WSJ What’s News - Israel, Hezbollah Seek De-Escalation After Show of Force
Episode Date: August 26, 2024A.M. Edition for Aug. 26. After a weekend of exchanging heavy fire, Israel and Iran-backed Hezbollah signal a desire to avoid a wider military conflict. The WSJ’s Dov Lieber says risks remain. Plus,... France detains the Russian-born CEO and founder of the Telegram messaging app, fanning tensions with Moscow. And, NASA taps SpaceX to bring two astronauts home in a blow to Boeing’s Starliner. Luke Vargas hosts. Sign up for the WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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After heavy fighting this weekend, Israel and Hezbollah tried to prevent a wider war. We'll get the latest from Tel Aviv.
The sense now that, let's say, this chapter has de-escalated, but every time you de-escalate,
you actually sow the seeds for even greater escalation.
Plus France arrests the founder of messaging app Telegram fanning tensions with Russia.
And while poorer Americans felt inflation
less than others during the pandemic, we'll look at why it's usually the other way around.
It's Monday, August 26th. I'm Luke Vargas for The Wall Street Journal,
and here is the AM edition of What's News, the top headlines and business stories moving your world today.
headlines and business stories moving your world today. We begin today in Israel, a day after a heavy exchange of fire between the country and Hezbollah
in neighboring Lebanon raised concerns about the breakout of a wider Mideast conflict.
But after Hezbollah launched hundreds of rockets and drones at Israel, and around a hundred
Israeli planes struck targets in Lebanon. Both sides are signaling
their intent to de-escalate. Joining me now with more on the situation is Wall Street Journal
correspondent Dov Lieber in Tel Aviv. Dov, before we look at whether efforts to cool the situation
are likely to be successful, fill us in on exactly what happened yesterday and how it came about.
Well, for weeks now Hezbollah has been saying that they will take revenge or retaliate for
Israel assassinating the chief of staff of their military, Afar Chukar, who was very
close with the leader of Hezbollah, Hassan Nasrallah.
So the region has been tense for weeks now, waiting for that retaliation.
It came finally at 5 a.m. yesterday.
And there's a question of what came first.
Hezbollah says they were able to fire hundreds of rockets,
largely at northern Israel,
but also they sent drones to central Israel.
And Israel says they preempted Hezbollah's attack
and sent 100 planes to strike these rocket launchers
in southern Lebanon.
And Israel says they managed to destroy
around two thirds of those before they fired
their rockets at Israel.
And in a way, each side walks away claiming success.
That's usually the best case scenario you can ask for.
Dov, you were describing there a pretty heavy exchange of fire and yet at the end of the
day, both sides have managed to walk away relatively unscathed.
Is this by luck that a major flare-up was averted or something that was calculated
to avoid escalation?
Something about yesterday's events that is very difficult to discern. What were the
intentions of both sides? On one point, you look at Hezbollah, they said they wanted a
serious retaliation, but at the end of the day, they didn't really have a lot of success.
On any given Sunday, Hezbollah has a lot more success targeting Israeli military installations targeting Israeli cities
they really do but at the same time we reported and Hassan Nasrallah himself
said that they targeted a major military intelligence base just north of
Tel Aviv if they had hit those installations that would have immediately
sparked a war at the same time Israel says it said again a hundred planes into
Lebanon but at the same time this was not a very lethal incident in terms of their attacks
on Hezbollah.
So the intentions of both sides in this last round wasn't exactly clear, whether they
puffed themselves up or was it really a serious round or a serious battle.
It's really hard to tell actually.
Interesting.
And then though both sides are signaling now that they want to de-escalate,
as an expert in your story reminds us, as long as this daily tit-for-tat continues to
be the norm, this possibility of escalation is kind of ever-present, right? Tell us a
little bit more about what the risks would be on that front.
Now, Seleucus is something interesting about if Israel tries to deny their successes, they
may be forced to carry out another attack.
And Netanyahu said really that this was only the beginning of a new type of policy in which
Israel will be far more aggressive towards Hezbollah.
It's very important to understand that things have shifted in Israel.
Because the war in Gaza is really slowed down and the country can really turn its attention
towards Lebanon.
That's actually from Israeli point of view, the major war that's affecting them today.
And so there's a lot more support in Israel for Israel to be far more aggressive towards
Hezbollah and the potential remains that the next bout could be extremely escalatory.
Dov Lieber, thank you so much as always.
Thank you for having me, Luke.
France has detained the Russian-born founder and CEO of the popular telegram messaging
app, Pavel Durov, drawing angry reactions from Russian officials.
French media reports Durov's detention relates to an investigation opened into the company's
role in spreading child pornography and its alleged refusal to cooperate with authorities on this.
Telegram said Duroff has nothing to hide and that the company complies with EU rules.
Journal reporter Matthew Dalton in Paris said the detention of a man dubbed by many as Russia's
Mark Zuckerberg could carry significant value for Western intelligence agencies.
There could be motivation by French intelligence agencies, by Western intelligence, to have
Durov in custody to see if they can use him as an asset to gain access to the encrypted communications that Telegram hosts.
It's the most widely used messaging app in the post-Soviet world, so
it would potentially be a treasure trove of information if they can crack it.
According to Russian state media, Russia has requested consular access to Dorov.
