Russian Federation –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Kamchatka Krai will present its exposition at the exhibition “Far East Street”, which will be held from September 3 to 9 as part of the tenth, anniversary Eastern Economic Forum. The exhibition is organized by the Roscongress Foundation with the support of the Office of the Plenipotentiary Representative of the President in the Far Eastern Federal District.

    The central zone of the space – “The Will of Man” – will be dedicated to the 80th anniversary of the victory over Japan, and in particular to the legendary Kuril landing operation. It will act as an interactive museum of Kamchatka military glory, and will harmoniously weave in stories about the Great Patriotic War and the special military operation.

    “We are celebrating the 80th anniversary of the Great Victory. I believe that it is impossible not to touch upon the topic of the victory of the Soviet people in the Great Patriotic War. Kamchatka made a significant contribution to the victory. This is not only the supply of products, but also the mobilization of human resources, the heroic defense of borders and preparation for strategically important operations. It is important to always remember and honor the heroic and selfless feat of home front workers, soldiers and officers, indigenous peoples – all who gave their lives for the freedom and independence of the Motherland. It is necessary to show what heroic feats and efforts were needed to create the victory,” said Deputy Prime Minister – Presidential Plenipotentiary Envoy to the Far Eastern Federal District, Chairman of the Organizing Committee of the Eastern Economic Forum Yuri Trutnev.

    “80 years ago, ordinary residents of the Kamchatka Region played a decisive role in ending World War II by conquering, as it seemed then, the impregnable islands of the Kuril Ridge. Then 306 Kamchatka residents gave their lives in the fight against Japanese militarism. We will never forget the price of this victory. And the main task that we set for ourselves is not to allow the events of those years to be distorted: every young resident of our region and the country as a whole should know and honor the pages of history that turned the tide of the war. That is why, on the instructions of the President of the Russian Federation, an open-air museum will be opened on Shumshu Island, and young people from all over the country, including Kamchatka guys, will go on a search expedition to the places of glory of our soldiers. The play “Ballad of the Kuril Landing” will be staged in Kamchatka, which will be presented to viewers on August 18,” said Vladimir Solodov, Governor of the Kamchatka Region.

    The exhibition will introduce guests and participants of the EEF-2025 to the unique features of Kamchatka, including its natural beauty.

    “Kamchatka is a unique region, the pearl of our country. It is truly a land of fire and ice. Active volcanoes, geysers, thermal springs form a unique landscape. This is one of the most promising territories of our country for tourism development. New hotels open every year. Thanks to the implementation of the master plan, the urban environment of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky is gradually changing. A new modern airport welcomes guests of the peninsula,” concluded Yuri Trutnev.

    The pavilion will feature a “Traveler’s Passport” zone, designed in the style of a travel agency. At the entrance to the pavilion, visitors will receive a personal traveler’s passport with information about tours, discounts from Kamchatka operators, and gifts from restaurants and shops.

    A separate zone, “The Power of the Ocean”, will be dedicated to demonstrating the natural and economic potential of Kamchatka as a unique oceanic territory. The big screen will systematize and present such areas as marine logistics, the fishing industry, scientific ocean research, tourism, sea cruises and yachting, and Pacific cuisine.

    In the “Volcano Energy” space, visitors will be able to get acquainted with the region’s potential for implementing projects in the fields of tourism, construction, agriculture, education and science. In the “New Kamchatka Facilities in 360” zone, it will be possible to take a full 3D tour of the Kamchatka Regional Hospital, airport and greenhouse complex.

    The “Specially Protected Natural Areas” area will feature the heroes of the documentary “Fire Fox”. Visitors to the stand will also be able to familiarize themselves with information about the “Far East – Land of Adventure” competition and learn about new tourist routes in the region. In addition, the area will display images from street cameras, supplemented with elements of wild nature.

    A souvenir pavilion and a stage will be opened next to the main exposition of the Kamchatka Territory. In addition, the Falcon House will be open, where the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment of Russia will prepare its own exposition.

    The 10th Eastern Economic Forum will be held on September 3–6 at the campus of the Far Eastern Federal University in Vladivostok. During these days, the exhibition will be available to forum participants, and on September 7, 8, and 9, it will be open to everyone. The EEF is organized by the Roscongress Foundation.

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    .

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Rosneft enterprises released more than 4.7 million valuable fish fry into Russian waters in July

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Rosneft – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Rosneft has been systematically working to preserve biological diversity and replenish the country’s aquatic bioresources for over 11 years. In July, the Company’s subsidiaries released more than 4.7 million young fish into Russian waters, including species listed in the Red Book.

    Together with employees of Rosneft subsidiaries, volunteers from the Movement of the First, students from partner universities and children of employees took part in environmental campaigns to stock water bodies with fish.

    Oil workers of Tyumenneftegaz sent 2.12 million muksun fry to the rivers and reservoirs of Siberia, Taas-Yuryakh Neftegazodobycha – 1.23 million peled, Kharampurneftegaz – 50 thousand nelma, RN-Purneftegaz – 457 thousand peled, 43 thousand muksun and 2 thousand nelma, SevKomNeftegaz – 357.7 thousand nelma, Angarsk Petrochemical Company – 10 thousand peled, RN-Uvatneftegaz – 2.9 thousand nelma.

    Employees of the Novokuibyshevsk Oil Refinery replenished the Volga bioresources with 11 thousand sterlet fry. Almost 9.5 thousand fry of this valuable fish species were released by Samaraneftegaz and 3.3 thousand by the Saratov Oil Refinery.

    The rearing and subsequent release of fry were carried out taking into account scientific data on the most favorable conditions for their adaptation in the natural environment and further reproduction.

    Preserving the environment for future generations is an integral part of the Rosneft-2030 strategy. The company and its subsidiaries aim to achieve leadership positions in minimizing environmental impact and environmentally friendly production, and are also implementing a number of comprehensive programs to preserve and restore natural resources.

    Rosneft employees actively participate in environmental campaigns and promote the development of a culture of rational and responsible consumption of natural resources. Volunteers from the Company’s enterprises regularly clean and improve the coastal areas of rivers, lakes and springs, and conduct environmental education classes in educational and preschool institutions.

    Department of Information and AdvertisingPJSC NK RosneftJuly 25, 2025

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    .

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: WFP concludes El Nino Emergency Drought Relief Response through the global humanitarian fund in Namibia

    Source: World Food Programme

    WINDHOEK – The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) in collaboration with partner organisations, has successfully wrapped up a critical a nine-month emergency response in support of the Government of Namibia’s Emergency Drought Response Plan to the El Niño-induced drought.

    With a contribution of US$3 million from the UN Central Emergency Response Fund (UN-CERF), WFP supported the government in delivering life-saving food and nutrition assistance to over 63,000 vulnerable people across Kavango East, Kavango West, and Omaheke regions between October 2024 and June 2025.

    In addition to food assistance, the project served as a platform for integrated service delivery. At food distribution sites, UNICEF provided outreach and basic health screenings for more than 83,500 people and facilitated referrals for malnourished children. UNFPA reached more than 22,400 people with Sexual and Reproductive Health (SRH) and Gender-Based Violence (GBV) services through daily mobile outreach in schools and communities. A community feedback mechanism system was also established, enabling affected populations to share their needs, concerns and suggestions to help shape and improve the response. 

    “This emergency response was about more than just delivering food, it was about restoring dignity and hope to communities hit hardest by the drought,” said Naouar Labidi, WFP Country Representative in Namibia. “Thanks to the generous support from UN-CERF and our collaboration with the Office of the Prime Minister and UN partners, namely the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), we reached tens of thousands of people with vital humanitarian assistance. But we also used this moment to invest in local capacity, strengthen partnerships, and helping communities build the resilience they need to face climate shocks.”

    The contribution from CERF allowed over 41,000 people (nearly 7000 households) to receive three rounds of food vouchers, enabling them to purchase essential items such as maize meal, canned fish and cooking oil from 25 participating retailers. This not only supported immediate needs, but also helped boost the local economy, laying the groundwork for longer-term resilience by supporting local businesses, creating employment opportunities, and strengthening local supply chains. At the same time, 22,000 children received hot and nutritious meals from 155 conveniently located soup kitchens.

    WFP remains committed to working closely with the Government of Namibia, UN agencies and partners to strengthen food systems, build community resilience and enhance emergency preparedness to future climate shocks.

    #                 #                   #

    About the World Food Programme

    The United Nations World Food Programme is the world’s largest humanitarian organization, saving lives in emergencies and using food assistance to build a pathway to peace, stability, and prosperity for people recovering from conflict, disasters, and the impact of climate change.

    Follow us on Twitter; @wfp_media, @WFP_SAfrica, @WFPNamibia

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • Sealing the Deal: How the India–UK FTA redefines global trade dynamics

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    The India–UK Free Trade Agreement (FTA), signed on July 24, 2025, marks a historic milestone in bilateral relations, transforming the economic landscape between two influential democracies with shared historical ties. At its core, this agreement aims to double the volume of trade between the two nations to $120 billion by 2030, signalling a shift in strategic and economic alignment in a post-Brexit global order. This comprehensive trade pact not only strengthens commercial ties but also deepens diplomatic and development-oriented collaboration across sectors. The agreement is ambitious in scope, eliminating tariffs on 99% of Indian exports to the United Kingdom covering almost 100% of trade value while India reciprocates by reducing tariffs on 90% of UK goods, with 85% becoming duty-free within a decade. The FTA is expected to boost India’s annual exports by $5 billion and create over one million jobs within five years, catalysing both industrial growth and employment in labour-intensive and technology-oriented sectors.

    India’s principal gain lies in its sweeping access to the UK market for sectors where it has a strong comparative advantage. Labour-intensive industries textiles and clothing, leather and footwear, processed food, gems and jewellery, and marine exports stand to benefit immediately from duty-free treatment. The UK has agreed to eliminate tariffs that previously ranged from 4% to as high as 70% on many Indian goods. For example, the processed food sector, which was earlier subject to duties of up to 70%, now enjoys zero-duty access on 99.7% of tariff lines. This development is monumental for rural India, where the agri-processing ecosystem is vital for both livelihood generation and export earnings.

    India’s textile and apparel industry, a major source of employment and a vital segment of its exports, is among the biggest beneficiaries. Previously subject to duties of up to 10–12% in the UK, Indian textiles now enjoy duty-free access. This policy move levels the playing field for Indian exporters against rivals such as Bangladesh and Vietnam, enhancing the competitiveness of cotton, synthetic fabrics, and finished garments. With projected gains of $5 billion in textile exports alone, this sector is poised for accelerated growth, enhanced investments, and large-scale job creation, especially in states like Gujarat, Maharashtra, and Tamil Nadu.

    Equally significant is the liberalisation of leather and footwear exports. These products, which were earlier taxed up to 16%, now enter the UK market duty-free. This shift supports the expansion of India’s footwear and leather goods industry key employment-generating sectors largely dominated by SMEs and artisanal clusters. The FTA is likely to generate substantial growth opportunities for exporters in Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, and Tamil Nadu, giving a much-needed fillip to these traditionally under-capitalised industries.

    In the high-value gems and jewellery sector, which contributes significantly to India’s export basket, the FTA brings immediate benefits. Duties of up to 4% on diamonds, gold, and silver ornaments have now been abolished. With duty-free access to a discerning and high-spending UK consumer base, Indian jewellery exporters are expected to see a surge in orders. The improved price competitiveness will also draw investment into India’s precious stones and jewellery sector, especially in Mumbai, Surat, and Jaipur, reinforcing India’s position as a global jewellery hub.

    The agreement also opens new frontiers for engineering goods, auto components, mechanical machinery, and organic chemicals. Tariffs in these segments, previously ranging from 4% to 14%, have been brought down to zero, strengthening India’s manufacturing ecosystem. The UK has also agreed to slash tariffs on automobiles from over 100% to just 10%, albeit under a quota system. This will allow Indian auto parts and engine manufacturers to increase their exports significantly, supporting India’s ‘Make in India’ agenda and integrating more deeply into global supply chains.

    India’s marine products sector particularly shrimp and frozen prawn exports gains a significant boost. Tariffs of up to 20% have been brought to zero, opening a $5.4 billion UK market. The removal of import duties will enhance price competitiveness for Indian seafood in the UK and directly benefit coastal communities and fishermen in Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, and Odisha. This measure also aligns with India’s broader objective of revitalising traditional sectors and expanding their global reach.

    In agriculture and processed foods, the FTA proves to be a game-changer. With tariff-free access on 95% of agricultural products including spices, mango pulp, pulses, and tea India’s agri-exports are projected to grow by 20% within three years. This liberalisation directly benefits farmers and small agro-industrial units, integrating them into international markets. Importantly, India has retained full protection for sensitive sectors like dairy, poultry, apples, vegetables, cooking oils, and oats. By refusing tariff concessions in these areas, the agreement ensures that India’s small and marginal farmers are not displaced by foreign competition.

