Daily Briefing
Autoland first documented success; Moscow attacks; Burundi refugee crisis

273 Articles •
Three Killed in Moscow Blast Near General's Assassination Site
Left 42%
Center 35%
R 23%
What happened: Two traffic police officers and a third person were killed early Wednesday when an explosive device detonated as officers approached a suspicious individual on Yeletskaya Street in southern Moscow around 1:30 a.m. The blast occurred just two days after Lieutenant General Fanil Sarvarov was killed by a car bomb on a nearby street on Monday morning.
Why it matters: The explosion heightens security concerns in Moscow and marks the latest in a string of assassinations targeting Russian military figures since the 2022 invasion of Ukraine. Russian authorities are investigating possible Ukrainian intelligence involvement while forensic teams review CCTV footage and conduct explosives analysis to determine how the device was triggered and identify those responsible.
60% of sources are Original Reporting

19 Articles •
Nearly 90,000 Congolese Refugees Flee to Burundi Amid M23 Offensive
L 20%
Center 40%
Right 40%
What happened: Over 88,000 refugees fled South Kivu province in DR Congo to Burundi this month after M23 rebels captured Uvira and reignited fighting, displacing an estimated 500,000 people since early December. Overcrowded camps face dire conditions with limited food, water, and medical care, raising urgent epidemic risks including cholera, measles, and malaria.
Why it matters: Humanitarian agencies are urgently scaling up aid to over 210,000 displaced people but need $67 million for three months of assistance as health facilities are looted, schools remain closed affecting 391,000 children, and families face emergency food insecurity. MSF treats 200 patients daily while providing 25,000 liters of water and building a 50-bed cholera treatment center to prevent disease outbreaks.
89% of sources are Original Reporting

358 Articles •
Libya's Military Chief Dies in Turkey Jet Crash
Left 34%
Center 38%
Right 28%
What happened: Gen. Muhammad Ali Ahmad al-Haddad and four senior Libyan officers died yesterday when their Falcon 50 jet crashed near Ankara after reporting an electrical fault. The aircraft disappeared from radar 40 minutes after takeoff while attempting an emergency landing, killing all eight aboard including three crew members.
Why it matters: Al-Haddad was western Libya's top commander and central to UN efforts to unify the country's fractured military forces. His death removes a key figure in Libya's stability efforts and may complicate ongoing reconciliation between rival governments, prompting three days of national mourning.
72% of sources are Original Reporting

94 Articles •
Amazon Reportedly Has Blocked Over 1,800 North Korean Job Applicants Since April
L 20%
Center 37%
Right 43%
What happened: Amazon blocked more than 1,800 suspected North Korean operatives from securing remote IT jobs since April, detecting a 27% quarter-over-quarter increase this year. The applicants used stolen identities, hijacked LinkedIn accounts, and US-based 'laptop farms' operated remotely to evade detection and funnel wages to Pyongyang's weapons programs.
Why it matters: More than 300 US companies, including Fortune 500 firms, unknowingly hired North Korean IT workers between 2020 and 2022, risking intellectual property theft, legal consequences, and sanctions violations. One Arizona laptop farm scheme alone generated over $17 million in illicit revenue for North Korea before the operator was sentenced to eight years in prison.

48 Articles •
Pentagon to Deploy xAI's Grok to 3M Personnel
Left 31%
Center 31%
Right 38%
What happened: The Pentagon announced yesterday it will add xAI's Grok AI models to its GenAI.mil platform, targeting 3 million military and civilian personnel with early 2026 deployment. The integration includes real-time insights from X and IL5-certified handling of Controlled Unclassified Information, expanding the DoD's AI capabilities alongside Google's Gemini.
Why it matters: This controversial move raises safety and ethical concerns as Grok produced antisemitic responses and praised Hitler just this summer, yet will now handle sensitive military information. The integration reflects growing tech-defense ties and potential conflicts of interest, with critics warning about intertwining commercial AI platforms with national security operations.
81% of sources are Original Reporting

