Daily Briefing
Superflu spikes global hospitalizations; Japan reboots nuclear after Fukushima; Lemon-shaped exoplanet

34 Articles •
Pentagon to Deploy xAI's Grok to 3M Personnel
L 20%
Center 30%
Right 50%
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.
79% 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

67 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.
70% of sources are High Factuality

19 Articles •
UK Police to Scrap Non-Crime Hate Incident System
7%
Center 29%
Right 64%
What's happening: Police leaders plan to scrap the recording of non-crime hate incidents, replacing the system with a common sense checklist that focuses only on the most serious anti-social behaviour cases. The College of Policing and National Police Chiefs' Council will present recommendations to the Home Secretary next month, ending a practice in place since 2005.
Why it matters: Incidents will no longer appear on crime databases or background checks for job applications, freeing officers to focus on criminal investigations rather than online disputes. Over 133,000 non-crime hate incidents have been recorded since 2014 across England and Wales, with critics arguing the system diverts police resources and restricts freedom of speech.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Left Sources
95% of sources are Original Reporting

36 Articles •
Pakistan Signs Arms Deal Worth Over $4 Billion With Libya
L 20%
Center 30%
Right 50%
The details: Pakistan finalized a $4 billion arms deal with Libya's eastern-based Libyan National Army last week, covering JF-17 fighter jets, trainer aircraft, and land and sea equipment to be delivered over two-and-a-half years. The agreement was sealed after Pakistan's military chief Field Marshal Asim Munir met with LNA deputy commander Saddam Khalifa Haftar in Benghazi.
Why it matters: This marks one of Pakistan's largest-ever weapons exports and raises questions about compliance with the UN arms embargo on Libya in place since 2011. Pakistani officials claim the embargo has become a "paper restriction" as multiple countries continue supplying arms to Libyan factions, though any transfer officially requires UN approval.
72% of sources are Original Reporting

88 Articles •
Canada Names Mark Wiseman U.S. Ambassador
Left 54%
Center 32%
R 14%
The appointment: Prime Minister Mark Carney named Mark Wiseman, 55, a former Canada Pension Plan Investment Board CEO and BlackRock executive, as Canada's ambassador to the United States. Wiseman assumes the role February 15 and will lead negotiations for the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement review starting mid-January, replacing outgoing ambassador Kirsten Hillman.
Why it matters: More than $3.5 billion in goods and services cross the Canada-U.S. border daily, with over 85% currently tariff-free under USMCA. The 2026 trade agreement review comes as President Trump has imposed tariffs up to 35% on most Canadian goods, including steel, aluminum, lumber and automobiles, threatening billions in trade that affects Canadian workers, businesses and key industries.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
60% of sources are High Factuality

43 Articles •
Indian Student Jailed in Russia Joins Army, Surrenders
Left 45%
C 23%
Right 32%
What happened: Sahil Mohammad Hussain, a 23-year-old student from Morbi, Gujarat, traveled to Russia in January 2024 on a student visa. He was arrested in April 2024 on alleged drug charges, offered military service to avoid seven years in prison, given 15 days of training, deployed to Ukraine's frontline, and immediately surrendered to Ukrainian forces who recorded his appeal and sent it to his mother.
Why it matters: Of 202 Indians recruited into Russian forces since 2022, 26 have been killed and seven are missing, with 119 discharged and 50 still serving. Prime Minister Modi raised the issue with President Putin during his December visit, and Foreign Secretary Misri warned Indian citizens to avoid any offers to join the Russian military as hundreds may be trapped in similar false drug case schemes.
95% of sources are Original Reporting
Daily Briefing
Superflu spikes global hospitalizations; Japan reboots nuclear after Fukushima; Lemon-shaped exoplanet


34 Articles •
Pentagon to Deploy xAI's Grok to 3M Personnel
L 20%
Center 30%
Right 50%
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.
79% 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

67 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.
70% of sources are High Factuality

19 Articles •
UK Police to Scrap Non-Crime Hate Incident System
7%
Center 29%
Right 64%
What's happening: Police leaders plan to scrap the recording of non-crime hate incidents, replacing the system with a common sense checklist that focuses only on the most serious anti-social behaviour cases. The College of Policing and National Police Chiefs' Council will present recommendations to the Home Secretary next month, ending a practice in place since 2005.
Why it matters: Incidents will no longer appear on crime databases or background checks for job applications, freeing officers to focus on criminal investigations rather than online disputes. Over 133,000 non-crime hate incidents have been recorded since 2014 across England and Wales, with critics arguing the system diverts police resources and restricts freedom of speech.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Left Sources
95% of sources are Original Reporting

36 Articles •
Pakistan Signs Arms Deal Worth Over $4 Billion With Libya
L 20%
Center 30%
Right 50%
The details: Pakistan finalized a $4 billion arms deal with Libya's eastern-based Libyan National Army last week, covering JF-17 fighter jets, trainer aircraft, and land and sea equipment to be delivered over two-and-a-half years. The agreement was sealed after Pakistan's military chief Field Marshal Asim Munir met with LNA deputy commander Saddam Khalifa Haftar in Benghazi.
Why it matters: This marks one of Pakistan's largest-ever weapons exports and raises questions about compliance with the UN arms embargo on Libya in place since 2011. Pakistani officials claim the embargo has become a "paper restriction" as multiple countries continue supplying arms to Libyan factions, though any transfer officially requires UN approval.
72% of sources are Original Reporting

88 Articles •
Canada Names Mark Wiseman U.S. Ambassador
Left 54%
Center 32%
R 14%
The appointment: Prime Minister Mark Carney named Mark Wiseman, 55, a former Canada Pension Plan Investment Board CEO and BlackRock executive, as Canada's ambassador to the United States. Wiseman assumes the role February 15 and will lead negotiations for the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement review starting mid-January, replacing outgoing ambassador Kirsten Hillman.
Why it matters: More than $3.5 billion in goods and services cross the Canada-U.S. border daily, with over 85% currently tariff-free under USMCA. The 2026 trade agreement review comes as President Trump has imposed tariffs up to 35% on most Canadian goods, including steel, aluminum, lumber and automobiles, threatening billions in trade that affects Canadian workers, businesses and key industries.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
60% of sources are High Factuality

43 Articles •
Indian Student Jailed in Russia Joins Army, Surrenders
Left 45%
C 23%
Right 32%
What happened: Sahil Mohammad Hussain, a 23-year-old student from Morbi, Gujarat, traveled to Russia in January 2024 on a student visa. He was arrested in April 2024 on alleged drug charges, offered military service to avoid seven years in prison, given 15 days of training, deployed to Ukraine's frontline, and immediately surrendered to Ukrainian forces who recorded his appeal and sent it to his mother.
Why it matters: Of 202 Indians recruited into Russian forces since 2022, 26 have been killed and seven are missing, with 119 discharged and 50 still serving. Prime Minister Modi raised the issue with President Putin during his December visit, and Foreign Secretary Misri warned Indian citizens to avoid any offers to join the Russian military as hundreds may be trapped in similar false drug case schemes.
95% of sources are Original Reporting