Pentagon and FAA agree to conduct anti-drone laser tests in New Mexico

The Pentagon and the Federal Aviation Administration agreed to conduct anti-drone laser tests in New Mexico after the military's deployment of the lasers led the FAA to suddenly close airspace in Texas twice in the last month.

Associated Press Cars cross the FILE - A Federal Aviation Administration sign hangs in the tower at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York, March 16, 2017. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File)

APTOPIX Mexico US Border

The newly announced testing was being carried out to "specifically address FAA safety concerns," the military said Friday in a statement. It was to take place Saturday and Sunday at the White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico.

Lawmakers were concerned about an apparent lack of coordination after the Pentagon allowed U.S. Customs and Border Protection to use an anti-drone laser in early February without notifying the FAA. The federal agency that ensures safety in the skies decided toclose the airspaceover El Paso for a few hours, stranding many travelers.

The Trump administration said it was working to halt an incursion by Mexican cartel drones, which are not uncommon along the southern border.

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On Feb. 26 the U.S. militaryused the laser to shoot downa "seemingly threatening" drone flying near the U.S.-Mexico border. It turned out the drone belonged to Customs and Border Protection, lawmakers said.

The incident led the FAA to close the airspace around Fort Hancock, about 50 miles (80 kilometers) southeast of El Paso.

"We appreciate the coordination with the Department of War to help ensure public safety," the FAA said of the testing, in a separate statement. "The FAA and DOW are working with interagency partners to address emerging threats posed by unmanned aircraft systems while maintaining the safety of the National Airspace System."

The military is required to formally notify the FAA when it takes anycounter-drone actioninside U.S. airspace.

Illinois Democratic Sen. Tammy Duckworth, the ranking member on the Senate's Aviation Subcommittee, called previously for an independent investigation after the two February incidents.

Pentagon and FAA agree to conduct anti-drone laser tests in New Mexico

The Pentagon and the Federal Aviation Administration agreed to conduct anti-drone laser tests in New Mexico after the mi...
China could see widespread use of brain-computer tech in 3-5 years, expert says

By Laurie Chen

Reuters

BEIJING, March 7 (Reuters) - China could see brain-computer interface (BCI) technology move into practical public use within three to five years as products mature, a leading BCI expert said, as ‌Beijing races to catch up with U.S. startups including Elon Musk's Neuralink.

Beijing elevated BCIs to a ‌core future strategic industry in its new five-year plan released this week, placing it alongside sectors such as quantum, embodied AI, 6G and ​nuclear fusion.

"New policies will not change things overnight. I think after another three to five years, we will gradually see some (BCI) products moving towards actual practical service for the public," said Yao Dezhong, Director of the Sichuan Institute of Brain Science, in an interview on Saturday on the sidelines of China's annual parliament meetings in Beijing.

A national ‌BCI development strategy released last year aims ⁠for major technical breakthroughs by 2027 and for China to cultivate two or three world-class firms by 2030.

China is the second country to launch invasive BCI human trials. ⁠More than 10 trials are active, matching the U.S., while scientists plan to enrol more than 50 patients nationwide this year.

Recent high-profile trials have enabled paralysed patients and amputees to regain partial mobility and operate robotic hands or intelligent wheelchairs.

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The ​government has ​already integrated some BCI treatments into national medical insurance ​in a few pilot provinces, and the domestic ‌market is projected to reach 5.58 billion yuan ($809 million) by 2027, according to CCID Consulting.

"China has many advantages in BCIs, such as its huge population, enormous patient demand, cost-effective industrial chain and abundant pool of STEM (science, technology, engineering and maths) talent," said Yao, who also leads a key neuroinformatics research centre under China's science and technology ministry.

Policies such as insurance integration and national standards aim to close the "huge" gap between scientific research, industry and ‌clinical applications, he said.

"The path from experimental to clinical trials ​is quite long, and this remains a problem," he told Reuters, ​adding that many Chinese hospitals have established BCI ​research labs to speed up the process.

While U.S. startups like Neuralink focus on invasive ‌chips that penetrate brain tissue, Chinese researchers are ​developing invasive, semi-invasive and non-invasive ​BCIs with wider potential clinical use.

Semi-invasive BCIs, placed on the brain's surface, may lose some signal quality but reduce risks such as tissue damage and other post-surgery complications. Neuralink's surgical robot can insert ​hundreds of electrodes into the brain in ‌minutes.

"This is a technical advantage, which I think is remarkable," said Yao, of Neuralink.

"(But) China ​is actually making very fast progress in this area now. In fact, Musk's direction is basically ​achievable domestically."

(Reporting by Laurie Chen. Editing by Mark Potter)

China could see widespread use of brain-computer tech in 3-5 years, expert says

By Laurie Chen BEIJING, March 7 (Reuters) - China could see brain-computer interface (BCI) technology move i...
Trump administration says Nashville reporter arrested by ICE will get due process

By Kanishka Singh

Reuters

WASHINGTON, March 6 (Reuters) - President Donald Trump's administration said on Friday a Colombian reporter for a Spanish-language news outlet in Tennessee, arrested by federal immigration ‌agents, will get due process.