22 Articles •
Report Accuses Witkoff of Seeking to Out-Maneuver Rubio in Ukraine Negotiations
Left 54%
Center 31%
R 15%
What happened: Billionaire real estate developer Steve Witkoff, Trump's special envoy, traveled to Geneva in November ahead of Secretary of State Marco Rubio to meet Ukrainian officials without informing him, deepening a rift over Ukraine negotiations. Witkoff favors pressuring Ukraine to accept Russian demands quickly, while Rubio supports a firmer stance requiring territorial withdrawal, with tensions flaring again after stalled Miami talks last week.
Why it matters: This internal power struggle between Witkoff and Rubio could determine how the nearly four-year Ukraine war ends and reshape how allies and adversaries perceive U.S. credibility and foreign policy. Witkoff's unconventional approach using private jets, unsecure communications, and undisclosed meetings has triggered State Department reviews, while his alignment with Trump and Jared Kushner gives him significant influence over potential concessions to Russia.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting

71 Articles •
U.S. Signs Health Deals with Nine African Nations
Left 25%
Center 62%
R 13%
The details: The United States signed five-year health compacts with at least nine African countries including Nigeria, Kenya, Rwanda, and Uganda, replacing dismantled USAID programs. The deals provide 49% less annual US funding than 2024 levels while requiring substantial co-financing from recipient nations, with Nigeria receiving up to $2 billion while raising $2.9 billion domestically.
Why it matters: The shift marks a sharp reduction in US health assistance to Africa, leaving countries racing to fill funding gaps for critical HIV, malaria, and disease programs after aid cuts crippled health systems. Controversies include data-sharing provisions allowing 25-year retention of sensitive health information, emphasis on Christian facilities in Muslim-majority Nigeria, and concerns that deportation agreements influenced deal terms despite official denials.
68% of sources are High Factuality

66 Articles •
Garmin Autoland Makes Historic First Emergency Landing in Colorado
L 22%
Center 51%
Right 27%
What happened: A Beechcraft Super King Air 200 experienced rapid loss of pressurization after departing Aspen on December 20, triggering Garmin's Autoland system. The automated system flew the aircraft to Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport in Broomfield, Colorado, landing safely with two pilots aboard who were unharmed.
Why it matters: This marks the first real-world emergency use of Autoland technology, validating a safety system now installed on approximately 1,700 aircraft. The successful automated landing demonstrates how aviation technology can handle life-threatening emergencies when pilots face incapacitation or complex situations, potentially reshaping future aircraft safety standards.
76% of sources are Original Reporting
Daily Briefing
Autoland first documented success; Moscow attacks; Burundi refugee crisis

273 Articles •
Three Killed in Moscow Blast Near General's Assassination Site
Left 42%
Center 35%
R 23%
What happened: Two traffic police officers and a third person were killed early Wednesday when an explosive device detonated as officers approached a suspicious individual on Yeletskaya Street in southern Moscow around 1:30 a.m. The blast occurred just two days after Lieutenant General Fanil Sarvarov was killed by a car bomb on a nearby street on Monday morning.
Why it matters: The explosion heightens security concerns in Moscow and marks the latest in a string of assassinations targeting Russian military figures since the 2022 invasion of Ukraine. Russian authorities are investigating possible Ukrainian intelligence involvement while forensic teams review CCTV footage and conduct explosives analysis to determine how the device was triggered and identify those responsible.
60% of sources are Original Reporting

19 Articles •
Nearly 90,000 Congolese Refugees Flee to Burundi Amid M23 Offensive
L 20%
Center 40%
Right 40%
What happened: Over 88,000 refugees fled South Kivu province in DR Congo to Burundi this month after M23 rebels captured Uvira and reignited fighting, displacing an estimated 500,000 people since early December. Overcrowded camps face dire conditions with limited food, water, and medical care, raising urgent epidemic risks including cholera, measles, and malaria.
Why it matters: Humanitarian agencies are urgently scaling up aid to over 210,000 displaced people but need $67 million for three months of assistance as health facilities are looted, schools remain closed affecting 391,000 children, and families face emergency food insecurity. MSF treats 200 patients daily while providing 25,000 liters of water and building a 50-bed cholera treatment center to prevent disease outbreaks.
89% of sources are Original Reporting

358 Articles •
Libya's Military Chief Dies in Turkey Jet Crash
Left 34%
Center 38%
Right 28%
What happened: Gen. Muhammad Ali Ahmad al-Haddad and four senior Libyan officers died yesterday when their Falcon 50 jet crashed near Ankara after reporting an electrical fault. The aircraft disappeared from radar 40 minutes after takeoff while attempting an emergency landing, killing all eight aboard including three crew members.
Why it matters: Al-Haddad was western Libya's top commander and central to UN efforts to unify the country's fractured military forces. His death removes a key figure in Libya's stability efforts and may complicate ongoing reconciliation between rival governments, prompting three days of national mourning.
72% of sources are Original Reporting

