WSJ What’s News - Sabotage Snarls French Trains as Olympics Begin
Episode Date: July 26, 2024A.M. Edition for July 26. Fires set around France’s rail network have brought service on several high-speed lines to a halt on the day of the opening ceremony of the Paris Olympics. WSJ reporter Mat...thew Dalton says the disruptions could drag on for days. Plus, former President Barack Obama endorses Kamala Harris’s presidential bid. And U.S. authorities arrest a Mexican drug kingpin after he was tricked into flying to Texas. 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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A massive act of sabotage halts trains across France
just hours before the Olympic opening ceremony.
There are 250,000 travelers who are currently impacted and that figure will rise to 800,000
by the end of the weekend.
It's a kind of nightmare on the opening day of the Olympics for the government.
Plus, the Obamas back Kamala Harris for president, solidifying her Democratic Party support,
and U.S. agents arrest a Mexican drug lord in Texas.
It's Friday, July 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.
We begin in France, where the country's rail service has been hit by a massive act
of sabotage hours before the opening ceremony of the Olympic
Games in Paris.
Officials say fires were set this morning at multiple sites around France's rail network,
disrupting service on lines that bring traffic to Paris from different parts of the country.
WSJ reporter Matthew Dalton has the latest.
Lines serving the north, the southwest and the east were all disrupted.
It seems like service on those high-speed lines is completely down.
Officials are saying it will take days to fix.
There are 250,000 travelers who are currently impacted, and that figure will rise to 800,000
by the end of the weekend. So all told, it's a really massive
attack.
And Matthew said that disruption stands to prevent thousands of people, including athletes,
from attending the opening ceremony in Paris tonight.
The games are mostly held in Paris, but there are a number of sites around the country where
the games are also being held, like in Lille.
And so some people are going to be trying to get to Paris for the games, and many of
those people will be using the high-speed rail network.
So yeah, their plans are going to be disrupted.
The opening ceremony is this evening.
France is expecting 300,000 people or more to attend, so it would be the most attended
opening event in Olympics
history. It's a kind of nightmare on the opening day of the Olympics for the government.
Officials don't yet know who is behind the attack, though France had been bracing for
acts of state-sponsored sabotage planned by adversaries such as Russia or Iran during
the games. And later in the show, we'll talk more about the security challenges Paris
had been preparing for before this latest news, we'll talk more about the security challenges Paris had been preparing
for before this latest news, as well as some of the things to get excited about as competition
gets underway.
Former first couple Barack and Michelle Obama have endorsed Kamala Harris's bid for the
White House, capping a week in which she has quickly become the expected Democratic nominee
for president.
The former president was the last major figure in the Democratic party to withhold his endorsement,
with people around him saying he had wanted to see the party unite before weighing in.
In election years, Obama typically ramps up his campaign activity after the Labor Day
holiday in early September, an approach he is expected to take this year.
Mexican drug lord Ismael el Mayo Zambada has been arrested by U.S. agents after a high-ranking
Sinaloa cartel member tricked him into flying to Texas. Zambada co-founded the cartel three
decades ago and heads a faction that's considered
the leading smuggler of fentanyl into the U.S.
According to a Homeland Security Investigations official, Zambada thought he was going to
inspect clandestine airfields in Mexico, but was instead flown to El Paso, Texas, where
he was taken into custody on the tarmac.
Joaquin Guzman Lopez, the son of imprisoned drug lord Joaquin El Chapo Guzman, was on
the same plane as Zambada and was also arrested.
It is the latest blow to the Sinaloa cartel, which has been a top target for U.S. law enforcement.
Venezuela is holding presidential elections on Sunday.
Pollsters say that challenger Edmundo Gonzalez could easily beat incumbent Nicolas Maduro
in a fair election, but that isn't expected to happen, according to diplomats and Venezuela
experts.
Maduro has been in power for 11 years, and his authoritarian regime has overseen an economic
collapse that has decimated a once-potent energy sector and prompted a
quarter of the population to flee.
However, journal correspondent Cajerl Villas in Caracas says that behind closed doors,
there are some oil executives and creditors on Wall Street who are quietly embracing Maduro.
His government badly needs foreign investment and it really needs tens of billions of dollars
to restart
their oil industry. One of the big impediments obviously is that there are
US sanctions and there's this government legitimacy issue. Maduro in private has
been offering pretty sweetheart deals to Americans who can help him effectively
lobby in Washington to try to get the US to both recognize his government as
legitimate and reestablish commercial ties. He's kind of offering an
opportunity to work in a country where you can potentially get generous
returns, get operational control over your projects with virtually no
environmental or regulatory oversight and no tender contracts. And so for many oil executives, this is kind of a unique opportunity.
And in markets news that we're watching today, Mercedes-Benz has reported a drop in second-quarter
net profit and revenue on the back of fewer vehicle sales.
The carmaker also pointed to a tough Chinese market and trade tensions as it lowered a
key margin target for the year.