    The India–UK FTA also provides significant advantages in high-tech sectors. Indian electronics exports smartphones, optical fibre cables, inverters, and electronic components now enjoy zero-duty access to the UK. The inclusion of streamlined customs processes and provisions on digital trade further lowers entry barriers, particularly for SMEs venturing into cross-border e-commerce. This has strong implications for India’s fast-growing technology manufacturing ecosystem and supports the expansion of Indian firms into high-value global markets.

    One of the most transformative features of the agreement is its support for the mobility of Indian professionals and skilled workers. The FTA includes provisions to facilitate temporary movement for Indian professionals such as IT engineers, architects, nurses, financial consultants, and even niche cultural workers such as yoga instructors and chefs. Up to 1,800 Indian professionals in these categories will be allowed to work in the UK temporarily. These mobility concessions expand India’s soft power and human capital exports, aligning with the government’s strategy to promote services-led growth.

    Additionally, the Double Contribution Convention (DCC) clause in the FTA exempts Indian workers from making social security contributions in the UK for a period of three years. This is expected to benefit over 75,000 Indian workers currently residing in the UK by significantly reducing their financial burden and enhancing the attractiveness of temporary employment opportunities in Britain. This provision is particularly impactful for the IT/ITeS sector, financial services professionals, and other knowledge economy workers.

    In tandem with these trade and labour mobility benefits, the UK’s offer also includes 99.3% tariff elimination for animal products, 100% duty elimination for marine products, and full liberalisation of key sectors such as chemicals, electrical machinery, plastics, base metals, headgear, ceramics, glass, and clocks. Across all categories, the agreement promises enhanced market access, easier customs procedures, and a simplified regulatory environment each element helping Indian exporters reduce transaction costs and achieve scale.

    Strategically, the FTA supports India’s broader development agenda. It reinforces the objectives of ‘Make in India’, the Production Linked Incentive (PLI) Scheme, and the goal of integrating Indian enterprises particularly MSMEs into global supply chains. The liberalised trade framework incentivises higher production volumes, improved quality standards, and adherence to international compliance norms, all of which contribute to India’s export dynamism. At the same time, by insulating sensitive sectors from duty concessions, the government has safeguarded domestic food security, protected vulnerable producer groups, and upheld rural economic stability.

    The India–UK FTA also carries strong geopolitical undertones. For post-Brexit Britain, deepening trade relations with India a rising economic power is a strategic imperative. For India, the agreement allows diversification of export markets at a time when supply chain realignments are underway globally, particularly due to tensions with China and economic uncertainties in Europe. The FTA offers a resilient and rules-based alternative route to prosperity for both partners, anchored in democratic values and mutual respect.

    The India–UK Free Trade Agreement of 2025 is a landmark pact with far-reaching consequences for trade, employment, mobility, and strategic cooperation. By unlocking duty-free access across vast sectors, protecting domestic interests, and enabling professional mobility, it serves as a blueprint for future FTAs India may sign with other developed economies. The deal is comprehensive, development-oriented, and forward-looking positioning India for a new era of global economic leadership and strengthening its strategic partnership with the United Kingdom in a rapidly evolving world order.

    In conclusion the India–UK Free Trade Agreement (FTA) could serve as a significant catalyst in shaping India’s ongoing and future trade negotiations with the United States and the European Union. As a comprehensive and balanced agreement with a G7 nation, the UK FTA strengthens India’s credibility as a serious and capable negotiator on the global stage. The successful inclusion of sensitive sectors, labour mobility, digital trade provisions, and extensive tariff liberalisation sets a precedent that India can leverage in its stalled or complex discussions with the U.S. and EU. For the United States, which has been engaged in hectic negotiations with India on Bi-lateral Trade Agreement, the Indo-UK FTA could act as a catalyst and a template for further negotiations on a prospective BTA.  Similarly, the European Union has also been in talks with India to clinch a FTA by the end of FY26 and the UK deal demonstrates India’s willingness to offer concessions while protecting key domestic interests. This FTA could thus help bridge trust deficits, unlock political momentum, and create negotiating templates for market access, investment protection, and digital standards. Ultimately, the India–UK FTA could become a benchmark, enhancing India’s bargaining position in global trade diplomacy.

    (Navroop Singh is a New Delhi-based IP attorney and geopolitical analyst)

  • MIL-OSI China: Regular Press Briefing of the Ministry of National Defense on July 14, 2025 2025-07-25 On the afternoon of July 14, 2025, Senior Colonel Jiang Bin, Deputy Director-General of the Information Office of China’s Ministry of National Defense (MND) and Spokesperson for the MND, answered recent media queries concerning the military.

    Source: People’s Republic of China – Ministry of National Defense

    On the afternoon of July 14, 2025, Senior Colonel Jiang Bin, Deputy Director-General of the Information Office of China’s Ministry of National Defense (MND) and Spokesperson for the MND, answered recent media queries concerning the military.

    On the afternoon of July 14, 2025, Senior Colonel Jiang Bin, Deputy Director-General of the Information Office of China’s Ministry of National Defense (MND) and Spokesperson for the MND, answers recent media queries concerning the military. (Photo by Sun Yue)

    Jiang Bin: First, I would like to announce two pieces of information.

    First, the Young Leaders Conference of China-Africa Peace and Security Forum will be held in Nanjing from July 15 to 19, with about 90 mid-and-senior level military officers from over 40 African countries attending. The Conference is hosted by the Chinese Ministry of National Defense and organized by the PLA Army Command College. With the theme of Building Peace Together for the Future, the conference is aimed at implementing the outcomes of the Beijing Summit of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation, and further boosting consensus, solidarity and cooperation between China and African countries on peace and security, so as to facilitate the building of an all-weather China-Africa community with a shared future for the new era.

    Second, army special forces of China and Serbia will carry out Peace Guardian-2025 joint training in Hebei in the second half of July. This will be the first joint training between Chinese and Serbian militaries. It will help strengthen combat capabilities of participating troops and deepen cooperation between the two militaries.

    Journalist: The Philippine Defense Secretary has recently said in an interview that China’s willingness to sign the Protocol to the Treaty on the Southeast Asia Nuclear Weapon-Free Zone was just a symbolic gesture. With one of the world’s largest nuclear arsenals, China should denuclearize first to show its sincerity. Do you have any comment?

    Jiang Bin: Some people in the Philippines often make groundless accusations against China’s efforts in preserving regional peace. Do they speak for themselves or stand for their country? We are not sure. Establishing the Southeast Asia nuclear weapon-free zone (SEANWFZ) is significant for strengthening the international nuclear non-proliferation regime and promoting regional peace and stability, and is conducive to the fundamental security interests of ASEAN countries. The Chinese side is firmly committed to such an undertaking, and has made clear our willingness to take the lead in signing the Protocol.

    China follows a policy of no-first-use of nuclear weapons, and has made an unconditional commitment of not using or threatening to use nuclear weapons against non-nuclear-weapon states or nuclear weapon-free zones. China is the only nuclear-weapon state that has made such a commitment. China’s nuclear force and nuclear policy have been a significant contribution to world peace, which is widely recognized by the international community.

    Journalist: Sources from the Japanese government said that Japan plans to export six Abukuma-class frigates to the Philippines. Some analysts believe this is aimed at “China’s maritime expansion”. What’s your take?

    Jiang Bin: It is our consistent position that defense and security cooperation between relevant countries should not target at any third party or harm the interests of any third party. During WWII, Japanese militarists committed heinous crimes when they invaded and colonized Japan’s neighboring countries, including China and the Philippines, and occupied islands in the South China Sea. In recent years, Japan has breached its commitments under the pacifist Constitution and exclusively defense-oriented policy by continuously exporting weapons and equipment to other countries, attempting to build small cliques to stir up trouble in the South China Sea, which created destabilizing factors in the Asia-Pacific region. This year marks the 80th anniversary of the victory of the Chinese People’s War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression and the World Anti-Fascist War. We urge the Japanese side to deeply reflect on and draw lessons from history, speak and act prudently on military and security matters, and do more to contribute to regional peace and stability.

    Journalist: The head of Taiwan’s military agency has reportedly announced the establishment of Taiwan’s first HIMARS company, and that it will greatly improve the Taiwan military’s precision strike and overall defense capabilities. In addition, Taiwan’s military agency has approved the acquisition of 168 units of US M109A7 self-propelled howitzers. Do you have any comment?

    Jiang Bin: In order to solicit US support for “Taiwan independence”, the DPP authorities are selling Taiwan’s interests to flatter the US and squandering the hard-earned money of the Taiwan people to pay protection fees. Buying US weapons to embolden themselves is useless and self-deceiving. Resisting reunification by force is a dead end. War provocations made by the “Taiwan independence” armed forces are futile, and will only lead to self-destruction.

    On the afternoon of July 14, 2025, Senior Colonel Jiang Bin, Deputy Director-General of the Information Office of China’s Ministry of National Defense (MND) and Spokesperson for the MND, answers recent media queries concerning the military. (Photo by Sun Yue)

    Journalist: According to reports, the DPP authorities stated that the activation of the W121 extension of the M503 route by the Civil Aviation Administration of China intends to reduce the depth of Taiwan’s air defense and shorten its early warning time, which would ultimately eliminate the “median line of the Taiwan Strait”, thereby posing military threats to Taiwan. Some media reports said that the activation came just days before Taiwan’s Han Kuang military exercise, and might escalate tensions across the Taiwan Strait. What’s your comment?

    Jiang Bin: Taiwan is a part of China and there is no so-called “median line of the Taiwan Strait”. The establishment and activation of relevant route is a routine work carried out by the competent authorities based on the needs of civil aviation development and management. It is beneficial to compatriots on both sides of the Strait. The DPP authorities used it as an excuse to hype up the so-called “military threats from the mainland” for their selfish gains, attempting to create security anxiety, intensify antagonism and confrontation, and obstruct cross-Strait exchanges. Their scheme would never be welcomed nor succeed.

    The root cause for the current tension across the Taiwan Strait lies in the DPP authorities’ collusion with external forces in their continuous provocations for “Taiwan independence”. We hope that all Taiwan compatriots can see through the true nature of the DPP authorities in seeking independence, realize the serious harm of “Taiwan independence”, firmly oppose “Taiwan independence” separatist activities, and jointly safeguard cross-Strait peace and stability.

    MIL OSI China News

  • PM Modi shares article highlighting benefits of India-UK trade deal

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday shared an article highlighting the wide-ranging benefits of the landmark India-UK Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA), calling it a transformative step for various sections of the Indian economy.

    Reiterating Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal’s remarks, the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) said on X:

    “Union Minister Shri @PiyushGoyal explains how the landmark India–UK Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement will empower Indian farmers, fishermen, artisans, and small businesses, while ensuring quality products at better prices for everyday consumers.”

    In his post on X, Goyal described the trade agreement as a “stellar example of how New India does business.” He noted that under the leadership of PM Modi, the deal would provide a significant boost to market access for Indian products and services, enhance competitiveness, and create jobs across sectors.

    Goyal added that the CETA will empower key contributors to the Indian economy—including farmers, fisherfolk, MSMEs, artisans, and service professionals—by opening new opportunities in the UK market. 

    https://x.com/PiyushGoyal/status/1948588543422394553

    Prime Minister Modi concluded a successful visit to the United Kingdom on Thursday, where he held talks with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer at Chequers, the official country residence of the UK Prime Minister.

    During the meeting, both leaders welcomed the signing of the India-UK Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA), which is poised to boost bilateral trade, attract investment, and generate employment opportunities in both countries.

  • India-UK FTA a “landmark economic achievement”: TPCI

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    The Trade Promotion Council of India (TPCI) has termed the India-UK Free Trade Agreement (FTA) a “landmark economic achievement,” saying it will open up new opportunities for Indian exporters across key sectors.

    Calling the deal “visionary,” TPCI Chairman Mohit Singla said the agreement supports the development of globally competitive Indian brands, while advancing rural growth and India’s integration into global value chains.

    India’s total trade with the United Kingdom touched $23.1 billion in FY2024–25, with exports rising 12.4 per cent to $14.5 billion. Imports grew marginally by 2.3 per cent to $8.6 billion, resulting in a trade surplus of $5.9 billion.

    The FTA is expected to drive agricultural exports, with zero-duty access granted to over 95 per cent of Indian farm and processed food products. These include fruits, vegetables, cereals, coffee, tea, spices, oilseeds, alcoholic beverages, and ready-to-eat items. According to TPCI, this could push agri-exports to the UK up by over 20 per cent in the next three years.

    The seafood industry is also set to benefit, with Indian exporters gaining tariff parity with EU countries like Germany and the Netherlands. The UK’s $5.4 billion marine market will now be accessible duty-free, potentially benefiting fisherfolk in states such as Andhra Pradesh, Odisha, Kerala, Gujarat, and Tamil Nadu.

    In addition to goods, the FTA also addresses mobility and services. Ashish Kumar Chauhan, MD and CEO of the National Stock Exchange (NSE), said Indian professionals working in the UK will be exempt from paying social security tax for up to three years — an annual saving estimated at ₹4,000 crore. He also said the new visa framework would allow for longer professional stays, adding that the agreement sets a precedent for FTAs with other major economies such as the US, EU, and Japan.

