Image

Daily News Brief

August 13, 2025

Welcome to CFR’s Daily News Brief. Today we’re covering renewed Gaza diplomacy as Israel signals a new offensive, as well as...

  • A virtual meeting between the United States, Ukraine, and European allies
  • Mexico’s high-profile prisoner transfer
  • Changes in an annual U.S. human rights report
 
 

Top of the Agenda

Hamas’s top negotiator attended talks with Egyptian officials about a potential truce today, as Israel bombed Gaza City ahead of a planned offensive. While previous rounds of talks have failed to stop the war, international pressure is mounting to do so—especially before Israeli ground troops move into Gaza City, a 1 million-person population center which Israel plans to retake as a first step toward full military occupation of the territory.

 

Where diplomacy stands. 

  • Egypt’s foreign minister said today that the country was working with Qatar and the United States to try to advance a plan for an initial sixty-day truce and partial hostage release. 
  • Unnamed Egyptian security sources told Reuters the talks were weighing Hamas giving up its governance of Gaza and its weapons, while an unnamed Hamas official said it would be impossible to lay down arms “before the occupation is dismissed.” 
  • Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that Israel sought all hostages held by Hamas and that he believed the moment for a partial truce “is behind us.”
  • The latest push at talks come after multiple countries announced plans in recent weeks to recognize a Palestinian state at next month’s UN General Assembly, calling for an end to the war.
  • Germany said it would stop some arms transfers to Israel, and Norway announced divestments from some Israeli companies. 

 

On the ground. 

  • Israel’s bombing of Gaza City killed 123 people in twenty-four hours, Gaza’s health ministry said today.
  • Netanyahu defended Israel’s actions, claiming that residents had the opportunity to leave “combat zones” ahead of the offensive and that Palestinians could depart Gaza entirely “if they want.” 
  • No country has agreed to accept Palestinians who choose to do so amid the current war. Israel is reportedly seeking such permission from South Sudan.
  • As hunger continues to spread in the territory, twenty-seven mostly European countries said yesterday that new registration requirements may force international aid groups to leave. They called for “urgent action” against starvation.
 
 

“Support for a two-state solution has diminished, and, as a result, the [Palestinian] state that the United Kingdom, France, and Canada want to recognize cannot come into existence. Israel holds all the cards…Palestinians argue that statehood is a right, and they do not need anyone’s approval. In principle, they are correct, but that is not the world in which we now live.”

—CFR expert Steven A. Cook, Foreign Policy

 

How a Truce Agreement Would Support Ukraine and NATO

Members of the Ukrainian delegation attend the talks with Russian negotiators in Istanbul, Turkey, March 29, 2022.

Ukrainian Presidential Press Service/Reuters

While hopes for a ceasefire in the Russia-Ukraine war remain slim, U.S. and European leaders need to lay the groundwork for lasting peace, CFR expert Paul B. Stares writes in this article.

 
 

Across the Globe

Ukraine virtual meeting. U.S. President Donald Trump is participating today in a call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and European allies. It precedes Trump’s planned meeting this Friday with Russian President Vladimir Putin, which the White House yesterday called a “listening exercise.” Russia seeks control of Ukraine’s Donetsk as part of a deal, Zelenskyy said; European Union leaders with the exception of Hungary said in a joint statement that “international borders must not be changed by force.”

 

U.S. global human rights report. An annual State Department report sharply decreased criticism of certain countries compared to last year. El Salvador’s entry went from including credible reports of arbitrary killings and torture to “no credible reports of significant human rights abuses.” Criticism of Israel also dropped, while criticism of Brazil and South Africa—countries that have clashed with Trump—rose. A State Department spokesperson said the changes aimed for readability to remove bias and declined to answer questions about specific countries.

 

Panama ports. The Panama Canal Authority said it plans to pursue ownership of some ports around the canal. Its planned expansion into new business activity comes after the United States criticized Chinese influence in the canal; a Hong-Kong-based company has operated nearby ports. The canal became flush with income this year after imports surged into the United States ahead of planned tariff hikes.

 

Mexican prisoner transfer. Mexico sent twenty-six people imprisoned for drug-related crimes to the United States, the second transfer this year of high-profile prisoners. The move comes as the two countries continue tariff talks and after Trump reportedly ordered the Pentagon to use military force against Mexican cartels. Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum has rejected reports that the U.S. military was authorized to strike within Mexico’s borders. 

 

DRC mineral sanctions. The United States sanctioned an armed group in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and companies from the DRC and China that it said were profiting from illegal mineral sales. The conflict minerals trade is causing danger and hampering lawful mining, a U.S. Treasury official said. Washington says it is trying to broker a peace deal in the country and invest in minerals there.

 

Iran sanctions warning. France, Germany, and the United Kingdom told Iran they are prepared to trigger a process to reimpose international sanctions if Tehran does not enter negotiations on its nuclear program by the end of this month. UN sanctions on Iran were lifted as part of a 2015 deal. Amid a war with Israel in June, Iran considered leaving the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty; Iran later halted cooperation with the UN nuclear watchdog.

 

China-Czech Republic rift. Beijing said it was suspending cooperation with Czech President Petr Pavel after Pavel met with the Dalai Lama—who the Chinese government considers a separatist—last month. Pavel went to congratulate the Dalai Lama on his birthday during a trip to India; his office did not immediately comment on China’s diplomatic suspension. Chinese-Czech relations had already hit tensions in 2023 when Pavel held a phone call with Taiwan’s then-president. 


Blackout in Iraq. A heatwave and rising electricity demand prompted power outages across the country yesterday. Though electricity was restored by today, the heatwave is expected to last more than a week, with temperatures surpassing 120°F. Two provinces of the country are currently hosting millions of extra visitors as part of a religious pilgrimage. 

 
 

Trade Agreements, Explained

USPres George Bush and Fernando Collor de Mello of Brazil watch as Trade Reps. Carla Hills of the US and Paraguayan Forgn Minister Alexis Fruto, Argetine FM F Guido di Tella, Brazil's FM Hector Gros, and Uruguayan FM Francisco Rezek sign trade agreement.

Rick Wilking/Reuters

The United States maintains fewer comprehensive trade agreements than other large economies and is increasingly turning toward nonbinding economic frameworks, CFR expert Inu Manak and CFR’s Helena Kopans-Johnson write in this article.

 
 

What’s Next

  • Today, Typhoon Podul is expected to make landfall in China.
  • Tomorrow, the UN Security Council holds a session on Lebanon.
  • Tomorrow, Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin begins a visit to Kyrgyzstan.
 
 

The Panama Canal and Global Trade

The President's Inbox

The canal funds almost a tenth of Panama’s budget and is known for its professional management, CFR expert Will Freeman says on this episode of The President’s Inbox.

Listen
 
 

Council on Foreign Relations

58 East 68th Street, New York, NY 10065

1777 F Street, NW, Washington, DC 20006

Was this forwarded to you? Subscribe to the Daily News Brief