Washington scrambles to do harm management after a significant leak of US categorised paperwork, revealing delicate data on the warfare in Ukraine. Plus, road papers are offering homeless distributors with a supply of revenue and a voice.
Washington is coping with the largest United States intelligence leak in a decade. Among the many secrets and techniques already revealed: delicate data on the warfare in Ukraine and proof of the US spying on its allies. American officers are in diplomatic harm management mode, attempting to handle the protection of a narrative that reveals no signal of letting up.
Contributors:
Anatol Lieven – Eurasia programme director, Quincy Institute for Accountable Statecraft
Anton Barbashin – Editorial director, Riddle
Idrees Ali – Nationwide safety correspondent, Reuters
Lucy Birge – Russian media specialist and open-source researcher
On our radar:
Producer Flo Phillips seems to be into leaks of a distinct variety at Fox Information. An upcoming lawsuit and a bunch of personal textual content messages, made public, flip an interview with former President Donald Trump into a clumsy affair.
Avenue papers altering the notion of homelessness
“Avenue papers” are a part of the media panorama worldwide – offering the unhoused distributors who promote them an revenue, and the audiences that learn them tales surrounding homelessness. Producer Johanna Hoes seems to be into Avenue Roots, a paper based mostly in Portland, Oregon, telling the phrase on the road, from the bottom up.
Contributors:
Israel Bayer – Director, Worldwide Community of Avenue Papers North America
Dumpsta D – Vendor and poet, Avenue Roots
Karen Flemming – Vendor, Avenue Roots
Chris Herring – Professor of sociology, UCLA
Nettie Johnson – Vendor and author, Avenue Roots
DeVon Pouncey – Vendor program director, Avenue Roots
Kaia Sand – Government director, Avenue Roots