94 Articles •
Amazon Reportedly Has Blocked Over 1,800 North Korean Job Applicants Since April
L 20%
Center 37%
Right 43%
What happened: Amazon blocked more than 1,800 suspected North Korean operatives from securing remote IT jobs since April, detecting a 27% quarter-over-quarter increase this year. The applicants used stolen identities, hijacked LinkedIn accounts, and US-based 'laptop farms' operated remotely to evade detection and funnel wages to Pyongyang's weapons programs.
Why it matters: More than 300 US companies, including Fortune 500 firms, unknowingly hired North Korean IT workers between 2020 and 2022, risking intellectual property theft, legal consequences, and sanctions violations. One Arizona laptop farm scheme alone generated over $17 million in illicit revenue for North Korea before the operator was sentenced to eight years in prison.

48 Articles •
Pentagon to Deploy xAI's Grok to 3M Personnel
Left 31%
Center 31%
Right 38%
What happened: The Pentagon announced yesterday it will add xAI's Grok AI models to its GenAI.mil platform, targeting 3 million military and civilian personnel with early 2026 deployment. The integration includes real-time insights from X and IL5-certified handling of Controlled Unclassified Information, expanding the DoD's AI capabilities alongside Google's Gemini.
Why it matters: This controversial move raises safety and ethical concerns as Grok produced antisemitic responses and praised Hitler just this summer, yet will now handle sensitive military information. The integration reflects growing tech-defense ties and potential conflicts of interest, with critics warning about intertwining commercial AI platforms with national security operations.
81% of sources are Original Reporting

22 Articles •
Report Accuses Witkoff of Seeking to Out-Maneuver Rubio in Ukraine Negotiations
Left 54%
Center 31%
R 15%
What happened: Billionaire real estate developer Steve Witkoff, Trump's special envoy, traveled to Geneva in November ahead of Secretary of State Marco Rubio to meet Ukrainian officials without informing him, deepening a rift over Ukraine negotiations. Witkoff favors pressuring Ukraine to accept Russian demands quickly, while Rubio supports a firmer stance requiring territorial withdrawal, with tensions flaring again after stalled Miami talks last week.
Why it matters: This internal power struggle between Witkoff and Rubio could determine how the nearly four-year Ukraine war ends and reshape how allies and adversaries perceive U.S. credibility and foreign policy. Witkoff's unconventional approach using private jets, unsecure communications, and undisclosed meetings has triggered State Department reviews, while his alignment with Trump and Jared Kushner gives him significant influence over potential concessions to Russia.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting

71 Articles •
U.S. Signs Health Deals with Nine African Nations
Left 25%
Center 62%
R 13%
The details: The United States signed five-year health compacts with at least nine African countries including Nigeria, Kenya, Rwanda, and Uganda, replacing dismantled USAID programs. The deals provide 49% less annual US funding than 2024 levels while requiring substantial co-financing from recipient nations, with Nigeria receiving up to $2 billion while raising $2.9 billion domestically.
Why it matters: The shift marks a sharp reduction in US health assistance to Africa, leaving countries racing to fill funding gaps for critical HIV, malaria, and disease programs after aid cuts crippled health systems. Controversies include data-sharing provisions allowing 25-year retention of sensitive health information, emphasis on Christian facilities in Muslim-majority Nigeria, and concerns that deportation agreements influenced deal terms despite official denials.
68% of sources are High Factuality

66 Articles •
Garmin Autoland Makes Historic First Emergency Landing in Colorado
L 22%
Center 51%
Right 27%
What happened: A Beechcraft Super King Air 200 experienced rapid loss of pressurization after departing Aspen on December 20, triggering Garmin's Autoland system. The automated system flew the aircraft to Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport in Broomfield, Colorado, landing safely with two pilots aboard who were unharmed.
Why it matters: This marks the first real-world emergency use of Autoland technology, validating a safety system now installed on approximately 1,700 aircraft. The successful automated landing demonstrates how aviation technology can handle life-threatening emergencies when pilots face incapacitation or complex situations, potentially reshaping future aircraft safety standards.
76% of sources are Original Reporting