The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested Estefany Maria Rodriguez ‌Florez, a journalist for Nashville Noticias, in the state capital on Thursday. She was taken to an ICE detention center ​and remains in custody.

ICE accuses her of violating her visa conditions. A lawyer for her was cited by local media as saying that "up until now, she hasn't had a case with ICE charging her with anything."

Rodriguez Florez has lived in the U.S. for five years and "frequently reports on stories critical ‌of ICE," her lawyers said ⁠in an emergency petition filed in federal court, saying she was arrested without a warrant.

ICE officers had an "administrative warrant" at the time of the arrest ⁠on Wednesday, an ICE spokesperson and a spokesperson of the Department of Homeland Security, of which ICE is a part, said on Friday.

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"She will receive full due process and remains in ICE custody pending the ​outcome ​of her immigration proceedings," the DHS spokesperson said.

ICE has ​been at the heart of Trump's ‌immigration crackdown, which rights advocates say violates free speech and due process, and has created an unsafe environment. Trump says his policies aim to curb illegal immigration and improve domestic security.

Rodriguez Florez had a meeting scheduled for March 17 with ICE's Enforcement and Removal Operations, her lawyers said. ICE previously twice rescheduled a meeting with her on her case, once due to a winter ‌storm and again when an agent could not find ​her appointment in the system.

Nashville Noticias said the reporter was ​with her husband outside a gym ​on Wednesday when the vehicle they were in, which was marked with the ‌media outlet's logo, was surrounded and she ​was detained.

Rodriguez Florez arrived ​in the U.S. on a tourist visa, filed for political asylum, later married a U.S. citizen and has a valid work permit, her lawyers say, adding that she and ​her husband have filed for permission ‌to adjust her status to lawful permanent resident.

The Trump administration alleges she was not ​authorized to stay in the U.S. beyond 2021 on her tourist visa.

(Reporting by ​Kanishka Singh in Washington; Editing by William Mallard)

Trump administration says Nashville reporter arrested by ICE will get due process

By Kanishka Singh WASHINGTON, March 6 (Reuters) - President Donald Trump's administration said on Friday...
US, Ecuador bomb drug trafficker camp near Colombia border, militaries say

By Jasper Ward and Alexandra Valencia

Reuters

WASHINGTON/QUITO, March 6 (Reuters) - The U.S. and Ecuador carried out a joint operation targeting drug trafficking ‌operations in the South American country, authorities in both countries ‌said on Friday, with the U.S. calling the move "lethal kinetic operations."

Neither the U.S. Southern Command, ​a branch of its military that oversees forces in Latin America, nor Ecuador's defense ministry, said if anyone was killed or captured in the strike, which Ecuador dubbed operation "Total Extermination."

The operations used helicopters, aircraft, river boats and drones ‌to locate and bomb ⁠a drug traffickers' training camp in north-east Ecuador near the Colombian border, Ecuador's defense ministry said in a statement.

The ⁠camp belonged to the Comandos de la Frontera (CDF), a Colombian crime group made up of FARC dissidents, and had a capacity for 50 people, it ​added.

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Ecuadorean President ​Daniel Noboa has made a military ​crackdown on organised crime a ‌cornerstone of his administration, and his government imposed tariffs on its larger neighbor Colombia, accusing it of not doing enough to fight drug trafficking.

He is set to travel to Miami this weekend to take part in the Trump administration's "Shield of the Americas" summit, which brings together many right-wing ‌leaders across the region with a focus ​on regional security and organized crime.

"The United ​States is a key ally ​in this fight," the defense ministry said.

"At the request ‌of Ecuador, the Department of War ​executed targeted action to ​advance our shared objective of dismantling narco-terrorist networks," Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell wrote on X.

The operation followed a similar U.S-Ecuadorean operation ​announced by the U.S. ‌Southern Command earlier this week.

(Reporting by Jasper Ward in Washington, Alexandra ​Valencia in Quito and Sarah Morland in Mexico City; Editing ​by Christian Martinez and Diane Craft)

US, Ecuador bomb drug trafficker camp near Colombia border, militaries say

By Jasper Ward and Alexandra Valencia WASHINGTON/QUITO, March 6 (Reuters) - The U.S. and Ecuador carried out ...
Noem's firing is little comfort to Minneapolis residents struggling to recover from crackdown

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Daniel Hernandez's grocery store in south Minneapolis has served Latino families for over 5 years, but he says it's on the verge of closing due to lasting economic damage from the nation's largest immigration enforcement crackdown.

Associated Press Minnesota civil rights activist Nekima Levy Armstrong, center left, and Jaylani Hussein, executive director of the Minnesota chapter of the Council on Islamic-American Relations, speak at a news conference in Minneapolis on Friday, March 6, 2026, on the ouster of Kristi Noem as secretary of the Department of Homeland Security. (AP Photo/Steve Karnowski) Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, center, with her husband Bryon Noem, right, seated behind her, appears for an oversight hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, March 3, 2026. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Noem Minnesota

Many of Hernandez's customers have continued to stay home or drastically reduce their spending, and 10 of the 12 Latino small businesses that rent space from him remain shuttered, he said in an interview Friday. Even though President Donald Trump's administration scaled back the crackdown earlier, and the presidentfired Kristi Noemas homeland security secretary on Thursday, many are still feeling the ripple effects.

