The Headlines - Israeli Strikes Kill Hundreds in Lebanon, and Biden to Address U.N.
Episode Date: September 24, 2024Plus, the U.S. News college rankings are out. Tune in every weekday morning. To get our full audio journalism and storytelling experience, download the New York Times Audio app — available to ...Times news subscribers on iOS — and sign up for our weekly newsletter.Tell us what you think at: theheadlines@nytimes.com. On Today’s Episode:In Lebanon’s Capital, Israel’s Strikes Stoke Fears of a Full-On War, by Christina Goldbaum and Hwaida SaadU.N. Meets Amid a Backdrop of Growing Chaos and Violence, by Farnaz FassihiU.S. to Seek Attempted Assassination Charge for Trump Golf Course Suspect, by Patricia Mazzei, Adam Goldman and Glenn ThrushMurder in U.S. Continues Steep Decline, F.B.I. Reports, by Tim ArangoThe U.S. News College Rankings Are Out. Cue the Rage and Obsession, by Alan Blinder
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From the New York Times, it's the headlines.
I'm Michael Simon Johnson.
Today's Tuesday, September 24th.
Here's what we're covering.
Israel and Hezbollah are trading fire this morning,
one day after an intense series of Israeli airstrikes left Lebanon reeling.
Yesterday, hundreds of people in Lebanon were killed
and over 1,500
were injured, according to the country's health ministry, making it the deadliest day of Israeli
attacks there in nearly two decades. Officials said dozens of women and children were among the dead.
The Israeli Air Force said it hit about 1,600 Hezbollah targets as part of an ongoing effort
to weaken the Iran-backed group that's been firing
on Israel for months in solidarity with Hamas. Hezbollah launched more than 150 rockets and
other weapons of its own into northern Israel yesterday, sending people scrambling for shelter.
Times correspondent Christina Goldbaum has been reporting on the escalating conflict
from Lebanon's capital. I'm in Beirut right now, where over the past few days,
people have become increasingly on edge, as this once kind of distant prospect of the country
spiraling into an all-out war with Israel has felt more and more like a real possibility.
You know, since Monday, schools have closed because administrators were worried about
airstrikes hitting the city. Fuel stations
have become absolutely packed as some people fill up their tanks and head to the mountains in the
north that they think are relatively safer in case there are many airstrikes in the city.
On Monday, I spoke to one woman, Lama Ejlul Sattar, who had brought her 10-year-old daughter
to work with her in a mall in Beirut that's just outside
of a neighborhood called Dahiya that's largely controlled by Hezbollah. And she told me that
she came to work that day with both her and her daughter's passports just in case they suddenly
had to evacuate the city. And as we spoke, she told me almost in a whisper so that her daughter
wouldn't hear, you know, death is very close,
very worried it's near. And she said that any decision I make might not be the right decision.
I'm not sure about anything, which is to say that that uncertainty in the city of what will come next is still hanging very heavy over folks who are trying to make these impossible decisions about what to do.
Meanwhile, the United Nations General Assembly kicks off today, bringing world leaders, including President Biden and the leaders of Israel, Lebanon, Iran, and Ukraine, to New York City.
International challenges are moving faster than our ability to solve them.
We see out-of-control geopolitical divisions
and runaway conflicts,
not least in Ukraine, Gaza, Sudan, and beyond.
In remarks ahead of the annual conference,
the UN Secretary General, Antonio Guterres,
described the global chaos that's the backdrop to the meeting.
Normally, as part of the General Assembly,
the UN Security Council holds one session on the sidelines.
This year, they're scheduled to hold three,
one on Ukraine, one on Gaza,
and a broader meeting about how the UN can resolve international crises at all.
Global institutions and frameworks are today totally inadequate
to deal with these complex and even existential challenges.
This General Assembly comes amid a really turbulent year for the UN itself.
It has really struggled to remain relevant in mediating conflicts
and in trying to play a political role.
Times reporter Farnaz Fasihi has covered the UN
for the past decade. You know, every year world leaders gather at the General Assembly and they
talk about the need for cooperation and diplomacy, but then they leave and nothing concrete comes out
of it. So there is also a reckoning here that both the UN as an institution and world powers have not really been able to do
what they're tasked to do at the UN, which is to mediate and prevent conflict. Guterres talks about
how the UN was created in the aftermath of World War II, and the world was very different 80 years
ago. And so part of what we're going to be also hearing this week is how to make it more adaptable to today's needs.
This morning, President Biden is expected to address the General Assembly.
It will be his fourth and final speech there as president.
And it comes as other world leaders are preparing for a new White House.
Many leaders are rushing to meet with Biden, Kamala Harris and Donald Trump during or after their visit to New York.
On Monday, I was in the federal courthouse in Florida,
where Ryan Ruth appeared for the second time in front of a judge.
Times reporter Patty Mazzei has been covering the investigation into the man who authorities allege was hiding with a loaded rifle
near where Donald Trump was golfing.
Just after he was arrested earlier this month, Ryan Ruth was charged with unlawful possession
of a firearm and having a firearm with a wiped out serial number. Now, federal prosecutors say
they will also charge Ruth with attempted assassination. What was interesting in the
lengthy hearing was that we started to get a look at the details of what information they have already gathered in the time since Ruth was arrested, including a note that they say was
written by Ruth. The note was in a box of items Ruth had left with a friend in North Carolina
several months ago. And in it, he wrote about his plans to carry out an assassination attempt on Trump. And he also
mentioned several times that the attempt might fail, which his defense lawyers suggested was a
sign of how unsophisticated and untrained Ruth was and how perhaps he intended to make more of a
statement than actually succeed in this assassination attempt. But prosecutors pointed to the note as evidence
that Ruth had been planning an assassination attempt for a long time.
Yesterday, the FBI released its annual report on crime in the United States,
and it shows a significant drop in violent crime
across the country. Notably, there was a remarkable 11.6% decline in the number of homicides last year
compared to the year before. It's the largest year-to-year drop in homicides since the FBI
started keeping national crime data in 1960. Overall, from 2022 to 2023, violent crime fell 3%.
And the number of other non-violent crimes also fell.
Burglaries were down about 8%,
and larceny, theft of personal property, was down about 4%.
The one exception was car thefts, which rose more than 12%.
Still, despite what the data shows,
a Gallup poll found that 77% of Americans believed crime was rising last year, even as it was falling.
Criminology experts tell The Times that people's perceptions of crime are often driven less by numbers and more by what they hear and feel in their communities, on influential, and if you're applying to any
kind of college in the U.S., they're probably also inescapable. Today, U.S. News & World Report
published its latest rankings of American colleges and universities. For decades, the list has been
a guide for students and parents, and a source of pride and or jealousy for schools. It's also faced intense criticism.
The Secretary of Education, Miguel Cardona, called it a, quote, false altar and said it has created
an obsession with selectivity in higher ed. In recent years, prominent schools like Yale and
Harvard pulled out of the rankings, saying they've skewed educational priorities. And U.S. News has been pressured to adjust its calculations to take
into account things like retention and graduation rates. Still, the publisher makes millions of
dollars a year from schools who pay to be able to license the famous U.S. News badge and brag
about their ranking. And many schools feel like they have to participate to catch students' attention.
With all that in mind,
the schools at the top of this year's list
for best university, best liberal arts college,
and best historically Black institution?
Princeton, Williams, and Spelman.
Those are the headlines.
Today on The Daily,
the story behind America's housing crisis and why it's so hard to fix.
That's next in The New York Times audio app or listen wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Michael Simon-Johnson. We'll be back tomorrow.