Credit...Tyler Hicks/The New York Times
Russia Threatens to Harden Its Stance on Ukraine
Plus, food trends for 2026. Here’s the latest at the end of Monday.
by https://www.nytimes.com/by/whet-moser · NY TimesRussia accused Ukraine of targeting a rural residence of Vladimir Putin’s in a drone attack, and officials informed the U.S. that they plan to revise “a number of previously reached agreements” in response. Russia has not shown clear-cut evidence of the attack, however, and Ukraine said Moscow had offered a fabrication in order to undermine peace talks.
President Trump and Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, had both given an upbeat assessment of their meeting at Mar-a-Lago over the weekend. No concrete progress was reported on the two thorniest issues — Russia’s demands for territory in southeast Ukraine, and security guarantees that would protect Ukraine against Russia — but for Zelensky, even a stalemate is a measure of success.
The security guarantees present the most complex obstacles, David Sanger writes. Zelensky has insisted that the U.S. protect Ukraine as if it were a member of NATO, a proposition Trump could find difficult selling to his base. Russia has not yet given up anything, and has not been formally asked to do so.
The first evidence from a U.S. boat strike washes ashore
Watching from a remote Colombian peninsula on Nov. 6, Erika Palacio Fernández whipped out her phone and unwittingly recorded the only verified and independent video of one of the Trump administration’s strikes in the Caribbean on boats the U.S. has accused of running drugs. Soon after, a scorched boat and two mangled bodies washed up.
The assortment of singed flotsam appears to be the first physical evidence of the U.S. campaign, which has destroyed 29 vessels and killed more than 100 people. Plastic packets that washed up were partly burned or melted and were empty except for sand, but some had traces of marijuana. Here’s what our reporters learned firsthand.
Related: Today, Trump reiterated his statement from Friday that the U.S. had attacked a drug trafficking facility in Venezuela, which would be the first known U.S. attack on land since he began his military campaign against the country. U.S. and Venezuelan officials have not confirmed the strike.
White House tells U.N. agencies to ‘adapt, shrink or die’
The Trump administration said it would provide $2 billion next year to fund U.N. humanitarian aid. The sum, though lower than past contributions, is likely to keep the U.S. as the biggest international donor. Humanitarian groups welcomed the news with cautious optimism.
A State Department official described the $2 billion as an initial commitment that could grow, but the department also warned that the funding was contingent on the U.N. making changes to reduce bureaucracy and that individual agencies would have to “adapt, shrink or die.”
The U.S. may follow Denmark on vaccines, alarming experts
In the new year, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the U.S. health secretary, is expected to announce that the country will adopt the childhood vaccine recommendations used in Denmark. Such a move would reduce the number of immunizations required for American children to 10 from 17, without the deliberative process that the U.S. has relied on for decades.
Public health experts point out that Denmark is an outlier among its European peers and wealthy nations, and that its minimal vaccine schedule is tailored to its universal health care system, which allows for more accessible and affordable disease screening and treatment.
More top news
- Gaza: Trump met with Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, and said that he thought reconstruction of the territory would begin soon.
- Iran: With the country’s currency collapsing and annual inflation at 42 percent, protesters took to the streets nationwide today.
- Weather: Ice storms that had battered the Midwest moved to New York and New England.
- Washington, D.C.: More performances were canceled after Trump’s renaming of the Kennedy Center.
- Business: Meet the new billionaires of the A.I. boom.
- Philippines: Ube, a bright purple yam, might be the next matcha. Farmers have struggled to meet global demand.
- Politics: We talked to 11 voters about the first year of Trump’s second term. Here’s what they told us.
- New York: Zohran Mamdani is leaving Queens for Gracie Mansion, the city’s mayoral residence in Manhattan. His new neighbors weren’t rooting for him.
- U.S.: Across the nation, new laws will take effect on Jan. 1. We have a roundup of some of the biggest changes.
- Profile: Marjorie Taylor Greene, the representative from Georgia who said she’d resign from Congress on Jan. 5, talked to Robert Draper at length about her split from Trump.
TIME TO UNWIND
What we’ll eat in 2026
Every year, my colleague Kim Severson consults an army of market researchers, food company executives, restaurant publicists and cooks to see how eating will change when the calendar flips. Right now, they see 2025’s wild ride of flavors giving way to “quiet luxury.”
That means warm, grounding foods that your grandma might have made, like sourdough bread and sauerkraut (call it “nonna-stalgia”). Vinegar could be the ingredient of the year, and diners will seek out hands-on rituals like tea ceremonies.
A year of ruckus in rock music
The 21st century has not been kind to rock. In recent years, the Grammy Awards haven’t even handed out the best rock album trophy during prime time. Generations of listeners have been trained on computer-tuned voices and metronomic beats, and A.I. promises more.
But that means there’s still traction in the longtime archetype of the rock band as a gang of unruly outsiders. The divisive critic’s darling Geese, the grungy, twangy Wednesday and the hardcore veterans Turnstile, who highlighted the year for Jon Pareles, are welcome signs of humanist obstinacy.
Dinner table topics
- An appraisal: Brigitte Bardot, who died yesterday at 91, embodied a changing France with her movies and her politics.
- Playtime is over: Youth sports have become increasingly professionalized, and many kids have burned out.
- Midcentury mission: A former private equity investor is mining design history to reboot overlooked gems.
- Party dress: For many Generation Z influencers, the brand Mirror Palais has become a go-to source of flirty frocks.
WHAT TO DO TONIGHT
Cook: To cover the New Year’s tradition of black-eyed peas, you can make Hoppin’ John.
Watch: Here are three great documentaries to stream.
Listen: We found seven podcasts for bookworms.
Read: Ben Markovitz’s poignant “The Rest of Our Lives” is shortlisted for the Booker Prize.
Exercise: Try these 10 tips to get moving in 2026.
Clean: Your clothes dryer is a great dusting tool.
Travel: Let an airline pilot be your guide to Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.
Play: Today’s Spelling Bee, Wordle and Mini Crossword. For more, find all our games here.
ONE LAST THING
Twins’ peaks
Eric and Matthew Gilbertson are twins, M.I.T.-educated mechanical engineers and climbers. And they share a hobby: correcting the height of the world’s mountains, one at a time.
It started when they decided to climb the highest mountain in every country. Satellite measurements have a margin of error, and the highest point can be in dispute. So when in doubt, the Gilbertsons climb competing peaks with surveying equipment. That’s how they found that Jabal Ferwa is the highest point in Saudi Arabia (10 feet higher than Jabal Sawda) and that Sare Firasu Hill is the highest point in Gambia.
Have a precise evening.
Thanks for reading. Matt will be back next week. — Whet
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