The Headlines - What to Know About the Cease-Fire Deal, and Biden Warns the Nation
Episode Date: January 16, 2025Plus, Drake sues his own music label. On Today’s Episode:Negotiators Agree to Long-Awaited Cease-Fire and Hostage Deal for Gaza, by Patrick Kingsley, Adam Rasgon, Aaron Boxerman, Ronen Bergman, ...Isabel Kershner and Peter BakerUpdates on the Cease-Fire Agreement, by Adam Rasgon and Aaron BoxermanIn Farewell Address, Biden Warns of an ‘Oligarchy’ Taking Shape in America, by Erica L. GreenJeff Bezos’ New Glenn Rocket Lifts Off on First Flight, by Kenneth ChangDrake Sues His Label, Calling Kendrick Lamar’s ‘Not Like Us’ Defamatory, by Joe Coscarelli 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.
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From the New York Times, it's the headlines. I'm Tracy Mumford. Today's Thursday, January
16th. Here's what we're covering.
Last minute disputes have come up surrounding the ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas.
Israel's cabinet has yet to meet to formally ratify it. And this morning, the office of
Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accused Hamas
of reneging on the agreement before it's even been put in place.
But a senior Hamas official says the group is committed to it.
Negotiators from Israel and Hamas agreed to the terms yesterday after 15 months of war.
And news of the agreement set off celebrations in the streets of Gaza.
In Israel, families of the remaining hostages held out hope that the deal would mean their
loved ones are returned soon. It's like a roller coaster. I'm not breathing right now.
We don't know if they're on the list, if they're alive. We actually don't know anything, so
know if they're on the list, if they're alive. We actually don't know anything, so it's scary. The Hamas-led attack that set the war in motion on October 7, 2023,
killed some 1,200 people in Israel. The Israeli bombings and raids that followed
killed some 45,000 Palestinians in Gaza and destroyed much of the territory.
The fighting is now set to stop Sunday for the first phase of a multi-step truce.
The deals largely with the Biden administration
pushed months ago.
Officials say pressure from the White House
and from the incoming Trump administration
helped push it over the finish line.
I think the general atmosphere,
the phrase I hear most is people are just holding their breath. There's a
lot of hope, but obviously a lot of trepidation as well because so much can go wrong.
Isabel Kirchner has been covering the negotiations. She got access to a draft of the ceasefire
agreement. She says the first phase of the deal is relatively straightforward. Over the
next six weeks, Israeli troops will pull back away from populated areas in Gaza. Hamas will release 33 hostages. But it will take a lot more negotiations
to continue the truce.
The next six weeks is supposed to take us into the second phase of the deal when the
rest of the hostages are supposed to be released. And that is extremely loosely worded how you transition from phase
one to phase two and is indeed yet to be negotiated. There has to be a negotiation which will deal
with the key fundamental stumbling block that we've had all along, which is the idea of moving from a temporary ceasefire
to a permanent cessation of hostilities,
or in other words, an end of the war.
So essentially, the biggest obstacles and problems
still remain to be resolved.
Meanwhile...
The Gazans that I spoke to were thrilled that the fighting was coming to a
halt, at least for a short while.
My colleague Aaron Boxerman has been on the phone with people in Gaza who are trying to
figure out what the deal will mean for life there.
The agreement calls for a surge of humanitarian aid, and it will allow many Palestinians to
return to parts of Gaza they were forced
to leave.
One woman described mixed feelings.
She was, of course, happy that the fighting might be coming to an end.
But she wondered whether she had any future with her family in devastated Gaza, whether
Gaza would ever be rebuilt and what their lives would look like.
Another person I spoke to believes his home in northern Gaza was destroyed, that he has
nowhere to go back to with his family.
He also wondered who would control Gaza when the dust settles.
If the war is ending, which it might be, would Hamas remain the most powerful force there.
Last night, President Biden addressed the nation in his farewell speech from the White
House.
And my colleague Peter Baker, the Times' chief White House correspondent,
was covering the event.
So President Biden didn't talk very much
about the accomplishments he feels quite proud of,
including his bringing the country out of the pandemic
and rebuilding the economy
and managing the war in Ukraine and so forth.
Instead of that...
I want to warn the country of some things
that give me great concern.
He was focused on where the country is going
in the future in a larger sense.
Today, an oligarchy is taking shape in America
of extreme wealth, power, and influence
that literally threatens our entire democracy.
He issued a particularly striking warning against an oligarchy that he sees emerging
as taking control, he argues, of the country.
And of course, that's a reference to Elon Musk and others in the billionaire circle
of Donald Trump, who in Biden's way of thinking are promoting their own interests over those
of the public.
By branding the incoming Trump circle as an oligarchy,
Biden is going straight at the attention
at the heart of the emerging White House.
Are they really populists intent on shaking up the government
to benefit working people
or just billionaire disruptors out to enrich themselves?
Now it's your turn to stand guard.
May you all be the keeper of the flame. May
you keep the faith. I love America. You love it too. And in the end, he wraps up by saying,
it's your turn now to the American public and saying, okay, as this new president comes in,
it's up to you to hold him accountable and to make sure that he follows the values
and the standards that America has come to know over these last two and a half centuries. Five, four, three, two, one. Early this morning in Cape Canaveral, Florida.
Lift off.
Jeff Bezos' space company, Blue Origin, launched its first rocket into orbit.
It's called New Glenn.
It's taller than the Empire State Building.
One minute into flight.
The launch marks the start of a new chapter in the private space race
as Bezos tries to catch up with Elon Musk and his company, SpaceX.
SpaceX is currently launching more than two rockets a week on average.
To try and match that, Bezos has poured billions of dollars of his own money into Blue Origin,
and he left his position as the CEO of Amazon in 2023 in part to focus on this.
Today's liftoff wasn't flawless.
The rocket's booster, which was supposed to touch down on a floating barge, crashed
landed instead.
But if Blue Origin starts making regular launches, it could shake up SpaceX's lock on the market.
Right now, NASA, the Pentagon, and commercial companies have few options other than SpaceX for getting things like satellites into space.
And finally, last year Kendrick Lamar and Drake dominated the billboard charts by
dropping deeply personal diss tracks about each other, one after the other. I said it, I know that you mad. I've emptied a clip over friendly a jazz.
You mentioned my seed and I deal with his dad.
I gotta go bad. I gotta go bad.
Now, the rap battle has turned into a legal battle.
On Wednesday, Drake sued Universal Music Group,
the record label that represents both of the artists,
for defamation and harassment.
The lawsuit centers on the song many considered to be Lamar's
winning blow over Drake. The track, Not Like Us, calls Drake and his crew
certified pedophiles. It's been streamed more than a billion times.
Drake's lawyers say the song put his reputation and life at risk by hiding, quote,
dangerous lyrics behind a catchy beat.
The album art for Not Like Us featured a photo of Drake's home, dotted with red markers meant to show it was full of registered sex offenders.
Drake's lawsuit points out there was then a shooting at his house, and other people tried to trespass on the property. In a statement, Universal Music
Group dismissed Drake's claim that the company valued profits over his safety and accused him
of trying to quote, weaponize the legal process to silence an artist's creative expression.
The lawsuit may only drive more interest in the song. It's up for Song of the Year at the Grammys next month, and Lamar is headlining the Super Bowl the week after.
Those are the headlines.
Today on The Daily, Times Jerusalem bureau chief Patrick Kingsley on what the ceasefire
could mean for the Middle East.
That's next in the New York Times audio app, or you can listen wherever you get your
podcasts.
I'm Tracy Mumford.
We'll be back tomorrow.