    The engineering sector has also welcomed the agreement. EEPC India noted that the UK, India’s sixth-largest engineering export destination, posted 11.7 per cent growth in trade during 2024–25. With the FTA eliminating tariffs of up to 18 per cent on key engineering items, exports are expected to gain further traction.

    EEPC India Chairman Pankaj Chadha said the deal could help double engineering exports to the UK to over $7.5 billion by 2029–30. “It is a strategic breakthrough that will energise the sector, particularly MSMEs, and strengthen India’s role in global supply chains,” he said.

    —IANS

  • How India is quietly powering Maldives’ growth through infra and human capital

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    India’s continued development partnership with the Maldives stands as a testament to the enduring ties between the two nations, with several landmark projects reflecting New Delhi’s commitment to supporting the island nation’s growth across sectors ranging from healthcare and education to infrastructure and fisheries.

    Healthcare cooperation

    The Indira Gandhi Memorial Hospital (IGMH) in Male remains a key symbol of India’s assistance to the Maldives. Conceived during the visit of former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi in February 1986, the 200-bed facility was inaugurated in April 1995 by then Prime Minister P.V. Narasimha Rao. Named after former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, IGMH is the largest public healthcare institution in the country.

    India had initially deployed 72 medical professionals to help operationalise the hospital. A major renovation, supported by India at a cost of ₹52 crore, was inaugurated in March 2019 by then External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj.

    Strengthening technical education

    India has also contributed to capacity-building in technical education through the establishment of the Maldives Institute of Technical Education (MITE), now known as the Faculty of Engineering Technology (FET). The foundation stone was laid in 1993 following an agreement during Prime Minister V.P. Singh’s visit in 1990. The completed institute was handed over in 1996 and has since been pivotal in training Maldivian youth in vocational and technical disciplines.

    Tourism education

    In a bid to bolster the Maldives’ hospitality sector, India supported the construction of the India-Maldives Friendship Faculty of Hospitality and Tourism Studies. The foundation stone was jointly laid by Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee and President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom in 2002. The eight-storey modern facility was officially handed over in February 2014 by then External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid. With a capacity for over 200 full-time students, the institute serves as a centre of excellence for tourism and hospitality studies.

    Largest Indian grant project supports law enforcement training

    The National College for Police and Law Enforcement (NCPLE), located in Addu City, is India’s largest grant-funded project in the Maldives. Built with ₹222.98 crore in grant assistance, the college was inaugurated in March 2022 during the visit of External Affairs Minister Dr. S. Jaishankar. The institution is designed to enhance the training capabilities of Maldives’ police and law enforcement agencies.

    Land reclamation in Addu to spur urban growth

    India has also supported the Addu Reclamation Project under an $80 million Line of Credit. A total of 184 hectares of land has been reclaimed to facilitate urban and economic development in Addu City. The project was inaugurated on August 11, 2024, during EAM Dr. Jaishankar’s visit to the country.

    Water and sanitation

    Improving basic infrastructure has also remained a focus area. Under a Line of Credit worth $107.31 million, water and sanitation projects have been completed across 34 islands. Of these, 28 projects have already been handed over to the Maldivian government. The initiative is aimed at enhancing public health and environmental sustainability.

    Fisheries infra

    In support of the Maldives’ crucial fisheries sector, a new ice plant with a daily production capacity of 50 tons has been established in Gemanafushi. The facility, developed under the Indian Line of Credit, was inaugurated on February 27, 2025. It is expected to bolster fish preservation, improve export capacity, and strengthen the livelihoods of fishing communities.

    India’s development footprint in the Maldives reflects a broader strategy of regional cooperation grounded in mutual respect and people-first initiatives. As both nations navigate the next phase of bilateral engagement, these enduring projects lay a strong foundation for deeper collaboration rooted in shared prosperity.

  • MIL-OSI Analysis: As seas rise and fish decline, this Fijian village is finding new ways to adapt

    Source: The Conversation – Global Perspectives – By Celia McMichael, Professor in Geography, The University of Melbourne

    Celia McMichael, CC BY-NC-ND

    In the village of Nagigi, Fiji, the ocean isn’t just a resource – it’s part of the community’s identity. But in recent years, villagers have seen the sea behave differently. Tides are pushing inland. Once abundant, fish are now harder to find. Sandy beaches and coconut trees have been washed away.

    Like many coastal communities, including those across the Pacific Islands region, this village is now under real pressure from climate change and declining fish stocks. Methods of fishing are no longer guaranteed, while extreme weather and coastal erosion threaten homes and land. As one villager told us:

    we can’t find fish easily, not compared to previous times […] some fish species we used to see before are no longer around.

    When stories like this get publicity, they’re often framed as a story of loss. Pacific Islanders can be portrayed as passive victims of climate change.

    But Nagigi’s experience isn’t just about vulnerability. As our new research shows, it’s about the actions people are taking to cope with the changes already here. In response to falling fish numbers and to diversify livelihoods, women leaders launched a new aquaculture project, and they have replanted mangroves to slow the advance of the sea.

    Adaptation is uneven. Many people don’t want to or can’t leave their homes. But as climate change intensifies, change will be unavoidable. Nagigi’s experience points to the importance of communities working collectively to respond to threats.

    Unwelcome change is here

    The communities we focus on, Nagigi village (population 630) and Bia-I-Cake settlement (population 60), are located on Savusavu Bay in Vanua Levu, Fiji’s second largest island. Fishing and marine resources are central to their livelihoods and food security.

    In 2021 and 2023, we ran group discussions (known as talanoa) and interviews to find out about changes seen and adaptations made.

    Nagigi residents have noticed unwelcome changes in recent years. As one woman told us:

    sometimes the sea is coming further onto the land, so there’s a lot of sea intrusion into the plantations, flooding even on land where it never used to be

    Tides are pushing ashore in Nagigi, threatening infrastructure.
    Celia McMichael, CC BY-NC-ND

    In 2016, the devastating Tropical Cyclone Winston destroyed homes and forced some Nagigi residents to move inland to customary mataqali land owned by their clan.

    As one resident said:

    our relocation was smooth because […] we just moved to our own land, our mataqali land.

    But some residents didn’t have access to this land, while others weren’t willing to move away from the coast. One man told us:

    leave us here. I think if I don’t smell or hear the ocean for one day I would be devastated.

    Adaptation is happening

    One striking aspect of adaptation in Nagigi has been the leadership of women, particularly in the small Bia-I-Cake settlement.

    In recent years, the Bia-I-Cake Women’s Cooperative has launched a small-scale aquaculture project to farm tilapia and carp to tackle falling fish stocks in the ocean, tackle rising food insecurity and create new livelihoods.

    Women in the cooperative have built fish ponds, learned how to rear fish to a good size and began selling the fish, including by live streaming the sale. The project was supported by a small grant from the United Nations Development Programme and the Women’s Fund Fiji.

    Recently, the cooperative’s women have moved into mangrove replanting to slow coastal erosion and built a greenhouse to farm new crops.

    As one woman told us, these efforts show women “have the capacity to build a sustainable, secure and thriving community”.

    The community’s responses draw on traditional social structures and values, such as respect for Vanua – the Fijian and Pacific concept of how land, sea, people, customs and spiritual beliefs are interconnected – as well as stewardship of natural resources and collective decision-making through clans and elders, both women and men.

    Nagigi residents have moved to temporarily close some customary fishing grounds to give fish populations a chance to recover. The village is also considering declaring a locally-managed marine area (known as a tabu). This is a response to climate impacts as well as damage to reefs, pollution and overfishing.

    For generations, village residents have protected local ecosystems which in turn support the village. But what is new is how these practices are being strengthened and formalised to respond to new challenges.

    A women’s cooperative have built aquaculture ponds to raise and sell fish.
    Celia McMichael, CC BY-NC-ND

    Adaptation is uneven

    While adaptation is producing some successes, it is unevenly spread. Not everyone has access to customary land for relocation and not every household can afford to rebuild damaged homes.

    What Nagigi teaches us, though, is the importance of local adaptation. Villagers have demonstrated how a community can anticipate risks, respond to change and threats, recover from damage and take advantage of new opportunities.

    Small communities are not just passive sites of loss. They are collectives of strength, agency and ingenuity. As adaptation efforts scale up across the Pacific, it is important to recognise and support local initiatives such as those in Nagigi.

    Sharing effective adaptation methods can give ideas and hope to other communities under real pressure from climate change and other threats.

    Many communities are doing their best to adapt often undertaking community-led adaptation, even despite the limited access Pacific nations have to global climate finance.

    Nagigi’s example shows unwelcome climatic and environmental changes are already arriving. But it’s also about finding ways to live well amid uncertainty and escalating risk by using place, tradition and community.

    The authors acknowledge the support of the people of Nagigi and Bia-I-Cake, and especially the Bia-I-Cake Women’s Cooperative, for sharing their time and insights.

    Celia McMichael receives funding from the Australian Research Council (ARC).

    Merewalesi Yee does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. As seas rise and fish decline, this Fijian village is finding new ways to adapt – https://theconversation.com/as-seas-rise-and-fish-decline-this-fijian-village-is-finding-new-ways-to-adapt-261573

    MIL OSI Analysis

  • MIL-Evening Report: As oceans warm, tropical fish are moving south. New friendships may be helping them survive

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Angus Mitchell, Postdoctoral Researcher in Marine Ecology, University of Adelaide

    Angus Mitchell

    When you think about climate change in our oceans, you may picture coral bleaching, melting sea ice, or extreme weather events. But beneath the ocean’s surface, another quiet shift is underway. Australia’s tropical fish are heading south into cooler waters.

    These fish are not just visiting. They are settling into the milder “temperate” reefs that used to be too cold for them. As they do, they encounter new environments, new challenges and new neighbours.

    In our new research we studied the behaviour of these new migrants. We found some tropical fish are not just surviving in their new homes, they’re thriving. And, surprisingly, much of that success comes down to who they’re hanging out with.

    A slow-motion invasion

    Tropical fish travel poleward via ocean currents.

    On Australia’s east coast, the fish typically hitch a ride on the strengthening East Australian Current as it pushes warm water and the tropical species further south.

    Some species are showing up hundreds of kilometres beyond their usual home range. Many tropical fish arrive on temperate reefs during summer, and used to die over winter when the water grew colder. Now, as winter water temperatures increase, some tropical fish survive year-round in temperate reefs.

    But life at the edge of your range is risky. These fish encounter colder water temperatures, unfamiliar predators and a reef full of competitors. So, how do they cope?

    As waters warm, temperate reefs of kelp and seaweed are becoming home to tropical fish as they venture southward.
    Angus Mitchell

    Risky business: but some fish can adapt

    We studied five tropical fish species and two temperate species across a 2,000km stretch of Australia’s east coast, from the tropics to the cold temperate south. We observed how these fish fed, sheltered and reacted to threats, using underwater video cameras.

    Analysis of the footage revealed tropical fish behaved differently in the colder waters. They spent more time hiding and less time feeding. They were also more wary of predators, displaying a cognitive shift in “lateralisation” — a preference to consistently turn left or right, which can help fish make faster escape decisions when threatened.

    Such risk-averse behaviour is likely to help fish stay alive in unfamiliar reefs by avoiding predators. But it also reduces food intake and growth, unless these fish find new friends.

    New school mates, better outcomes

    Previous research has shown when tropical fish gather or “shoal” with temperate fish, they grow bigger and survive longer into winter than fish in tropical-only shoals.

    We wanted to understand the mechanism for this phenomenon. Could tropical fish be learning from temperate shoal mates? And how might their behaviour change when shoaling with temperate fishes?

    Using underwater videos, we found three tropical damselfish species spent more time feeding and less time sheltering when they formed mixed shoals with temperate fish. They also appeared bolder and were more successful at finding food.

    We think these mixed shoals offer key advantages: safety in numbers, more eyes watching for predators, and perhaps most importantly, social learning. By shoaling with local temperate species such as the Australian Mado, tropical fish may learn where and when it’s safe to feed, and how to behave in these foreign temperate ecosystems.

    This kind of behavioural “plasticity” is a powerful tool in a changing climate. Fish that can adjust their behaviours in ways that boost their fitness are more likely to survive as climatic conditions rapidly shift in our oceans.

    Tropical and temperate fish species form a mixed-species group or shoal at Little Manly in southeastern Australia.
    Angus Mitchell

    Not all fish benefit

    These interactions were not always beneficial. Two herbivorous tropical fish species, the convict tang and brown tang, did not show the same benefits, likely because their specialised diets made it harder to learn from omnivorous temperate species.

    And for the temperate fish, the presence of tropical fish in shoals were often problematic. At the northern, warmer edge of their range, temperate fish fled more often and fed less when tropical fish were present. That’s worrying, because warming alone is already pushing many temperate species toward their biological limits. Adding new competitors might push them over the edge.

    Herbivorous convict tangs (Acanthurus triostegus) shoal tightly near shelter on a temperate oyster reef. At the edge of their range, these tropical fish adopt more cautious behaviours, seeking refuge and foraging less.
    Angus Mitchell

    A changing reef community

    All this comes amid dire news of the Earth’s oceans. Research published today shows 2023 set new records for the duration, extent and intensity of marine heatwaves.