And police in Germany have detained a 26-year-old Syrian national in connection to a knife attack
on Friday that killed three people and wounded eight others that they're treating as an act of terror.
Islamic State has claimed responsibility for the attack.
The incident puts Germany's government under pressure ahead of closely watched elections
in the east of the country where the far-right anti-immigration party AFD is expected to
make big gains at the polls.
Coming up, new research finds that poorer Americans are once again being hit harder
by inflation after a short reprieve, and NASA turns to SpaceX to get a pair of astronauts
delivered to the ISS by Boeing back to Earth.
We've got those stories and more after the break. TNB Tech Minute gives you the day's top tech headlines, featuring newsmakers that shaped
the tech world and beyond, like OpenAI CEO Sam Altman.
The two things that I think will matter most over the next decade are abundant and inexpensive
intelligence and abundant and cheap energy.
And if we can get these two things, then it's almost difficult to imagine how much else
we could do.
Check out TNB Tech Minute in the Tech News briefing feed from the Wall Street Journal.
In an update to a story that we covered earlier this month, NASA says two astronauts at the
International Space Station will remain there until February before being brought home by
SpaceX.
That's a setback for Boeing, which transported the astronauts in June for a short test mission
before it hoped to earn certification to ferry NASA crews to and from the ISS.
Instead, Boeing's Starliner spacecraft will now return uncrewed in September amid lingering
questions about the technical challenges it faced during its mission.
A Boeing spokeswoman declined to comment on the company's plans for Starliner.
For astronauts Barry Wilmore and Sunita Williams, the decision means they will spend about eight
months in space compared with the eight-day mission they originally embarked on.
Meanwhile, SpaceX is set to conduct the first private spacewalk later this week in a test
of new spacesuits that it's developed.
The mission, funded by tech billionaire Jared Isaacman, is slated to launch tomorrow, with
the spacewalk scheduled to happen in the following days.
Poorer Americans were less hard hit by a burst of inflation that came on the heels of the
pandemic, according to new research released by Xavier Gérevel at the London School of
Economics.
However, as journal economics reporter Justin Leihart
told us, even that bit of relief for less well-off
households has proved to be temporary.
Poor people don't commute as much,
don't spend as much on cars.
And those were two things shortly after the pandemic hit
that went up a lot.
So they actually saw a little bit lower rate of inflation.
But what we've seen more recently is really a reversion to what we'd seen in the past,
which is that inflation rate of poor Americans is a tiny bit higher in any given year than
it is for richer Americans. So there's an estimate that millions more people
would be below the poverty threshold
if we adjusted incomes not using the overall inflation rate,
but if we adequately adjusted people's spending
for their income category.
Facing intensifying competition in China,
IBM is shutting its R&D department in the
country with some employees being told that jobs will be added in India.
The move marks the latest retreat from China by a top U.S. tech company, with the likes
of Microsoft downsizing its cloud and AI operations earlier this year and asking local employees
to consider transferring elsewhere.
And in other markets news, we're watching today a federal antitrust trial that will
decide the fate of Kroger's planned $20 billion purchase of rival Albertsons is set
to begin in Oregon.
The roughly three-week trial will test whether distribution company CNS Wholesale Grocers,
which is buying close to 600 stores in a roughly
$3 billion divestiture deal with the two giants, can credibly make up for lost competition
from the merger.
And U.S. stock futures are ticking higher, putting the Dow and S&P 500 on course to hit
record highs after Fed Chair Jerome Powell on Friday said the time has come for rate
cuts.
And finally, credit card perks and rewards are a big part of what gets us to sign up
to a particular card.
And for those who carry high-end ones, the likes of Amex, Chase, and Capital One have
been increasingly offering luxurious
experiences in exchange for high annual fees.
Journal personal finance reporter Imani Moise told our Your Money Briefing podcast about
some of the flashiest benefits from VIP spaces at places like airports and music festivals
to exclusive lounges that act like members clubs.
Traditional credit card rewards like miles, cash back,
things like that, they tend to be underutilized.
Americans had over 33 billion in unused credit card rewards
at the end of 2022.
By comparison, these experience-based rewards
tend to sell out as soon as they're available.
They hope that number one, you have a great experience,
and number two, that you tell a friend,
most of these lounges give card holders a plus one, or in some you have a great experience, and number two, that you tell a friend. Most of these lounges give cardholders a plus one or in some cases even a plus four. And what
they're hoping is if you bring along a friend who's not a cardholder, maybe they also have
a great experience and they're convinced to open up an account as a result of that.
Nat. For more on the sometimes extravagant perks offered by credit cards, head on over
to the Your Money Briefing podcast.
And before we go with back to school, just around the corner, many school districts are
banning cell phones in classrooms.
Is yours one of them?
What's your reaction?
And what questions do you have about the effect that phones or the banning of them might have
for your kids?
To weigh in, send a voice memo to WNPD at WSJ.com
or leave a voicemail with your name and location at 212-416-4328.
We just might use it on the show. And that's it for What's
News for Monday morning. Today's show was produced by Kate
Bulevent and Daniel Bach with supervising producer Christina
Rocca. And I'm Luke Vargas for The Wall Street Journal.
We will be back tonight with a new show.
And until then, thanks for listening.