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Yesterday — 24 January 2026Homeland Security Newswire

U.S. Makes Exit from the WHO Complete | The Organic Industrial Base and the Risks of Competing Against Ourselves | Teenagers Are Pushing Himmler’s Favorite Myth, and more

By: Staff
24 January 2026 at 06:32
1/24/26
OUR PICKS
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Emerging Evidence Provides Basis for Opening Investigation of ICE Agent Who Killed Renee Good  (Julia Gegenheimer, Just Security)
The Justice Department’s refusal to investigate ICE Agent Jonathan Ross’s killing of Renee Good breaks with decades of DOJ civil-rights practice and standards.

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Footage, Documents at Odds with DHS Accounts of Immigration Enforcement Incidents

24 January 2026 at 06:48
1/24/26
THE ICE MESS
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As a growing number of encounters between civilians and Department of Homeland Security agents — including the widely scrutinized fatal shooting of Renee Good in Minneapolis — are scrutinized in court records and on social media, federal officials are returning to a familiar response: self-defense.

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How Not to Lead | America Needs a New Nuclear Nonproliferation Toolkit | China’s Military Is Seriously Rehearsing Around Taiwan, and more

By: Staff
24 January 2026 at 06:35
1/24/26
WORLD ROUNDUP
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How Not to Lead  (Fareed Zakaria, Foreign Policy)
America’s allies may comply for now. But the damage to trust will have consequences.

The Great Divorce  (Eliot A. Cohen, The Atlantic)
The marriage between Europe and the United States has been fraught from the first—and now it might be coming apart.

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Cutting Nuclear Power Plant Costs: Argonne Develops Framework for Smarter Maintenance

24 January 2026 at 08:33
1/24/26
NUCLEAR POWER
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Merge a multiphysics simulation with real nuclear reactor inspection data and the result is a revolutionizing tool that predicts component failure before it happens.

Researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory have developed an innovative framework to improve maintenance schedules for critical components in nuclear power plants. This breakthrough could save millions of dollars on operating costs while keeping power reliable.

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INL Advances Department of Defense’s Project Pele Demonstration Microreactor with First TRISO Fuel Delivery

By: Staff
24 January 2026 at 06:36
1/24/26
NUCLEAR POWER
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The recent delivery of advanced nuclear fuel to the Idaho National Laboratory’s Transient Reactor Test Facility marks a major milestone for Project Pele, a first-of-its-kind mobile microreactor prototype designed to provide resilient power for military operations.

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Before yesterdayHomeland Security Newswire

Trump Administration Sues Another State for Sensitive Voter Data

24 January 2026 at 06:46
1/23/26
ELECTIONS
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The Trump administration has sued another state — Virginia — in its quest to obtain sensitive voter data, despite two recent legal setbacks in suits against other states.

The Justice Department on Friday sued Susan Beals, the elections commissioner in Virginia, after months of seeking a copy of the state’s voter registration lists, including individual names, addresses, dates of birth and Social Security numbers.

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Why People Believe Misinformation Even When They’re Told the Facts

24 January 2026 at 06:44
1/23/26
TRUTH DECAY
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When you spot false or misleading information online, or in a family group chat, how do you respond? For many people, their first impulse is to factcheck – reply with statistics, make a debunking post on social media or point people towards trustworthy sources.

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Trump Administration Orders USDA Employees to Investigate Foreign Researchers They Work With

24 January 2026 at 06:40
1/23/26
SUSPICION
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The Trump administration is directing employees at the U.S. Department of Agriculture to investigate foreign scientists who collaborate with the agency on research papers for evidence of “subversive or criminal activity.”

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A New Method to Unlock Vast Lithium Stores

By: Staff
22 January 2026 at 06:42
1/22/26
CRITICAL MINERALS
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Demand for lithium is skyrocketing as factories across the world churn out electric vehicles and the massive batteries that make wind turbines and solar panels reliable sources of energy. Unfortunately, current methods for producing lithium are slow and require high-quality feedstocks that are found in relatively few locations on the planet. Ironically, the environmental costs are also significant: refining the mineral behind clean energy requires large amounts of land and pollutes water supplies that local communities depend on.

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Taiwan’s Drone Program Is Far Too Small | Indonesia’s Sea Lanes Give It Overlooked Leverage Over China | European Populists Broke with Trump on Greenland as National Goals Diverged, and more

By: Staff
22 January 2026 at 06:31
1/22/26
WORLD ROUNDUP
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Trump Returns to a Familiar Role: Sowing Trade Chaos  (Ana Swanson, New York Times)
The president’s quick reversal on tariffs over Greenland was another sign of his willingness to rip up the international order — even parts of it that he himself has made.