    Fish migration to temperate reefs is a glimpse of the future: even warmer waters, shifting species ranges and new species interactions.

    Our results suggest these new species interactions and relationships, particularly mixed-species shoaling, can help tropical fish survive longer in temperate ecosystems. But they may also disrupt existing ecosystems and place extra stress on local temperate species.

    In this way, climate-driven range shifts are more than just a temperature driven story. They’re stories about behaviour, relationships, and resilience.

    Understanding how fish respond to their new neighbours and how those responses shape who stays and who goes, will be key to managing reefs in a rapidly warming ocean.

    Ivan Nagelkerken receives funding from the Australian Research Council (ARC).

    Angus Mitchell and Chloe Hayes do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. As oceans warm, tropical fish are moving south. New friendships may be helping them survive – https://theconversation.com/as-oceans-warm-tropical-fish-are-moving-south-new-friendships-may-be-helping-them-survive-258405

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Magnitude 6.6 earthquake hits Wallis and Futuna Islands – USGS

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    BEIJING, July 25 (Xinhua) — An earthquake with a magnitude of 6.6 jolted 167 km southeast of Mata-Utu (Wallis and Futuna) at 23:37 GMT on Thursday, the U.S. Geological Survey said.

    According to preliminary data, the epicenter of the tremors was located at a point with coordinates of 14.75 degrees south latitude and 175.79 degrees west longitude. The hypocenter was located at a depth of 324 km. –0–

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    .

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Lowy Institute keynote speech – Navigating Australia’s Trading Future

    Source: Australian Attorney General’s Agencies

    I begin by acknowledging the traditional custodians of the land on which we gather today, and pay my respects to their elders past, present and emerging.

    Good afternoon everyone and thank you to the Lowy Institute and Executive Director, Dr Michael Fullilove, for the opportunity to speak today.

    Australia is a trading nation.

    From the first known trading networks between indigenous Australians in northern Australia and the Makasar of Indonesia; to the Australian wool which helped clothe the world in the early 20th century; to the energy and mineral resources that have helped societies across the globe develop their economies.

    For centuries, we have relied on our ability to export as we have built the robust and modern economy from which we all benefit today.

    However, until recently, most Australians did not have cause to pay much attention to international trade.

    But that has changed in recent years.

    The imposition of trade impediments by the Chinese Government on $20 billion worth of Australian exports highlighted the risk of putting all your eggs in one basket.

    Upon my appointment as Minister for Trade and Tourism in 2022, working alongside Prime Minister Albanese and Minister for Foreign Affairs, Senator Wong, we worked calmly and methodically to resolve these blockages for Australian businesses.

    Our patient and calibrated approach to stabilising the bilateral relationship with China – without compromising our core interests and values – was vital in achieving the removal of these impediments.

    This means that our world class wine, beef, lobster and many other products are now back on the tables of Chinese consumers, benefiting Australian businesses and local jobs.

    This turnaround could not have been achieved without personal engagement – I have now met my Chinese counterpart, Commerce Minister Wang Wentou, ten times.

    Our government has also taken steps to deepen our economic ties with our nearest neighbours and increase opportunities with new partners further abroad.

    We have worked hard to strengthen our relationships in Southeast Asia, boosting two-way trade and investment with our closest region and reached Australia’s first free trade agreement in the Middle East, when we signed the Australian-UAE agreement late last year.

    I look forward to visiting Abu Dhabi again soon to turbo-charge business and investment.

    Getting our products into the UAE is like getting it into the Woolies warehouse, if you can get it there, you can then get it to all the surrounding countries in the Middle East.

    I am proud of what our Government has achieved in the past three years, with solid foundations laid for continuing the work of building stronger and deeper trading relationships with international partners.

    The diversification of our trade networks will open new opportunities for Australian exporters to ship their goods to the world and bring down the cost of living for Australians.

    Of course, diversification doesn’t mean selling less to our largest trading partners, it means selling more to new partners.

    As the Treasurer laid out in his recent address to the National Press Club, the Albanese Labor Government has organised its economic policy for the second term around three priorities:

    • productivity;
    • economic resilience; and
    • budget sustainability.

    Trade and investment support all three of these priorities.

    Trade drives productivity through competitive innovation, spurred by global competition.

    Trade enhances economic resilience by diversifying markets and supply chains.

    And, trade contributes to budget sustainability by increasing revenues through exports and economic growth.

    Nearly a third of Australia’s economic output is supported by trade.

    One in four Australian jobs relate to trade.

    And foreign investment provides the capital to build for the future, and access to global talent, new ideas, best practices and cutting-edge technologies.

    Business craves certainty to enable long-term investment and planning.

    For the past eight decades that certainty has been based on the institutions forged from the wreckage of World War Two – from trade agreements that have allowed the free flow of resources and capital, and the rules based order which has allowed for an even playing field, ushering in an unprecedented period of global economic growth.

    But, these institutions and norms we worked so hard to build are being questioned and the rules we wrote are being challenged.

    One of the chief designers of the global trading system, the United States, is now questioning the benefits of open, rules-based trade.

    The Trump Administration is seeking to expand domestic manufacturing and influence the policies of trading partners.

    Australia is a medium-sized open economy that is highly integrated with the global economy.

    We rely on being able to send our produce, resources and human capital to the world to sustain the high standard of living which we enjoy today.

    What we risk seeing is a shift from a system based on shared prosperity and interdependence to one based solely on power and size.

    We cannot risk a return to the ‘law of the jungle’.

    If our trading partners’ growth slows, without doubt we will suffer.

    The costs to consumers and businesses of a global economic slowdown will be felt for generations, and the shockwaves of inflation will worsen.

    Even before the imposition of tariffs by the current US Administration, several other forces have been reshaping global trade for some time.

    Firstly, heightened geostrategic competition is increasing the intersection of national security and economic prosperity, made more complex by the rapidly evolving technology that is enabling both extraordinary new growth and adding to the global competition.

    Secondly, the widespread use of industrial policy to support key sectors as nations seek to rebuild industrial bases and sovereign manufacturing capability and ensure technological dominance.

    And thirdly, the transition towards net zero emissions.

    These forces demand a more strategic, coordinated approach to trade policy.

    An approach that balances openness with resilience and long-term competitiveness.

    In 2025, we’re no longer in a “set and forget” world.

    We can no longer afford to take the rules that underpin a stable trading system for granted.

    So, how will the Albanese Labor Government navigate these challenges to best position Australia in a turbulent global economy?

    We will be guided by five key principles.

    The first principle is that free and open markets are essential to Australia’s prosperity.

    Imposing tariffs of our own would drive up the costs for Australian families and businesses.

    This position was backed up by the Productivity Commission in its most recent Trade and Assistance Review released earlier this month.

    Our markets will remain open, and we will stand by our trade agreements. In fact, we will make them even stronger.

    Our second principle is that world trade should be governed by rules and not by power alone.

    We will always stand up for Australian industry and Australian jobs.

    By fighting for a level playing field for our businesses and workers.

    And by providing the right support to ensure our exporters are not locked out of the opportunities we have fought hard for.

    The third principle is that of cooperation.

    We have and will continue to take a good faith approach to trade negotiations – which means engaging with a genuine desire to achieve mutually beneficial outcomes and uphold the rules-based order which has benefited so many.

    The fourth principle is that we will not leave those affected behind – Australian businesses, workers or the broader community.

    As the Prime Minister has said, no one held back, no one left behind.

    We will work hard to ensure that the benefits of trade are shared widely, which is why the Albanese Government is putting so much effort into inclusive trade policies, including our First Nations trade agenda.

    That agenda has already had some big wins – a new international treaty recognising First Nations’ traditional knowledge, and a chapter specifically relating to first nations trade in our UAE agreement, which is the first time this has happened in any Australian trade agreement.

    The final principle is that we will not compromise our fundamental values and interests.

    Like the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, and our biosecurity system.

    To be clear, the announcement yesterday of the outcome of the technical assessment of beef from the United States is the culmination of a decade of science and risk-based import assessments and evaluations.

    Australia is the land of the ‘’fair go’, we value social justice, fairness, inclusion and equality.

    Programs like the PBS, which are at the heart of the health and wellbeing of our country, will never be up for negotiation under an Albanese Labor Government.

    And while we believe in free and fair trade, we will not trade away parts of our core identity.

    With these principles in mind, our government will continue to advance a trade policy which delivers for all Australians.

    During the election campaign we committed to initiatives that would provide support to businesses impacted by protectionist trade measures.

    This included strengthening our anti-dumping regime to help create a level playing field by addressing unfair trade.

    In addition, we put $50 million dollars on the table to work closely with key industry peak bodies, supporting businesses to find and access new market opportunities and we will provide $1 billion in zero interest loans to firms.

    We also committed to establishing a Strategic Reserve for critical minerals so we can make sure Australia can respond to trade and supply disruptions from a position of strength with our key partners.

    And we will put Australian businesses at the front of the queue for government procurement and contracts.

    This is in addition to implementing our Southeast Asia Economic Strategy2040 and our Roadmap for Economic Engagement with India.

    And by backing local manufacturing through the Future Made in Australia policy, we will continue to invest in the skills, technology and renewable energy to make more things here, creating jobs and opportunities for Australians.

    Of course, our ability to compete abroad depends on how productive we are at home.

    Which is why the Government has such an ambitious domestic productivity reform agenda.

    And that agenda depends, in turn, on the quality of our trade and investment connections to the world.

    As I alluded to earlier in my remarks, trade diversification will continue to be a key focus.

    We are fortunate to already have a strong network of 18 free trade agreements with 30 partners, covering almost 80 per cent of the value of our two-way trade.

    But there is unfinished business.

    I am committed to concluding a deal with the European Union, the missing piece in the puzzle of Australia’s network of FTAs, with a market of over 450 million consumers.

    Having met recently with my European counterpart I know there is a genuine desire to reach an outcome.

    But it will require a Team Australia approach both internationally and domestically with stakeholders, including business and farmers.

    And I am committed to expanding our trade deal with India, the world’s most populous nation with a rapidly growing middle class.

    Just these two new agreements bring in almost 2 billion new consumers for Australian products.

    The good news is that my Indian counterpart, Piyush Goyal, and I have a shared vision to boost two-way trade and investment.

    There is new energy in regional trade agreements.

    We are here to work with the region to back this trend.

    As Chair of the CPTPP in 2025, Australia is seeking to expand the membership and deepen its high standard rules.

    And closer to home, in the Pacific region, I want to ensure the gains from trade are spread throughout our neighbourhood.

    Many Pacific island partners tell us they want to participate more fully in global supply chains. I want our friends like Fiji and PNG to be part of our regional trading network that has worked so well for us.

    One of the key ingredients in development and poverty alleviation in Southeast Asia has been a story of opening up to trade.

    That’s why so many of our neighbours are backing regionalism in trade as a response to the current turbulence.

    Because backing these norms of rules and openness backs our region’s strength and vitality.

    We will leverage the G20, OECD and APEC to build support for continued openness around the world, acting as a calm and considered voice for trade across the world.

    Underpinning these bilateral and regional deals is the World Trade Organization, through which most global trade still flows according to its rules.

    Our message to the world is simple: we will continue to respect the rules and be a partner you can count on.

    Shaping the rules of the road is in our DNA.

    We were a founding member of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade in 1948 and played a major role in the Uruguay Round negotiations which led to the creation of the WTO.

    Now we face a major challenge in global trade – a time when Australia can play its part as a calm and considered international partner, leveraging our relationships to support free and fair trade.

    The meeting of the world’s trade ministers in Cameroon in March next year must tackle the big issues of WTO reform – how we make decisions, make new rules, and enforce those rules.

    We have got to bring new agreements like the one we have helped create on E-commerce, into the WTO rulebook.

    We must also make progress on agriculture, where there has been a tilted playing field for far too long.

    Australian businesses, workers and consumers are on the front line of this new era of global trade policy.

    That is why we will back business with real, practical support to assist Australian exporters to seize the new opportunities created by our trade deals.

    The Government is committed to genuine consultation – to ensure that our approach both reflects our community’s experience and meets our nation’s expectations.

    Taking an economy wide approach has allowed us to navigate these last few months of tariff disruption successfully.

    It is only with that same approach that we can navigate through the period of uncertainty ahead.

    And ensure that Australia isn’t just a passive witness to our circumstances – but instead shapes them – as we have at key points before in our history.

    The new trading landscape we face is difficult, and challenging.

    But we have to have the courage of our convictions.

    We know that open, rules-based trade and investment works.

    An outward looking trade and investment policy is central to this Government’s ambitions for our economy.

    From our earliest days, Australia has always been a trading nation.

    Our businesses, our people and our communities benefit from it.

    And we will continue to be a successful trading nation if we can both lift our performance at home and shape our circumstances abroad.

    With a genuine Team Australia approach, I am confident we are up to that task.

    Thank you.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-Evening Report: ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for July 25, 2025

    ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on July 25, 2025.

