The New York Times: Θανατηφόρο χτύπημα των ΗΠΑ σε αρχηγό πολιτοφυλακής στη Βαγδάτη και αγώνας της Γερουσίας να περάσει βοήθεια για την Ουκρανία και το Ισραήλ – Η διαμάχη για το ποιος εφηύρε το κοτόπουλο – Ένα χτύπημα των ΗΠΑ σκότωσε έναν διοικητή πολιτοφυλακής – Οι Δημοκρατικοί αγωνίστηκαν να σώσουν βοήθεια για την Ουκρανία και το Ισραήλ – Ο Νετανιάχου απέρριψε, η προσφορά της Χαμάς για κατάπαυση του πυρός – Δύο ξεχωριστές εκρήξεις έξω από εκλογικά γραφεία στο Πακιστάν σκότωσαν τουλάχιστον 22 άτομα, μια θανατηφόρα υπενθύμιση της επιδείνωσης της κατάστασης ασφαλείας της χώρας που οδεύει προς τις εθνικές εκλογές σήμερα – Η Νίκι Χέιλι επέκρινε κατηγορηματικά το κόμμα της αφού έχασε τις προκριματικές εκλογές των Ρεπουμπλικανών στη Νεβάδα. Επιλογή ψηφοδελτίων για το “Κανένας από αυτούς τους Υποψηφίους.” – Μπορείτε να το αποκαλέσετε η μεγάλη σύγκρουση με κάρυ: Δύο οικογένειες στην Ινδία τσακώνονται για το ποιος εφηύρε το κοτόπουλο βουτύρου, ο παραδεισένιος γάμος κοτόπουλου tandoori και σάλτσα ντομάτας αγαπητός παντού όπου σερβίρεται φαγητό της Βόρειας Ινδίας – Πρέπει Το Ισραήλ, θα αποκλειστεί από τη Eurovision;

A man stares at the wreckage of a car on a street in Baghdad.
Viewing the scene of a deadly strike in Baghdad yesterday. Hadi Mizban/Associated Press

A U.S. strike killed a militia commander

A U.S. Special Operations drone strike in Baghdad killed a senior leader of Kata’ib Hezbollah, a militia that U.S. officials blame for recent attacks against American personnel, the Pentagon said.

A senior Kata’ib Hezbollah official and Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps both said that two commanders had been killed in the strike. A spokesman for Iraq’s security services said that the strike “violated Iraqi sovereignty and risked dangerous repercussions in the region.”

Kata’ib Hezbollah, based in Iraq, is considered a proxy of Iran. The U.S. considers the group a terrorist organization. A drone attack that officials attributed to the group killed three U.S. service members in Jordan late in January, leading President Biden to begin a campaign of retaliation.

U.S. officials have said they are focused on whittling down militias’ arsenals and deterring attacks against U.S. troops, without starting a broader war in the Middle East.

Analysis: National security experts and officials say privately that to truly degrade the capability of Iran-backed militias, the U.S. would have to carry out a yearslong campaign similar to the six-year effort to defeat the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.

Related: Iraq has allowed both U.S. and Iran-backed forces to operate on its soil, striking a delicate balance that is growing shaky.

Senator Chuck Schumer, wearing a blue suit and tie, answers questions from a throng of reporters.
Senator Chuck Schumer, the majority leader. Anna Rose Layden for The New York Times

Democrats struggled to salvage aid for Ukraine and Israel

Republicans in the Senate blocked a bill to pair tens of billions of dollars in aid for Israel and Ukraine with stringent border security measures, torpedoing a compromise that they had demanded before Donald Trump vocally opposed the bill.

Democrats tried to salvage the aid by advancing a stand-alone foreign aid bill stripped of the immigration measures. But the vote was delayed as some Republican senators demanded border changes — only hours after voting to tank the aid package that contained them.

Despite the delay, there were glimmers of hope that the aid package would eventually move forward, a remarkable turnaround after months of stalemate. Chuck Schumer, Democrat of New York and the Senate majority leader, said the chamber would hold a vote today.

Quotable: “Republicans have said they can’t pass Ukraine without border. Now they say they can’t pass Ukraine with border. Today, I’m giving them a choice,” Schumer said, adding, “I urge Republicans to take yes for an answer.”