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ICE Is Pushing the Legal Envelope

22 January 2026 at 06:46
1/22/26
QUICK TAKES // By Ben Frankel
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An advisory by the legal unit at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has reportedly suggested that ICE agents may, in certain circumstances, enter private homes without a judicial warrant. The advisory has raised concern because the home occupies a uniquely protected position in American constitutional law. The legality of such entries turns not on immigration policy preferences but on Fourth Amendment doctrine, the distinction between judicial warrants and administrative warrants, and recognized exceptions to the warrant requirement.

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States, Cities Are Hard-Pressed to Fight Violent ICE Arrest Tactics

22 January 2026 at 06:46
1/22/26
ICE’S TACTICS
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State leaders who want to curb the increasingly violent arrest tactics of immigration enforcement agents in Minneapolis and elsewhere are struggling to push back.

They’ve promised civil rights legislation that could offer alleged victims another route to courts, ordered up official tribunals to gather video and other records, or asked cities to refuse requests to cooperate with raids. But for the most part, states looking for concrete ways to push back find themselves largely hamstrung.

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Bookshelf: Why the U.S. Failed to Contain North Korea’s Nuclear Threat

22 January 2026 at 06:40
1/22/26
NUCLEAR WEAPONS
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When Barack Obama took over the US presidency in 2009, North Korea could barely muster one nuclear weapon and had just a handful of missiles that could reach Japan. Yet despite tight international sanctions, tough external pressure and on-again-off-again negotiations, barely a decade later Pyongyang had managed to develop advanced nuclear weapons capable of striking cities in the continental United States.

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Hacking the Grid: How Digital Sabotage Turns Infrastructure into a Weapon

22 January 2026 at 06:36
1/22/26
POWER-GRID SABOTAGE
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The darkness that swept over the Venezuelan capital in the predawn hours of Jan. 3, 2026, signaled a profound shift in the nature of modern conflict: the convergence of physical and cyber warfare. While U.S. special operations forces carried out the dramatic seizure of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, a far quieter but equally devastating offensive was taking place in the unseen digital networks that help operate Caracas.

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Trump Is Keeping Coal on Life Support. How Long Can It Last?

22 January 2026 at 06:34
1/22/26
KING COAL
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Heading into President Donald Trump’s second term, coal looked like an industry nearing the end of its life. Utilities planned to retire more than half of the nation’s coal-fired power plants by 2028, no new facilities were coming online, and production had been flat for years.

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Small Boats and Shifting Threats: Britain Can't Keep Fighting Yesterday's Battle in the Channel

21 January 2026 at 06:45
1/21/26
BORDER SECURITY
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As 2025 drew to a close, the Council of Europe met for preliminary discussions on illegal migration, producing both a joint statement and a separate declaration by 27 countries, including the UK.

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How Trump Has Pocketed $1,408,500,000 in His First Year in Office | DOJ Is Now Trump’s Personal Law Firm | Pardoned by Trump, Jan. 6 Rioters to Demand Money from the Government, and more

By: Staff
21 January 2026 at 06:33
1/21/26
OUR PICKS: DEMOCRACY WATCH
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·  How Trump Has Pocketed $1,408,500,000  (Editorial Board, New York Times)
One year ago, Donald Trump took an oath to serve the American people. Instead, he has focused on using the presidency to enrich himself.
President Trump has never been a man to ask what he can do for his country. In his second term, as in his first, he is instead testing the limits of what his country can do for him.

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ICE Is Using Medicaid Data to Find Out Where Immigrants Live

21 January 2026 at 06:46
1/21/26
DEPORTATIONS
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In a win for President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown, a recent court ruling has cleared the way for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to resume using states’ Medicaid data to find people who are in the country illegally.

The case is ongoing. But for now, immigrants — including those who are in the country legally — will have to weigh the benefits of gaining health coverage against the risk that enrolling in Medicaid could make them or their family members easier for ICE to find.

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The Trump Administration’s Push for Greenland: What to Know

21 January 2026 at 06:44
1/21/26
GREENLAND GAMBIT
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U.S. President Donald Trump has continued to escalate his rhetoric about bringing Greenland, a semiautonomous territory of Denmark and the world’s largest island, under U.S. control. Trump argues that Greenland’s natural resources and strategic location in the Arctic make it vital to U.S. national security interests. “If we don’t do it, Russia or China will,” Trump told reporters in January.

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