    Gangs are going global and so is the illegal gun trade – NZ can do more to fight it
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Alexander Gillespie, Professor of Law, University of Waikato According to the Global Organised Crime Index, international criminal activity has increased over the past two years. And the politically fractured post-pandemic world has made this even harder for nations to combat. New Zealand is far from immune. According

    Historic ICJ climate ruling ‘just the beginning’, says Vanuatu’s Regenvanu
    By Ezra Toara in Port Vila Vanuatu’s Minister of Climate Change Adaptation, Ralph Regenvanu, has welcomed the historic International Court of Justice (ICJ) climate ruling, calling it a “milestone in the fight for climate justice”. The ICJ has delivered a landmark advisory opinion on states’ obligations under international law to act on climate change. The

    3 reasons young people are more likely to believe conspiracy theories – and how we can help them discover the truth
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jean-Nicolas Bordeleau, Research Fellow, Jeff Bleich Centre for Democracy and Disruptive Technologies, Flinders University Conspiracy theories are a widespread occurrence in today’s hyper connected and polarised world. Events such as Brexit, the 2016 and 2020 United States presidential elections, and the COVID pandemic serve as potent reminders

    Waiting too long for public dental care? Here’s why the system is struggling – and how to fix it
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Santosh Tadakamadla, Professor and Head of Dentistry and Oral Health, La Trobe University Just over one-third of Australians are eligible for public dental services, which provide free or low cost dental treatment. Yet demand for these services continues to exceed supply. As a result, many Australian adults

    Butter wars: ‘nothing cures high prices like high prices’ – but will market forces be enough?
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Alan Renwick, Professor of Agricultural Economics, Lincoln University, New Zealand RobynRoper/Getty Images The alarming rise of butter prices has become a real source of frustration for New Zealand consumers, as well as a topic of political recrimination. The issue has become so serious that Miles Hurrell, chief

    Ultrafast fashion brand Princess Polly has been certified as ‘sustainable’. Is that an oxymoron?
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Harriette Richards, Senior Lecturer, School of Fashion and Textiles, RMIT University Carol Yepes/Getty Images Last week, the ultrafast fashion brand Princess Polly received B Corp certification. This certification is designed to accredit for-profit businesses that provide social impact and environmental benefit. Established on the Gold Coast in

    AI will soon be able to audit all published research – what will that mean for public trust in science?
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Alexander Kaurov, PhD Candidate in Science and Society, Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington Jamillah Knowles & Digit/Better Images of AI, CC BY-SA Self-correction is fundamental to science. One of its most important forms is peer review, when anonymous experts scrutinise research before it is

    Columbia’s $200M deal with Trump administration sets a precedent for other universities to bend to the government’s will
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Brendan Cantwell, Associate Professor of Higher, Adult, and Lifelong Education, Michigan State University Students at Columbia University in New York City on April 14, 2025. Charly Triballeau/AFP via Getty Images Columbia University agreed on July 23, 2025, to pay a US$200 million fine to the federal government

    Miles Franklin 2025: Siang Lu’s Ghost Cities is a haunting comedy about tyranny. Is it the funniest winner ever?
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Joseph Steinberg, Forrest Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow, English & Literary Studies, The University of Western Australia Siang Lu David Kelly/UQP The Miles Franklin judges described Siang Lu’s Ghost Cities, winner of the 2025 award, as “a grand farce and a haunting meditation on diaspora”. To my mind, it

    Keep fighting for a nuclear-free Pacific, Helen Clark warns Greenpeace over global storm clouds
    Asia Pacific Report Former New Zealand prime minister Helen Clark warned activists and campaigners in a speech on the deck of the Greenpeace environmental flagship Rainbow Warrior III last night to be wary of global “storm clouds” and the renewed existential threat of nuclear weapons. Speaking on her reflections on four decades after the bombing

    Business coalition calls for 25% cut in the cost of red tape by 2030
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra Business, universities, and investors have jointly urged the federal government to commit to cutting the cost of red tape by 25% by 2030, in a submission for next month’s Economic Reform Roundtable. The push to reduce regulation is in line

    Grattan on Friday: net zero battle has net zero positives for Sussan Ley
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra There’s no other way of looking at it: Sussan Ley faces a diabolical situation with the debate over whether the Coalition should abandon the 2050 net zero emissions target. The issue is a microcosm of her wider problems. The Nationals,

    The Murray–Darling Basin Plan Evaluation is out. The next step is to fix the land, not just the flows
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michael Stewardson, CEO One Basin CRC, The University of Melbourne Yarramalong Weir is one of many barriers to the passage of fish in the Murray-Darling Basin. Geoff Reid, One Basin CRC A report card into the A$13 billion Murray–Darling Basin Plan has found much work is needed

    The Murray–Darling Basin Plan Evaluation is out. The next step is to fix the land, not just the flows
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michael Stewardson, CEO One Basin CRC, The University of Melbourne Yarramalong Weir is one of many barriers to the passage of fish in the Murray-Darling Basin. Geoff Reid, One Basin CRC A report card into the A$13 billion Murray–Darling Basin Plan has found much work is needed

    Reserve Bank says unemployment rise was not a shock, inflation on track
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By John Hawkins, Head, Canberra School of Government, University of Canberra Reserve Bank Governor Michele Bullock has fleshed out the central bank’s thinking behind its surprise decision to keep interest rates on hold this month. In a speech today to the Anika Foundation, Bullock said there has been:

    Reserve Bank says unemployment rise was not a shock, inflation on track
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By John Hawkins, Head, Canberra School of Government, University of Canberra Reserve Bank Governor Michele Bullock has fleshed out the central bank’s thinking behind its surprise decision to keep interest rates on hold this month. In a speech today to the Anika Foundation, Bullock said there has been:

    Israel waging ‘horror show’ starvation campaign in Gaza, says UN chief
    This is Democracy Now!. I’m Amy Goodman. More than 100 humanitarian groups are demanding action to end Israel’s siege of Gaza, warning mass starvation is spreading across the Palestinian territory. The NGOs, including Amnesty International, Oxfam, Doctors Without Borders, warn, “illnesses like acute watery diarrhea are spreading, markets are empty, waste is piling up, and

    Israel waging ‘horror show’ starvation campaign in Gaza, says UN chief
    This is Democracy Now!. I’m Amy Goodman. More than 100 humanitarian groups are demanding action to end Israel’s siege of Gaza, warning mass starvation is spreading across the Palestinian territory. The NGOs, including Amnesty International, Oxfam, Doctors Without Borders, warn, “illnesses like acute watery diarrhea are spreading, markets are empty, waste is piling up, and

    Historic ruling finds climate change ‘imperils all forms of life’ and puts laggard nations on notice
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jacqueline Peel, Professor of Law and Director, Melbourne Climate Futures, The University of Melbourne Hilaire Bule/Getty Climate change “imperils all forms of life” and countries must tackle the problem or face consequences under international law, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) has found. The court delivered its

    Jet ski accidents are tragic but preventable. Here’s how to reduce the risk
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Milad Haghani, Associate Professor & Principal Fellow in Urban Risk & Resilience, The University of Melbourne Richard Hamilton Smith/Getty Two teenage boys were thrown from a jet ski during a ride on the Georges River in Sydney’s south this week. One died at the scene. The other

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI USA: Kennedy introduces bill to open door to homeownership for American families

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator John Kennedy (Louisiana)

    WASHINGTON – Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.), a member of the Senate Banking Committee, today introduced the Build Now Act, which would incentivize new home construction by tying federal funds to cities’ rates of homebuilding. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Ranking Member of the Senate Banking Committee, joined Kennedy in introducing the bill.

    “In my book, homeownership shouldn’t be a pipe dream for the average American family. Unfortunately, not everyone agrees with me. Government overregulation has brought homebuilding to a grinding halt and left ordinary people twisting in the wind as existing home prices went through the roof. I’m proud to introduce the Build Now Act to discourage pointless roadblocks and incentivize cities to help make the American Dream possible again,” said Kennedy. 

    “Americans are suffering under sky-high housing prices caused by a worsening housing shortage. The Federal government should use the tools at our disposal to reward communities that are taking bold action to build more housing and reduce families’ biggest monthly expense. It’s time for Congress to act—and this bipartisan proposal is a call to action to communities across the country to build housing now,” said Warren.

    The United States today faces a housing crisis. Since 2021, the annual income needed to qualify for a mortgage has increased by 60%, driving the median age of a first-time home buyer to a record-high 38 years old.

    By May 2025, new home construction rates had collapsed to their lowest level since the pandemic. On an annual basis, new home construction has fallen nearly 5%. 

    Currently, the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)’s Community Development Block Grant Program (CDBG) provides annual grants to states, cities and counties irrespective of their rate of homebuilding.

    The Build Now Act would:

    • Require HUD to remove 10% of CDBG funding from cities that fail to improve their rate of homebuilding above the national median.
    • Order HUD to proportionally reallocate those CDBG funds to cities that exceeded the national median rate of homebuilding. Under the Build Now Act, cities with the highest rates of growth would receive larger shares as funds are reallocated.
    • Allow metropolitan areas two years to start building homes before HUD determines their level of CDBG funding.

    The bill would not apply to cities where the median home value is below the national median or cities that issued an emergency disaster declaration in the last year.

    In his role on the Senate Banking Committee, Kennedy has championed the cause of making homeownership easier for families, raising the issue frequently during recent hearings:

    • In Jan. 2025, Kennedy questioned then-HUD Secretary nominee Scott Turner about the failures of previous affordable housing policies. During this hearing, he suggested an approach that would incentivize localities to allow more new home construction without affording excessive power to the federal government.
    • At a hearing one week later, Kennedy outlined a potential “carrot-and-stick” system that would spur new home construction while allowing local governments to determine their exact means of doing so.
    • In Feb. 2025, Kennedy questioned then-Director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency nominee Bill Pulte on the consequences of Americans borrowing large amounts of money to buy homes, noting that “we’ve got a house of cards here.”

    Full text of the bill is available here.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI China: Barcelona’s Ter Stegen to undergo back surgery

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    Marc-Andre ter Stegen will be out for at least three months after the FC Barcelona goalkeeper announced on Thursday that he will undergo surgery for a back injury.

    FC Barcelona’s Marc-Andre ter Stegen (3rd L) saves the ball during the UEFA Champions League Group F match between FC Barcelona and Inter Milan in Barcelona, Spain, Oct. 2, 2019. (Xinhua/Joan Gosa)

    The news comes at a difficult time for the German international, who missed nearly all of last season with a torn cruciate knee ligament.

    Barcelona signed Wojciech Szczesny to cover his absence and renewed the Polish goalkeeper’s contract earlier this month. The club has also activated the 25 million euros release clause to bring in Joan Garcia from Espanyol, casting doubt on ter Stegen’s place in the squad as the club looks to trim its wage bill.

    “Today is a personally difficult day for me,” ter Stegen wrote on Instagram, adding that he felt “in very good shape, although unfortunately I am not free from pain.”

    “After intensive discussions with the FC Barcelona medical team and external experts, the quickest and safest way for me to fully recover is through back surgery.”

    This will be the goalkeeper’s second back operation. He noted that he missed 66 days after the first procedure, but that “this time, the doctors believe about three months will be necessary as a precaution, to avoid any risks.”

    The operation means ter Stegen will be sidelined until at least the end of October, making it unlikely that Barcelona will register him in the first-team squad for the first half of the season. It also all but rules out a transfer before the window reopens in January 2026.

    Meanwhile, Barcelona’s planned tour of Asia is in doubt after the squad failed to fly to Japan on Thursday as scheduled, due to unresolved issues with the tour contract. The itinerary includes one match in Japan and two in South Korea.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Samsung Launches Galaxy Z Fold7, Galaxy Z Flip7 and Galaxy Watch8 Series Globally Starting Today

    Source: Samsung

    Samsung Electronics today announced the global availability of its latest foldable smartphones, Galaxy Z Fold7 and Galaxy Z Flip7, as well as its new Galaxy Watch8 series.
     
     
    Galaxy Z Fold7 and Z Flip7: Ultra-Thin and Light With Intuitive Intelligence
    Refined by years of breakthrough engineering and elevated with advanced intelligence, Galaxy Z Fold7 and Z Flip7 represent the next leap in smartphone innovation. Galaxy Z Fold7 and Z Flip7 are Samsung’s thinnest, lightest and most advanced Z series devices yet. Powered by cutting-edge performance and seamlessly integrated Galaxy AI,1 they are intelligent, adaptive companions that anticipate and respond to user needs in real time. With expansive, flexible displays, pro-grade cameras and context-aware intelligence, Galaxy Z Fold7 and Z Flip7 open up new realms of ultra experience with productivity, creativity and connection.
     