Analysis: Officials said that the collapse of U.S. support for Ukraine was a real possibility, but they were focused on passing a bipartisan aid package.

A Palestinian boy sits on a bed in a room littered with debris.
A Palestinian boy inside his home in Rafah. Haitham Imad/EPA, via Shutterstock

Netanyahu rejected Hamas’s cease-fire offer

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel spurned a cease-fire proposal from Hamas, dashing hopes of a pause to the violence in Gaza.

He also said that Israel had directed its forces to prepare to operate in Rafah, a city on Gaza’s border with Egypt — and a refuge for more than one million Palestinians, more than half of the territory’s entire population.

According to a Lebanese daily newspaper with access to people familiar with the plan, Hamas’s proposal called for Israeli forces to eventually leave Gaza altogether and for Israel to release jailed Palestinians. In exchange, Hamas would free some of the roughly 100 hostages it still holds.

Israeli officials said that a key obstacle to Hamas’s plan was the demand that Israeli troops completely withdraw from Gaza.

“There is no solution besides total victory,” Mr. Netanyahu said.Continue reading the main story

THE LATEST NEWS

Europe News

Prince William, who will take on many duties while King Charles is treated for cancer, stepped back onto the public stage. Prince Harry flew to London to visit their father, then returned to the U.S. without meeting Prince William, according to a person familiar with their schedules.A Russian missile attack killed at least five people in Kyiv, Ukraine.

Around the World

A man wearing black stares at the wreckage of a car and motorbike after a bomb blast in Pakistan.
Banaras Khan/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Two separate explosions outside election offices in Pakistan killed at least 22 people, a deadly reminder of the country’s deteriorating security situation heading into national elections today.Despite civil-liberties concerns, the hard-line approach to gangs taken by President Daniel Noboa of Ecuador has drawn widespread support.

Other Big Stories

Nikki Haley speaks into a microphone.
Ruth Fremson/The New York Times
Nikki Haley emphatically criticized her party after she lost the Nevada Republican primary to a ballot option for “None of These Candidates.”NASA captured more interplanetary close-ups of Io, one of Jupiter’s moons, possibly showing a double volcanic plume spewing into space.Amateur soccer players in Ivory Coast play in inexpensive plastic sandals called lêkê instead of in fancy cleats.

Business News

For the first time in 20 years, the U.S. bought more goods from Mexico than from China.Our personal tech columnist tried Apple’s virtual reality headset and was “unconvinced that people will get much value from it.”Demand for electric vehicles like the Ford F-150 Lightning is waning in the U.S., as customers grapple with issues like “range anxiety.”

A Morning Read

A ladle pours a creamy curry into a bowl.
Anindito Mukherjee for The New York Times

You might call it the great curry clash: Two families in India are wrangling over who invented butter chicken, the heavenly marriage of tandoori chicken and tomato gravy beloved everywhere North Indian food is served.

Money and the legacy of a storied restaurant hang in the balance after one family took another to court over the dish’s origins. But foodies may not care about the details, as long as the dish tastes good.

SPORTS NEWS

A humiliating defeat: South Korea’s luck finally ran out as it lost to Jordan in the Asian Cup.

Cashing in on fake news: Tracking down the people making money from misinformation about Manchester United.

A new name and a fresh start: Stake, the Formula 1 team formerly known as Alfa Romeo, tries to stop its long slide with a makeover.

ARTS AND IDEAS
A man and a woman flank a singer in a black dress and hold her hands in the air while she clutches a microphone.
Regev D Zarka/Keshet 12

Should Israel be barred from Eurovision?

The Eurovision contest, in which singers representing dozens of countries compete before tens of millions of viewers, is not an obvious proxy for war. But as the civilian death toll in Gaza has mounted, there have been growing calls for Israel to be bared from this year’s competition.

Several prominent artist-led campaigns argue that recent decisions to exclude Russia and Belarus set a precedent and that Israel should be bared for human-rights violations. Eurovision officials reject those comparisons, but when Eden Golan, Israel’s 20-year-old entrant, competes, many voters are likely to consider more than just her singing.

RECOMMENDATIONS
A spoon scoops gooey macaroni and cheese from a bowl filled with it.
David Malosh for The New York Times

Cook: Caramelized onions make this macaroni and cheese outrageously good.

Antonis Tsagronis
Antonis Tsagronis
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