What do the Hong Kong protests look like from inside the resistance? Our Ann Scott Tyson went to Hong Kong to burrow into the life of a protester. 聽
For today鈥檚 five hand-picked stories: a protester鈥檚-eye view of Hong Kong unrest, the importance of Georgia鈥檚 shifting politics, why LGBTQ rights are coming to the surface in Tunisia, the need for difficult conversations on climate change, and how holograms are redefining live music.
You might think, given the brouhaha over the hot mic that caught Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau commiserating with a few European leaders about working with a disrupter U.S. president named Donald Trump, that this week鈥檚 NATO leaders meeting in London was every bit as divisive and cacophonous as earlier alliance summits of the Trump era.
But in fact the meeting, meant to mark NATO鈥檚 70th anniversary, was comparatively harmonious and forward-looking 鈥 especially given the sense of foreboding that permeated most transatlantic experts鈥 expectations. 鈥淚t was a little like spring,鈥 says Alexander Vershbow, a NATO deputy secretary-general during the Obama presidency. 鈥淚n like a lion, out like a lamb.鈥
Yes, President Trump abruptly departed London after scrapping a press conference. Still, Mr. Vershbow says the meeting 鈥渆nded on a very positive note鈥 with 鈥渓eaders determined to project unity ... and avoid drama.鈥 Very different from last year鈥檚 summit in Brussels, he adds, which 鈥渆nded on a tense note.鈥
To say the least. I was at the Brussels summit, and I recall the hand-wringing of European officials who worried right up until Air Force One was 鈥渨heels up鈥 that President Trump just might pull the United States out of an alliance whose members he lambasted as freeloaders.
This year, he had mostly praise to offer his NATO counterparts for stepped-up defense spending (crediting himself for an upswing that began in 2014). He signed a final declaration that for the first time cites China as a NATO concern and names space as an 鈥渙perational domain.鈥
OK, so maybe the political side of the alliance showed some fissures. But that鈥檚 hardly new. As seasoned NATO hands like to say, when you鈥檙e dealing with 29 democracies, it comes with the territory.