Bristol-Myers, Squibb, Colgate, Palmolive, and 3M are among the companies reporting earnings this
morning, and the Fed's Preferred Inflation Gauge, the Personal Consumption Expenditures Index for
June, is due out at 8.30am Eastern. Those readings could help clarify why U.S. core inflation topped analysts'
expectations in yesterday's GDP report.
Coming up as Paris prepares to celebrate the start of the 2024 Olympics, it won't just
be the athletes looking to make history as city authorities take on a mammoth security
challenge. We've got that story after the break. a contractor, or a consultant. You can get customized coverage for your business.
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At long last, the Paris Olympics are upon us.
The opening ceremony of the Games will feature a four-mile-long
parade of boats along the Seine tonight, carrying athletes through the heart of the city, and if
all goes well, it will be just one of many good storylines to emerge over the next two and a half
weeks. But as journal reporters Noemi Bissurb and Joshua Robinson are here to discuss, there are some
other dynamics we'd be remiss
if we didn't talk about both on and off the field of competition. Noemi, I want to start with you
talking about the Paris security situation. You report that threats against the Games
have essentially turned the capital into an open-air fortress. Tell us a bit more about that.
So 45,000 police, 10,000 soldiers, and 22,000 security guards are being deployed across the country
and mainly in Paris where the opening ceremony is taking place today.
It will be held on the Seine River, so outside the stadium,
which represents a huge security challenge for authorities.
You'll have police stationed every six feet along the river.
They will also be patrolling the city's catacombs,
which is a maze of underground galleries along the river. They will also be patrolling the city's catacombs,
which is a maze of underground galleries under the city.
And you'll have helicopters with special forces flying above.
They have conducted more than a million security checks
on any individual which is supposed to come anywhere near the games.
And they have banned several thousand people
from coming to the game sites for secondary reasons.
All these measures and these resources being deployed are unprecedented here in
Paris and anywhere in the world really.
Frank Noemi has been in the news. You've come on the program to talk about the
political situation there. Does that have any bearing on the preparedness for
responding to anything that might come up here?
So yes, the games come as friends admit one of the biggest political crisis in decades.
The government has resigned and it is staying on in a caretaker capacity,
but it should have a limited impact on the games themselves.
Beyond that, Noemi, there's the perennial question of whether the host city,
and in particular its venues, most notably this year, the River Seine,
are ready for competition. Folks are
going to be swimming in a river that has been notoriously dirty as recently as just a few
weeks ago. What are we looking at there?
So, yes, the Seine River is safe for swimming, and the Paris mayor took a dip last week to
prove it. But yeah, as you say, the situation remains fragile. The issue is that much depends
on the weather.
The water quality can deteriorate very quickly when it rains because that's when the city's
sewage system saturates and that creates sewage pollution in the river.
So here's hoping for good weather in days to come.
Josh, you are our European sports reporter.
I know there has been some concern raised about doping at many Olympics, but that is
coming up again this year, including in the swimming competition.
What are we looking at there?
Yeah, this comes on the heels of the revelation that 23 Chinese swimmers tested positive for
banned substances ahead of Tokyo 2021 and were allowed to compete anyway.
Now 11 of those athletes are coming back to Paris, and they'll be under heavy, heavy scrutiny to make sure that nothing slips through
the cracks again.
Nat. And Josh, I understand the American swimmers this year are sort of on guard for this.
Josh. Oh, there's been outrage across the sports community that anyone could be allowed
to test positive and still compete. And it's really a major black eye for the IOC and WADA,
the World Anti-Doping
Agency.
In an attempt to end this segment on a more positive note, we've got lots of competition
coming up in the next few weeks. What are some storylines we should be getting excited
about?
Well, first of all, I think we should be excited about some of the arrival of new sports. We've
got break dancing in the Olympics for the first time, and that's going to happen in
the Place de la Concorde. So this wide open plaza with the famous Hotel de Crayon, with an obelisk and every gilded building you can imagine. So the visual should be amazing.
We've got surfing returning for a second time. That's not in Paris per se. That's a little
further afield in Tahiti. But those images are going to be spectacular as they surf the Tejahupa
wave. I think for Americans, the return of Simone Biles is especially exciting because she is an incredible Olympian who ran into a case of the twisties in Tokyo 2021 and so she's
made the long journey back and is hoping to add to her tally of gold medals and I think
above all the visuals of this Olympics are going to be absolutely spectacular.
We've got skateboarding in the Concorde, we've got beach volleyball at the foot of the Eiffel
Tower, we've got equestrian in the Palace of Versailles.
No matter what happens on the field of play, I think we're sure to have a postcard everywhere
we look.
I've been speaking to Wall Street Journal reporters Noemi Biserbe and Joshua Robinson.
Thank you both.
Enjoy the games.
Au revoir.
Thank you.
And that's it for What's News for Friday 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.
Otherwise, have a great weekend.
Thanks for listening.