     
    Galaxy Z Fold7 brings Galaxy advancements together and broadens their scope, delivering an ultra-level experience in the thinnest, lightest and most advanced Z series yet. It offers immersive, high-octane performance on an expansive screen, empowering users to game, stream, connect and create all at once. Galaxy’s true AI companion experience has also been optimized for the foldable format, enabling fluid interactions across more apps and the larger screen. And with camera and screen sharing with Gemini Live,2 users can talk naturally to Gemini about what they’re viewing. They can simply share a picture of a local delicacy while they’re exploring a new city and ask Gemini whether there is a nearby restaurant where they can try it. Plus, Galaxy Z Fold7’s ultra-grade 200 MP high-resolution camera gives the freedom to shoot at flexible angles, putting professional-quality content creation at users’ fingertips. For example, convenient editing features like Generative Edit3 now automatically detect passersby in the background of photos and proactively recommend what to remove, eliminating the need to make manual selections and edits. Apart from these features, Galaxy Z Fold7 brings familiarity and durability in a head-turning new design that unfolds into something extraordinary.

     
    As for Galaxy Z Flip7, it distills flagship power, intelligence and personality into a compact and iconic form. With its edge-to-edge FlexWindow, users can express themselves, access key features at a glance and stay connected — all without opening the device. Built for dynamic lifestyles, Galaxy Z Flip7 transforms the way users capture and share content, from flawless selfies to cinematic video, all with the agility and creativity only Flip devices can offer. Now Bar4 delivers helpful information right on Galaxy Z Flip7’s FlexWindow to help users stay in control of their day, such as what song is playing, workout progress and even rideshare ETAs at a glance. Gemini Live also allows users to share what they see through their camera and chat with Gemini in real time directly on FlexWindow. So, they can ask for travel tips while road tripping with their dog or outfit suggestions based on the day’s weather. Users can also simply share the camera in Flex Mode and converse with Gemini hands-free. Galaxy Z Flip7’s FlexCam makes it easier than ever to capture the perfect selfie. Real-time filters on the FlexWindow instantly enhance users FlexCam selfies, so that they can be ready to post or share without the need for any extra editing. And with fun new features like Portrait Studio5 for pets, users can instantly transform any snapped or downloaded pet photo into a work of art. They can choose from styles that resemble artistic paintings, 3D cartoons, fisheye lens photos or professional-quality portraits and create frame-worthy masterpieces with one quick tap.

     
    Years of breakthrough engineering have led foldables to become flexible canvases for the new AI experience. As a new class of smartphones designed to fit in with and elevate user lives, Galaxy Z Fold7 and Galaxy Z Flip7 represent this achievement. Familiar yet transformative, they blend power, portability, style and substance, whether users seek a revolutionary, ultra-level experience or an AI powerhouse that fits in their pocket. As form factors evolve to look and think differently, this generation of foldables represents the next leap in smartphone innovation.
     

     
     
    Galaxy Watch8 Series: Ultra-Comfort Meets Real-Time Health Motivation
    Completing the Galaxy ecosystem, the Galaxy Watch8 series — including Galaxy Watch8 and Galaxy Watch8 Classic — brings the same spirit of re-engineering found in the new phones to the wrist. Galaxy Watch8 features advanced sensor technology and creates an intuitive AI-powered experience to help users fulfill a healthier, more connected life, while its ultra-thin cushion design and Dynamic Lug system flex naturally for all-day comfort and more precise sensor contact. Leveraging Samsung’s BioActive Sensor for continuous health tracking, the watches deliver real-time insights and instant rewards or alerts across sleep, stress, nutrition and activity, turning healthy intentions into immediate, motivating feedback.6 Plus, for the first time in a smartwatch, Galaxy Watch8 has introduced the Antioxidant Index,7 enabling users to measure carotenoid levels in just five seconds and make informed lifestyle choices for healthy aging.

     
     
    Hands-On With the Galaxy Z Series and the Watch8 Series at Galaxy Experience Spaces
    After Unpacked, Samsung opened its Galaxy Experience Spaces in major cities including Dubai, London, New York, Paris and Seoul. Designed to offer consumers an early, hands-on experience of the newest Galaxy devices, these spaces featured interactive zones that highlighted the devices’ design, performance and Galaxy AI features. Samsung also partnered with local communities including running, photography and skateboarding groups to host various sessions, teaching visitors how they can get the most out of their new devices.
     
    In addition, Samsung launched a new Experience Store locator feature on Samsung.com, making it easier for users to find nearby stores and try the newest devices in person.
     

     

     

     

     

     

     
     
    Availability
    Galaxy Z Fold7, Galaxy Z Flip7, Galaxy Watch8 and Galaxy Watch8 Classic will be available for purchase at Samsung.com and in stores across 49 markets starting July 25, before being made available in over 110 markets worldwide. Galaxy Z Fold7 is offered in Blue Shadow, Silver Shadow, Jetblack8 and an online-exclusive Mint.9 Galaxy Z Flip7 comes in Jetblack, Blue Shadow, Coralred10 and an online-exclusive Mint.11 Galaxy Z Flip7 FE, which brings the foldable experience to a wider audience, is available in Black or White.

     
    So far, Blue Shadow has emerged as the most popular color globally for both Galaxy Z Fold7 and Z Flip7, accounting for nearly 40% of pre-orders for both devices.
     
    Galaxy Watch8 is available in two sizes — 44 mm and 40 mm — and comes in Graphite or Silver. Galaxy Watch8 Classic comes in 46 mm with Black or White options, while the new Galaxy Watch Ultra is offered in four titanium finishes, including the new Titanium Blue.
     
    For greater peace of mind, Samsung Care+12 offers comprehensive coverage for accidental damage, repairs and replacements. Plus, for users who love having the latest technology, Samsung is introducing the New Galaxy Club.
     
    Users can get expanded access to Google AI Pro and 2 TB of cloud storage for 6 months at no cost with Galaxy Z Fold7, Galaxy Z Flip7 and Galaxy Z Flip7 FE.
     
    For more information about the Galaxy Z series and Galaxy Watch8 series, please visit: Samsung Newsroom, SamsungMobilePress.com and Samsung.com.
     
     
    1 Samsung Account login may be required to use certain AI features. Samsung does not make any promises, assurances or guarantees as to the accuracy, completeness or reliability of the output provided by AI features. Availability of Galaxy AI features may vary depending on the region/country, OS/One UI version, device model and phone carrier. Galaxy AI features will be provided for free until the end of 2025 on supported Samsung Galaxy devices. Different terms may apply for AI features provided by third parties. Galaxy AI service may be limited for minors in certain regions with age restrictions over AI usage.
    2 Gemini Live feature requires internet connection and Google Account login. Service availability may vary by country, language, device model. Features may differ depending on subscription and results may vary. Compatible with certain features and certain accounts. Only available to users 18 years or older. Accuracy of results is not guaranteed.
    3 Generative Edit feature for Photo Assist requires a network connection and Samsung Account login. Editing with Generative Edit may result in a resized photo. A visible watermark is overlaid on the image output upon saving in order to indicate that the image is generated by AI. The accuracy and reliability of the generated output is not guaranteed.
    4 Availability of functions supported within the apps may vary by country. Some functional widgets may require a network connection and/or Samsung Account login.
    5 Portrait Studio feature for Photo Assist requires a network connection and Samsung Account login. Editing with Portrait Studio results in a resized photo. A visible watermark is overlaid on the image output upon saving in order to indicate that the image is generated by AI. The accuracy and reliability of the generated output is not guaranteed.
    6 Not intended for use in detection, diagnosis or treatment. Intended for general wellness and fitness purposes only. The result is for your personal reference only. Please consult a medical professional for advice.
    7 Antioxidant index available on Android phones (Android 10 or above) and requires the Samsung Health app (v6.30 or above). Samsung account login required. To measure, place the center of your finger on the sensor at the back of the Watch and hold it for 5 seconds. While Anti-oxidant index can be measured using any finger, the thumb is recommended for the most accurate result. Repeat measurement due to uneven skin texture may lead to inaccurate results. Antioxidant index is for fitness and wellness only. Not intended for use in detection, diagnosis or treatment of any medical condition. Please consult a medical professional for advice if you’re concerned about your antioxidant level. This is a Labs feature that you can preview before its official launch. If you don’t want to use this experimental feature, you can turn it off in Samsung Health settings.
    8 Color availability may vary depending on market, country or carrier.
    9 Online exclusive colors only available on Samsung.com.
    10 Color availability may vary depending on market, country or carrier.
    11 Online exclusive colors only available on Samsung.com.
    12 Terms and conditions apply. Samsung Care+ coverage, service type and promotion details may vary by country/region and deductible (service fee) may apply. To be eligible for Samsung Care+ promotion benefit, registration may be required. For detailed Samsung Care+ information, please visit https://www.samsung.com/samsung-care-plus/.

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI USA: More Than $4 Million for North Pond and Unity Pond Restoration Advanced by Senator Collins in Funding Bill

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Maine Susan Collins

    Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senator Susan Collins, Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, announced that she advanced $4,350,000 in Congressionally Directed Spending to improve the water quality of North Pond and Unity Pond in the Fiscal Year (FY) 2026 Interior and Environment Appropriations bill. The bill, which was officially approved by the Senate Appropriations Committee today, now awaits consideration by the full Senate and House.

    “Maine’s lakes and ponds play an important role in communities throughout the state, offering recreational, fishing, and birding opportunities for locals and visitors,” said Senator Collins. “This funding aims to address frequent algae blooms and improve water quality, helping to ensure these natural resources will be available for all to enjoy for generations to come. As the Chair of the Appropriations Committee, I will continue to advocate for this funding as the appropriations process moves forward.”

    This funding advanced through the Committee’s markup of the FY 2026 Interior and Environment Appropriations bill—an important step that now allows the bill to be considered by the full Senate.

    Funding advanced by Senator Collins is as follows:

    North Pond Water Quality Restoration

    Recipient: Belgrade Regional Conservation Alliance

    Project Location: Somerset and Kennebec Counties, ME

    Amount Requested: $2,350,000

    Project Purpose: To remediate algae blooms in North Pond.

    Unity Pond Water Quality Restoration

    Recipient: Friends of Lake Winnecook

    Project Location: Waldo County, ME

    Amount Requested: $2,000,000

    Project Purpose: To remediate algae blooms in Unity Pond.

    In 2021, Congress reinstituted Congressionally Directed Spending. Following this decision, Senator Collins has secured more than $1 billion for hundreds of Maine projects for FY 2022, FY 2023, and FY 2024. As the Chair of the Appropriations Committee, Senator Collins is committed to championing targeted investments that will benefit Maine communities.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Warnock, Ossoff Urge DOJ to Investigate Conditions at Bibb County Jail

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Reverend Raphael Warnock – Georgia

    U.S. Senators Reverend Raphael Warnock (D-GA) and Jon Ossoff (D-GA) urged the Department of Justice to open a federal investigation into conditions at the Bibb County Jail in Macon, Georgia.

    Senator Reverend Warnock and Senator Jon Ossoff: “given the extremity of the reported health, safety, and civil rights concerns that persist in the jail, we urge the DOJ to conduct a full and thorough investigation into conditions at this jail and whether the rights of any individuals who work at or are incarcerated at these facilities may have been violated.”

    Washington, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senators Reverend Raphael Warnock (D-GA) and Jon Ossoff (D-GA) urged the Department of Justice to open an investigation into conditions at the Bibb County Jail in Macon, Georgia. The Senators are demanding action following recent reports of health, safety, and civil rights concerns at the facility. In recent years, multiple inmates have been killed or injured in outbreaks of violence at the jail, including a 22-year-old inmate who was stabbed to death at the facility in June.

    “The reports emerging from Bibb County Jail are disturbing. On June 4, 2025, Breele Jahiem Johnson, 22, was stabbed to death. Multiple other inmates were injured in the same incident. Unfortunately, violence at this facility is not rare. In April, an inmate had boiling water thrown on his face, causing severe burns. In May 2024, an inmate died after being tasered by officers. Just last week, another inmate was stabbed and had to be taken to a local hospital. Since 2020, four individuals have died by suicide. The pattern of violence at this facility is troubling.” the Senators wrote to Attorney General Pam Bondi. “We have been encouraged by local officials’ recent efforts to address Bibb County Jail conditions. However, given the extremity of the reported health, safety, and civil rights concerns that persist in the jail, we urge the DOJ to conduct a full and thorough investigation,” the Senators added. 

    The effort builds on Senator Warnock’s previous work to ensure humane conditions in prisons in Georgia and across the nation. In February of 2024, Senator Warnock led his colleagues in successfully urging the Justice Department prioritize the investigation into Fulton County Jail following multiple deaths at the facility in recent years. In 2025, the Justice Department entered a consent decree over the conditions at Fulton County Jail.

    Full text of the letter can be found HERE and below:

    Dear Attorney General Bondi:

    We are writing you today to request that the Department of Justice (DOJ) open an investigation into conditions at the Bibb County Jail in Macon, Georgia.

    Throughout our time in office, we have conducted oversight and taken action to expose and address civil and human rights abuses in prisons and jails, including in federal, state, and local institutions across Georgia. The reports emerging from Bibb County Jail are disturbing. On June 4, 2025, Breele Jahiem Johnson, 22, was stabbed to death.1 Multiple other inmates were injured in the same incident. Unfortunately, violence at this facility is not rare. In April, an inmate had boiling water thrown on his face, causing severe burns. In May 2024, an inmate died after being tasered by officers. Just last week, another inmate was stabbed and had to be taken to a local hospital. Since 2020, four individuals have died by suicide.6 The pattern of violence at this facility is troubling.

