Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Thursday Briefing: A Gaza cease-fire deal

Plus, ancient Celtic gender roles
Morning Briefing: Asia Pacific Edition

January 16, 2025

Good morning. We're covering a cease-fire agreement in Gaza, and Trump cabinet hearings in Washington.

Plus, ancient Celtic gender roles.

Two people raised above a crowd celebrate by clapping and moving their arms.
People celebrate while watching a television along a street in Khan Younis yesterday. Bashar Taleb/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Hamas and Israel reached a cease-fire agreement

Negotiators from Israel and Hamas agreed yesterday to a 42-day cease-fire and hostage release in Gaza, President Biden and other officials announced. The deal would take effect on Sunday, the Qatari prime minister said. Officials in Israel and Qatar said both sides were still hammering out the final details, and Israel's cabinet and government would still need to ratify it. Here's the latest.

The agreement raised hopes that there could soon be an end to more than a year of war that has killed tens of thousands of Palestinians. About 100 hostages are thought to still be in Gaza, although the Israeli authorities believe around 35 of them are dead.

Hamas confirmed the cease-fire deal in a statement on Telegram, and hailed Gazans' "legendary resilience" in the face of the war.

Biden said he was "confident" that the deal would hold, and that U.S. hostages would be released in the first phase. The cease-fire deal is broadly similar to a three-phase framework publicized by the U.S. in May, according to officials.

Details: The first phase would last six weeks. Israeli forces would withdraw to the east, away from populated areas, and some 33 hostages would be released over the course of 42 days, the Qatari prime minister said. Biden said that in addition to the releases, Palestinians would be able to return to their homes and would have access to a surge of humanitarian supplies.

A portrait of Marco Rubio in a suit and red tie.
Senator Marco Rubio, yesterday. Eric Lee/The New York Times

U.S. Senate confirmation hearings pressed on

Senator Marco Rubio of Florida, President-elect Donald Trump's pick for secretary of state, appeared before the Senate yesterday. He is widely expected to be easily confirmed next month.

He was two hours into his hearing when it was announced that Israel and Hamas had reached terms for a temporary cease-fire. In the past, he has defended Israel's conduct in the war. In the hearing, he argued that Ukraine must make peace with Russia and said that "there will have to be concessions made" by both parties. He said he still supported NATO, but shared Trump's view that Europe should spend more on its collective defense.

Rubio also discussed China, which he warned was aiming to overtake the U.S. as the world's pre-eminent power.

Other hearings: Pam Bondi, Trump's pick to run the Justice Department, refused to explicitly say she would defy White House pressure in the role — or admit that Trump lost the 2020 election. Bondi served on Trump's legal team during his first impeachment trial in 2020.

White House: President Biden is making his final address to the nation as president, putting a capstone on his five-decade political career.

President Yoon Suk Yeol of South Korea walking behind two cars and his face turned away from the camera.
President Yoon Suk Yeol of South Korea arrived for questioning after his detention yesterday. Pool photo by Lee Jong-Keun

South Korea's president was detained

President Yoon Suk Yeol of South Korea yesterday became the first sitting president in the nation's history to be detained in a criminal investigation. The detention ended a weekslong political turmoil that saw Yoon be impeached for briefly declaring martial law last month. Investigators showed up with 1,000 police officers to take Yoon into custody, after his bodyguards rebuffed an attempt to detain him last week.

What's next: Investigators have 48 hours to interrogate Yoon, after which they can decide to formally arrest him. If he is arrested, they must indict him within 20 days. Separately, the Constitutional Court began deliberating whether he should be removed from office.

Analysis: My colleague Choe Sang-Hun, The Times's ​Seoul bureau chief, explains what led up to yesterday's detention and what it could mean for the future.

MORE TOP NEWS

Rows of destroyed homes are nestled between a road and a mountain.
The damage caused by the Palisades fire in Malibu on Tuesday.  Mark Abramson for The New York Times

Sports

A soccer player in a blue jersey and yellow shorts runs after a ball.
Andrew Katsampes/ISI Photos, via Getty Images
  • Soccer: Bayern Munich has signed Bajung Darboe, a U.S. youth international midfielder from Los Angeles Football Club.
  • Chess: Magnus Carlsen, the game's current highest-rated player, made his debut playing for the St. Pauli chess team.
  • Formula 1: Cadillac's anticipated entry into the racing league comes with a question: Who will be the team's driver?

MORNING READ

Three young people sit at a small table in a room with a painted brick wall while another, playing a mother, places plates.
Oksana Parafeniuk for The New York Times

In Ukraine, it has become hard to imagine a future without strife. One acting teacher in Kyiv wrote a play for the students in her summer acting course. She hoped to provide them with a break.

And somehow, during rehearsals and then performances, hope entered stage left, at least for a little while. Read more here.

Lives lived: J. Fraser Stoddart built molecular machines a thousand times smaller than the width of a human hair, for which he shared a Nobel Prize. He is dead at 82.

CONVERSATION STARTERS

  • Virtual love: A 28-year-old woman spends hours on end talking to her A.I. boyfriend for advice and consolation. And yes, they do have sex.
  • (Don't) fly me to the moon: The World Monuments Fund added the moon to its list of at-risk sites, and warned of the dangers of space tourism if it is left unregulated.
  • Not dry, but damp January: Being "soberish," sometimes also referred to as "sober curious," has caught on in the U.S. and elsewhere as we continue to better understand the health risks of alcohol.

We hope you've enjoyed this newsletter, which is made possible through subscriber support. Subscribe to The New York Times.

ARTS AND IDEAS

A view looking down on a circular excavation with a partially exposed human skeleton next to a person in blue gloves and a hard hat sifting through the soil.
Bournemouth University

Where Celtic women held sway

An ancient cemetery in southwest England has offered a tantalizing view of a women-centric society: About 2,000 years ago the women of the Celtic Durotriges tribe remained in their ancestral homes and the men migrated for marriage, a recent study found.

This is the first time this type of society, called a matrilocality, has been identified in European prehistory. The findings have added to growing hints of flexible gender dynamics in the British Iron Age.

RECOMMENDATIONS

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Cook: Craving comfort? These vegetarian meatballs are the answer.

Plan: These apps, many of them free, let you keep a journal that captures much more than just words.

Read: The editors of The Book Review bring you the best thrillers of 2024.

Play: Spelling Bee, the Mini Crossword, Wordle and Sudoku. Find all our games here.

That's it for today. See you tomorrow. — Emmett

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