    Living conditions at the Bibb County jail are also unacceptable. After touring the jail, the president of the Georgia NAACP stated that the “cracked walls, broken plumbing, poor lighting and unsanitary conditions create an environment no human should be subjected to.” According to others, rodents and waste are regularly seen in the hallways.

    We have been encouraged by local officials’ recent efforts to address Bibb County Jail conditions. However, given the extremity of the reported health, safety, and civil rights concerns that persist in the jail, we urge the DOJ to conduct a full and thorough investigation into conditions at this jail and whether the rights of any individuals who work at or are incarcerated at these facilities may have been violated. Our offices are ready to assist your work in any capacity.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Chairman Wicker Leads SASC Confirmation Hearing on Chief of Naval Operations Nominee Admiral Daryl Caudle

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Mississippi Roger Wicker
    Watch Video Here
    WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Roger Wicker, R-Miss., Chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, today led a hearing to consider the nomination of Admiral Daryl Caudle to be Chief of Naval Operations.
    In his opening remarks, Chairman Wicker praised Admiral Caudle’s extensive experience and highlighted the challenges facing the Navy amid rising demands in the maritime domain.
    Read Senator Wicker’s hearing opening statement as delivered.
    I welcome Admiral Daryl Caudle, and his family are here, thank you for being here today.  As Commander of United States Fleet Forces Command for the past four years, Admiral Caudle has been responsible for the readiness, training, and deployment of naval forces.  He is uniquely suited to guide the Navy through today’s complex challenges.
    The U.S. Navy handles critical maritime missions that no other nation could shoulder. Our Navy is unmatched in its capabilities. No other navy can operate complex naval exercises in the Pacific, defend Israel from Iranian ballistic missile attacks, and prosecute a campaign against the Houthi terrorists in Yemen – executing all of these missions nearly simultaneously.
    Accomplishing all these objectives is no easy feat.  Admiral Caudle has championed a ready fleet, targeting a goal of 80 percent surge combat readiness to ensure forces are prepared for rapid deployment.  He also started the important task of rethinking force generation models to consider how we can more efficiently generate combat power.  We must start addressing the global demand for United States naval presence by increasing the supply of ready ships, personnel, and equipment.
    Last week, this committee released the text of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026.  In addition to reforms proposed by the FORGED Act, our bill seeks to address maintenance challenges faced by the Navy’s surface fleet. The Senate’s plan adjusts the contracting strategy for ship repair.  We would like to see the Navy give a clear demand signal to each shipyard and bring them into the planning process much earlier. Additionally, we proposed authorities that are meant to reverse inefficiencies in current processes by empowering the fleet to oversee maintenance.  I would like to hear from our witness about these reforms and his strategies for boosting readiness to meet global demands.
    The committee’s NDAA would help correct serious deficiencies in the Navy’s budget by proposing additional support for the service.  Billions of dollars are misaligned between the Navy’s budget request and the recently enacted reconciliation law.  If confirmed, Admiral Caudle must navigate these fiscal realities in order to keep readiness and modernization on track.  I am hopeful that Congress will unite to raise the defense topline, closing these gaps to ensure our Navy remains the world’s preeminent maritime force.
    Fortunately, the reconciliation law gives the Navy a transformative opportunity.  It includes $18 billion for shipbuilding, $5 billion for unmanned systems, $5 billion for rebuilding the maritime industrial base, $5 billion for munitions and missiles, and $2 billion for ship spare parts.
    These investments are necessary, but they are no substitute for good management.  Leadership starts at the top, and I hope that our nominee and Secretary Phelan will build an immediate partnership.  The next Chief of Naval Operations will lead our Navy into the most dangerous threat window our country has faced in generations.
    Let me quote Admiral Hyman Rickover, “In everything we do, we must ask ourselves: Does this directly advance our preparation for war?”  We all seek peace, but the surest path to preserving peace is by building unmatched strength.  I look forward to hearing from our witness how he will strengthen our Navy to meet the challenges we need.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Representative Nadler Delivers Remarks at Rally in Support of Brooklyn Container Port

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Jerrold Nadler (10th District of New York)

    Today, Representative Jerrold Nadler (NY-12) delivered the following remarks, as prepared for delivery, at a community rally in Red Hook in support of the Brooklyn container port: 

    “Thank you for inviting me here today. As many of you know, I have advocated for the Port of New York and New Jersey for more than forty years. For many of those years, I represented the Red Hook waterfront in Congress and fought for this vital facility, the community, and the jobs that depend on the port.

    Red Hook is the only remaining container port facility on the eastern side of the Hudson River, making it immensely important for our city, state, and region. We gather today to address a critical decision facing our community regarding the future of the Brooklyn Marine Terminal and Red Hook’s working waterfront.

    Red Hook has served as an active working waterfront for 150 years. While the port may be smaller than terminals in New Jersey and Staten Island, its location in the heart of America’s largest consumer market provides unique value. Red Hook connects our region to vital supply chains, bringing fresh produce from Latin America and the Caribbean directly to grocery stores throughout the city and Long Island.

    The recent Baltimore bridge collapse reminded us how vulnerable our supply chains can be. We need redundancy and resilient alternatives. The Blue Highway barge service operating since 1991 employs skilled long-shore workers representing generations of maritime expertise. This infrastructure deserves our investment and protection.

    Unfortunately, the city in acquiring the facility made a bad deal with the Port Authority and inherited a facility with significant challenges from decades of underinvestment. But now that the city owns Brooklyn Marine Terminal, it must repair the facility without any conditions. The current proposal from EDC is deeply flawed. To save the port, they propose developing thousands of market-rate housing units to finance improvements. I believe there is a better path forward, because their plan would have the opposite effect—shrinking and killing the very port they claim to want to save.

    I fully recognize the city’s housing crisis requires urgent attention. However, adding 8,000 housing units to an area with narrow streets, aging infrastructure, and limited transit raises serious concerns about community impact and quality of life.
    I propose a more thoughtful approach. First, preserve the Red Hook Port with no reduction in its footprint. Second, the city should invest in port stabilization and improvements as a public infrastructure priority, similar to investments in ferry lines, roads, and bridges. New York State should contribute as well, since the terminal serves the broader region including Long Island and the Hudson Valley.

    Finally, housing decisions should be addressed through the established ULURP process, designed for complex land use decisions requiring maximum community input. This same process recently delivered the City of Yes housing plan through proper democratic engagement.

    The fact that EDC keeps postponing the Task Force vote shows they lack support for their deeply flawed plan. It is profoundly undemocratic for EDC to delay the vote simply because they know their plan will be rejected. I urge the Task Force to approve necessary port improvements immediately while deferring housing decisions for later consideration through the ULURP process. This approach respects both the community’s voice and the democratic processes that ensure good governance.

    The future of Red Hook deserves careful deliberation, not rushed decisions. We can protect our working waterfront while addressing housing needs through proper planning and community engagement.”

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Reps. Salinas and Ansari Lead 37 Colleagues in Demanding Secretary Rollins Reinstate the 2001 Roadless Rule

    Source: US Representative Andrea Salinas (OR-06)

    Washington, D.C. – Today, Congresswoman Andrea Salinas (OR-06), alongside Congresswoman Yassmin Ansari (AZ-03), led 37 of their colleagues in sending a letter to Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins urging her to reverse the decision to fully rescind the 2001 Roadless Rule and to reinstate full roadless protections.

     Since its inception, the Roadless Rule has protected 58.5 million acres of forestland by preventing road construction and ensured consistent, dependable protections for these critical landscapes. Earlier this year, Reps. Salinas and Ansari, alongside Sens. Cantwell and Gallego, introduced legislation to enshrine the Roadless Rule into law.

    Click here or see below for the full letter:

    Dear Secretary Rollins,

    We write to express profound concern with your recent decision to fully rescind the 2001 Roadless Area Conservation Rule. This critical environmental safeguard ensures the protection of 58.5 million acres of our nation’s most pristine wild forestlands and provides durable climate benefits; protects watersheds that provide drinking water to millions of Americans; preserves critical habitats for threatened species; and supports recreation opportunities for American communities.

    In your announcement, you claimed that this rule is overly restrictive and limits our ability to protect forests from devastating fires. However, the Roadless Rule already includes commonsense provisions to allow road construction to protect public health and safety and timber harvests when needed to maintain healthy ecosystems and reduce wildfire risks. Moreover, evidence shows that roads actually increase the risk of fire. According to the U.S. Forest Service (USFS):

    “Building roads into inventoried roadless areas would likely increase the chance of human-caused fires due to the increased presence of people. Fire occurrence data indicates that prohibiting road construction and reconstruction in inventoried roadless areas would not cause an increase in the number of acres burned by wildland fires or in the number of large fires.”

    Additionally, recent analysis of wildfire data shows that fires are nearly four times as likely within 50 meters of roads as in roadless areas. Further, USFS has stated that “the agency rarely builds new roads to suppress fires.” It is simply untrue to assert that repealing the Roadless Rule will necessarily result in fewer or less damaging fires or that the USFS lacks the flexibility to respond effectively to these disasters. 

    This also represents a significant potential burden on USFS resources at a time when your Administration has pursued staff reductions and proposed spending cuts that threaten the agency’s ability to effectively carry out its mission. This Administration has already put more Americans at risk from wildfire as a result of dismantling the Forest Service. Rescinding the Roadless Rule will only exacerbate the wildfire crisis facing our western communities. Now is not the time to ask this critical agency to do more with less. 

    USFS already has an enormous backlog of maintenance needs for the existing 368,102-mile road system, which will cost $5,980,000,000 to eliminate. One of the many reasons the Roadless Rule was adopted 25 years ago was to stop the excessive and fiscally irresponsible road construction that was happening across our national forests at American taxpayer expense. Forcing the recission of this policy to allow more roads to be built is an irresponsible distraction and massive waste of taxpayer funding. 

    Beyond these realities, repeal is deeply unpopular. More than 1.6 million comments were submitted in favor of the Roadless Rule – more than any other rulemaking in our nation’s history at the time it was adopted– and the rule has survived decades of attacks. This is precisely because millions of Americans are clear-eyed about the value of these protected ecosystems. These include anglers and hunters, hikers, tribal communities, and so many more Americans who use and cherish our country’s incredible natural resources. That includes the outdoor recreation and tourism industry. A 2019 analysis of the economic values of roadless area conservation found that the recreational and passive uses of inventoried roadless areas yielded a total of nearly $9 billion in economic benefits each year  – benefits our country and forest-adjacent communities cannot afford to lose.

    The Roadless Rule keeps these wild ecosystems intact, sustaining critical habitats for threatened species such as native salmon populations that provide immense economic value in the Pacific Northwest and represent significant tribal cultural resources. In Alaska, the Tongass National Forest is the largest national forest, with 9 million acres of roadless areas and mature and old-growth rainforest, storing more than 1.5 billion metric tons of CO2-equivalent and sequestering 10 million metric tons a year. These forests protect clean drinking water for American communities, particularly rural communities which cannot afford to pay for drinking water infrastructure. They also serve as carbon sinks, making them an important tool in our work to address climate change, which agricultural producers depend on to sustain their businesses. 

    For over two decades, the Roadless Rule has served as dependable protection for some of our nation’s most valued public lands. We urge you to reverse course and retain full roadless protections for these 58.5 million acres.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Cantwell Intros Bipartisan Bill to Help Tribes Combat MMIWP Crisis and Fentanyl Trafficking

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Washington Maria Cantwell

    07.24.25

    Cantwell Intros Bipartisan Bill to Help Tribes Combat MMIWP Crisis and Fentanyl Trafficking

    Bipartisan legislation would boost federal benefits to help recruit and retain tribal law enforcement officers; This week – local, federal, and tribal law enforcement indict 12 individuals in major drug trafficking operation on Yakama Nation lands

    WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator Maria Cantwell (D-WA), a senior member of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, Senator Markwayne Mullin (R-OK), Representative Dan Newhouse (R, WA-04) and Representative Marie Gluesenkamp Perez (D, WA-03) introduced the Parity for Tribal Law Enforcement Act of 2025. The legislation would help tribal police departments hire and retain tribal law enforcement officers by providing access to federal retirement, pension, death, and injury benefits on par with law enforcement officers from non-tribal jurisdictions.

    “Tribes need more law enforcement officers to fight both the fentanyl and murdered and missing indigenous people epidemics and to respond to emergencies in their communities,” said Sen. Cantwell. “The Parity for Tribal Law Enforcement Act will help tribal communities get the law enforcement resources they need to keep their communities safe.”

    “Tribal police departments work tirelessly to protect and serve our communities in Oklahoma and around the nation,” said Sen. Mullin. “Tribal police should receive equal treatment and resources needed for the safety of their communities without going through excessive red tape. I’m proud to join with my colleagues on this and support our Tribal law enforcement.”

    “As the missing and murdered indigenous women crisis continues to plague tribal communities across the country, tribal law enforcement agencies are facing serious challenges with recruiting and retaining officers and resources,” said Rep. Newhouse. “This bipartisan legislation empowers tribal law enforcement to build and maintain strong, well-trained forces who will be far better equipped to address the MMIW crisis, counter illicit drug flow, and protect tribal communities in Central Washington. I thank members of the House and Senate on both sides of the aisle who understand the scale of these challenges and are helping to lead towards a solution.”

    According to the Department of Interior, public safety and justice at the Bureau of Indian Affairs is funded at just 13% of need and over 25,600 personnel are needed to adequately serve Indian Country. This includes at least 13,000 more tribal law enforcement officers to meet FBI Community Safety Standards.

    “The Colville Tribes strongly supports the ‘Parity for Tribal Law Enforcement Act.’ The bill would implement long overdue reforms and remove administrative barriers to tribal law officers enforcing federal laws on their reservation lands. It will also assist the Colville Tribes and other tribes in recruiting and retaining officers, which is critical for rural tribes that have large land bases and not enough officers to adequately patrol.” – Jarred-Michael Erickson, Chairman, Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation

    “Bolstering support for Tribal law enforcement recruitment and retention is crucial to addressing the many serious and systemic public safety issues in Indian Country. The issue is particularly pressing for the Yakama Nation and other tribes with large-land bases and a severe lack of resources to adequately patrol such a vast area. At Yakama we are facing an overwhelming confluence of public safety crises. We have experienced a surge in violent and property crimes, the highest rate of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women/People in the region, and a terrifying rise in outside gang and cartel-related drug activity coming onto our lands, including the pervasive and deadly fentanyl epidemic. The recent coordinated, multi-agency drug trafficking interdiction “Operation Overdrive” that dismantled a large drug distribution network operating on the Yakama Reservation shows what is possible when all levels of government work together to make our communities safer. The Parity for Tribal Law Enforcement Act will help give the Yakama Nation and other tribes the tools and funding necessary to protect our communities and people who live, work, and raise their families on our lands. The Yakama Nation appreciates Senator Cantwell and Congressman Newhouse’s partnership with us and their continued work to address long-standing impediments to Tribal sovereignty and our public safety efforts.” – Jeremy Takala, Law & Order Committee Chairman, Yakama Nation Tribal Council

    “The Chehalis Tribe strongly supports the bill. Our Tribe is fortunate in that we are able to pay our law enforcement officers competitive salaries but competitive retirement benefits are currently out of reach for Chehalis and most other tribes around the country. If enacted, this will allow Chehalis and other tribes to take care of the officers that patrol and keep our communities safe.” – Dustin Klatush, Chairman, Confederated Tribes of the Chehalis Reservation

    “Many tribal police departments are chronically understaffed and massively underfunded. The Parity for Tribal Law Enforcement Act would level the playing field for tribal police benefits, retirement, and pension, allowing tribes to improve retention and recruitment of officers on tribal lands. Ultimately, passage of the act would help improve overall safety in tribal communities. We are grateful to Senator Cantwell, Congressman Newhouse, Congresswoman, Gluesenkamp Perez, and their colleagues for championing this act and hope the overwhelming tribal support will ensure its approval.” – Chairman Glen Nenema, Kalispel Tribe of Indians

    “As a tribal law enforcement officer and an elected tribal leader, I know firsthand how hard it is to recruit and retain law enforcement officers. This bill will make it so much easier to achieve that objective by ensuring tribal law enforcement officers have access to proper retirement benefits. This bill will make our community safer.” – Vice-President Everett Ekdahl, Jr. Keweenaw Bay Indian Community

    “The Parity for Tribal Law Enforcement Act will provide tribal nations with the tools necessary to recruit and retain law enforcements officers. It shows Congress’s commitment to public safety on tribal lands and the fair treatment of tribal law enforcement officers. We are grateful for Senator Cantwell, Congressman Newhouse, and Congresswoman Gluesenkamp Perez for their leadership on this important issue.” – Chairman Leonard Forsman, Suquamish Tribe

    “The Parity for Tribal Law Enforcement Act represents a crucial advancement in ensuring that tribal law enforcement agencies, such as Hopi Law Enforcement Services, have the support they need to protect those that live and work on the Hopi Reservation. The Hopi Tribe is grateful to Senator Cantwell, Congressman Newhouse, Congresswoman Gluesenkamp Perez, and their colleagues for their leadership strengthening recruitment, retention, and public safety across tribal nations.” – Chairman Timothy Nuvangyaoma, Hopi Tribe

    “Access to resources is critical to improving the recruitment and retention tribal law enforcement officers. The Parity for Tribal Law Enforcement Act removes administrative barriers and provides the necessary reforms to protect our community. The Nisqually Tribe thanks Senator Cantwell and Representative Newhouse for their leadership in strengthening safety and security across tribal communities.” – Chairman Ken Choke, Nisqually Tribe

    “Jurisdictional gaps in Indian Country have allowed far too many criminals to fall through the cracks. We appreciate Senator Cantwell’s leadership in taking meaningful action to close these gaps. By allowing qualified Tribal officers operating under 638 contracts to enforce federal law and receive federal protections, this bill strengthens our ability to respond to serious criminal activity on our reservation.” Chairman Anthony Hillaire, Lummi Nation

    Combatting the Fentanyl Epidemic

    Sen. Cantwell is a strong advocate for increasing the presence of tribal law enforcement officers on reservations to help combat the fentanyl epidemic and Murdered and Missing Indigenous Women and People (MMIWP) crisis among Native communities.

    Sen. Cantwell first introduced the Parity for Tribal Law Enforcement Act in July 2023. The bipartisan bill was first considered at a U.S. Senate Indian Affairs Committee hearing on May 1, 2024. During a hearing on the fentanyl crisis in Indian Country later that month, Sen. Cantwell pressed federal officials about the need to help tribes hire and keep more tribal law enforcement officers and highlighted several tribes in Washington state that urgently need more resources to improve chronic understaffing issues.

    In October 2023, Sen. Cantwell sent a letter to the leaders of the U.S. Senate Indian Affairs Committee requesting that the committee hold an oversight hearing on how to address the fentanyl crisis in Indian Country. Soon after, the committee announced two hearings on the topic. At the November 2023 hearing titled: “Fentanyl in Native Communities: Native Perspectives on Addressing the Growing Crisis,” Sen. Cantwell invited Lummi Nation Chairman Anthony Hillarie to testify.

    In December 2023, Vanessa Waldref, the United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Washington, and Glen Melville, Deputy Bureau Director at the Bureau of Indian Affairs’ Office of Justice Services and member of the Makah Tribe, participated in the second hearing titled: “Fentanyl in Native Communities: Examining the Federal Response to the Growing Crisis.” At the hearing, both Waldref and Melville commented that fentanyl traffickers often target tribal lands due to lack of tribal law enforcement.

    A background document on Sen. Cantwell’s legislative track record and advocacy to combat the fentanyl crisis is available HERE.

    Fighting Against MMIWP Crisis

    In 2020, Sen. Cantwell’s Savanna’s Act was signed into law to help federal, state, and tribal law enforcement agencies better respond to cases of missing and murdered indigenous women and people by improving coordination among all levels of law enforcement, increasing data collection and information sharing, and providing tribal governments with vital resources.

    In May 2023, Sen. Cantwell announced she sent a letter to the Biden Administration urging them to prioritize funding to assist Tribes and organizations working to combat the MMIWP crisis.

    Following Sen. Cantwell’s urging, in June 2023 the U.S. Department of Justice announced the creation of the Missing or Murdered Indigenous Persons Regional Outreach Program, which dedicated five Assistant U.S. Attorneys and five coordinators to the task of resolving the cases of missing and murdered indigenous people. This included dedicated personnel based in Eastern Washington.

    In October 2024, Sen. Cantwell announced $6.9 million in federal funding for state and municipal law enforcement agencies, tribal justice departments and programs, and medical examiner offices to help fight the fentanyl crisis, gun violence, and violence against women and children.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • From Trade to Technology: India-Maldives cooperation set to expand

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi concluded a landmark visit to the United Kingdom on Thursday, setting the stage for the next phase of his two-nation tour as he departed for the Maldives. This marks his third visit to the island nation and the first by a head of government during the tenure of Maldivian President Mohamed Muizzu.

    The visit is expected to deepen the growing partnership between India and the Maldives, especially under the framework of the India-Maldives Joint Vision for a Comprehensive Economic and Maritime Security Partnership, adopted during President Muizzu’s visit to India in October 2024.

    Expanding Economic Ties
    India’s economic and trade relationship with the Maldives has transformed in recent years into a multi-dimensional partnership encompassing trade, infrastructure, finance, and technology. The foundation of this relationship was laid in 1981 when both countries signed a bilateral trade agreement under which India assured the export of essential commodities to the Maldives.

    In April 2025, India approved the highest-ever quotas for essential goods exports to the Maldives, reaffirming its commitment to the welfare of its maritime neighbour.

    Trade between the two nations has grown substantially-from crossing the USD 300 million mark in 2021 to exceeding USD 500 million in 2022. In 2023, bilateral trade stood at USD 548 million. This surge was driven by the launch of a dedicated cargo vessel service in September 2020 and several Lines of Credit (LoC) projects initiated since 2021. Visa-free access for Indian business travellers, granted in February 2022, further encouraged commercial engagement.

    India primarily exports pharmaceuticals, engineering goods, cement, agricultural products, and construction materials to the Maldives. In return, scrap metals make up a bulk of Indian imports from the Maldives. Notably, duty-free tuna exports from the Maldives to India were introduced in August 2022, aiming to boost the island nation’s seafood sector.

    Strategic Financial Cooperation
    The State Bank of India (SBI), operational in the Maldives since 1974, has played a key role in supporting economic infrastructure by financing resort development and marine exports. In November 2022, India extended a USD 100 million financial support package via SBI Malè by subscribing to Maldivian government domestic T-bonds backed by a sovereign guarantee from India. The support was renewed in 2024 with an interest-free extension under a unique government-to-government arrangement.

    In response to further budgetary needs, India offered an additional USD 400 million currency swap facility in October 2024. This follows a 2022 agreement signed between the Reserve Bank of India and the Maldives Monetary Authority under the SAARC framework, allowing up to USD 200 million in withdrawals.

    Digital and FinTech Partnerships
    In August 2024, India and the Maldives signed an agreement enabling the use of India’s Unified Payments Interface (UPI) in the Maldives. This development, facilitated during the visit of India’s External Affairs Minister to Malè, represents a critical step toward digital and financial integration between the two nations.

    To further enhance economic cooperation, Maldivian Finance Minister Moosa Zameer visited New Delhi in December 2024 to participate in the Global Economic Policy Forum. He held bilateral meetings with India’s Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman and engaged with business leaders from the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) to explore investment opportunities.

  • MIL-OSI USA: Senator Murray Opening Remarks at Full Committee Mark Up of Interior-Environment and Transportation-Housing and Urban Development Bills

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Washington State Patty Murray

    ***WATCH: Senator Murray’s opening remarks***

    Washington, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), Vice Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, delivered the following opening remarks as the committee meets to consider the draft fiscal year 2026 Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies, and Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies appropriations acts.

    Senator Murray’s opening remarks, as delivered, are below:

    “Thank you very much, Chair Collins, and thank you to Senator Murkowski and Senator Merkley, our Interior subcommittee leads, and Senators Hyde-Smith and Gillibrand, our THUD subcommittee leaders, for working so hard and working together to hammer out two bipartisan bills.

    May not be the bills I would have written on my own, certainly more I would love to see us do and investments and accountability measures I’d like to see. But these bills are serious bipartisan compromises that reject many of the truly harmful cuts Trump and House Republicans are pushing for, and maintains crucial programs that help make sure folks back home have a roof over their heads; safe, reliable transportation; and clean air and water.

    “In the Interior bill, we were able to put together a bill that protects public lands and national parks, invests in fighting wildfires, helps live up to our obligations to Tribes, and invests in critical work protecting our environment—and our families.

    “And in the THUD bill, we were able to maintain crucial investments to address the housing crisis reject Trump’s deep cuts to rental assistance programs that make sure millions of families have a roof over their head and invest in transportation infrastructure across the board—including a much needed increase to hire more air traffic controllers.

    “These are worthwhile investments—and they show just what is possible if we work together and exactly why a bipartisan process is a better path for everyone than the Trump bills House Republicans seem intent on writing—or another slush fund CR.

    “Now, Russ Vought may want to break this process—and make it more partisan, he said so. He may want to set Congress on a track for a shutdown. But we, on this committee, can reject that partisan vision that hurts working families everywhere. And we can reject the painful cuts and policies they’re trying to inflict in our communities—just as these bills do.

    “In fact, I think most of us here recognize that we have to reject that path.

    “Because, at the end of the day—passing funding bills here in the Senate takes 60 votes.

    “And that means the Trump-Vought path is choosing a dead end and a shut down.

    “I won’t pretend the work ahead is going to be easy—I think every one of us knows, compromise means doing hard work, making hard choices.

    “And it requires trust—something that unfortunately continues to be chipped away at. I hope that trajectory can be reversed—and I look forward to more discussion on each of the bills before us today.”

    MIL OSI USA News