Hernandez, an immigrant from Mexico, said only one business, an Ecuadorian ice cream shop, has been able to reopen since December,when the immigration crackdown began.

"I don't know if my business will survive, being honest," Hernandez said. "The amount of damage is so big that I am afraid."

The fall of Noem

Noem was pushed out amid mounting criticism over her leadership, including her handling of the crackdown and the aftermath of the shooting deaths of two Minneapolis residents by federal officers, Renee Good and Alex Pretti.

It's not clear how many Immigration and Customs Enforcement and other federal officers are left in Minnesotaafter peaking around 3,000at the height of the surge. Noem put the number at 650 in her congressional testimony this week.

But U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar told Minnesota Public Radio that White House border czar Tom Homan called her to say that total was incorrect, and they've cut backto their original numberof a little over 100 ICE officers, plus some additional agents working on fraud investigations.

ICE and Homeland Security officials did not immediately respond to emails seeking details Friday.

Many businesses are still struggling

Like Hernandez's Colonial Market, many businesses owned by immigrants or that cater to them are still struggling from sharp drops in sales.

"Instead of spending $150, now they spend $30, $40," Hernandez said.

Other customers stopped coming in altogether — either because they were afraid of being detained, regardless of their legal status, or because money is tight from being unable to work.

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey said last month that small businesses have collectively lost tens of millions of dollars in revenue. He estimated the federal immigration operation cost thecity's economy $203 millionin January alone and led 76,000 people to experience food insecurity.

Activists credit community organizing

"We warn our community that the fight is not over," said Jaylani Hussein, a Somali American who is executive director of the Minnesota chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, at a news conference Friday. "It is a good day to say good riddance to Kristi Noem. But it's not a good day to walk away from the fight."

The sense among many activists is that the intense community organizing against the surge played a decisive role in the administration backing down. And they say it sparked the formation of strong neighborhood networks that will live on and continue to push for social justice.

Minneapolis resident Patty O'Keefe, who wasdetainedin January for following a federal officer's vehicle, said she's happy to see Noem go but it will take more to bring about real change.

"It's a sign that we're winning, that the Trump administration feels like they have to make a change to save face because they're losing public support and losing the narrative," she said. "And I think it's a testament to the hard work of Minnesotans who fought back against this war of political retribution and xenophobia that has been and continues to be waged against us."

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Brandon Sigüenza, who was detained with O'Keefe, said the mood isn't celebratory because the crackdown is ongoing.

"I don't think Minneapolitans are necessarily dancing in the streets. Because there's still no justice for Renee Good, there's still no justice for Alex Pretti," Sigüenza said.

Minneapolis psychologist Lucy Olson helped organize a covert grassroots network that swelled to 2,000 volunteers assisting around 500 immigrant families with legal matters, shelter, food and rent assistance. She said that after the crackdown, the mutual aid systems that formed will continue to respond to community needs.

"For those of us who had the honor of participating as volunteers, I think we will never be the same," Olson said. "I think there's been cross-cultural friendships, the opportunity to build out neighborhood networks that have changed the face of our city."

Charges still against 39 indicted in church protest

Nekima Levy Armstrong,a local civil rights activist and lawyer, said at the news conference with Hussein that Noem should have been fired after the deaths of Good and Pretti.

Levy Armstrong, an ordained nondenominational Christian reverend, is also one of39 people indictedfor their alleged roles in aprotest in Januaryat a St. Paul church where a pastor, David Easterwood, is a top local ICE official. She said that she'd been praying for a day like Thursday when Noem was fired.

"So while we celebrate the fact that this woman has been removed from her high perch — where she thought she was untouchable, she thought she could literally allow these agents to get away with murder — we recognize that this system is very broken," Levy Armstrong said.

Safety for school children

Brenda Lewis, superintendent of Fridley Public Schools in suburban Minneapolis, said Noem's firing "doesn't really matter" because the safety of children in her school district is still impacted.

Fridley, which has students from many Somali and Ecuadorian families, has been the site of heightened ICE activity over the past two months. Federal vehicles were found in neighborhoods near the schools and at the homes of school board members.

Of the around 2,700 students in the district, more than 112 have unenrolled, Lewis said. Another 400 are in virtual learning. The district has also lost $130,000 in revenue because of lower participation in meal programs.

"It's not a Democrat or a Republican issue," Lewis said. "It's about children's safety, and we need to really come together and ensure that this absolute removal of safety for school children by a federal agency can never ever happen again in the state or the country."

GOP lawmakers in Minnesota have muted reaction

While the state's top Republican leaders had generally supported Noem's leadership of the surge, they've been mostly silent on her downfall. A message seeking comment from U.S. House Majority Whip Tom Emmer — the state's most powerful Republican — was not immediately returned Friday.

But GOP state Sen. Jim Abeler, a moderate from suburban Anoka, noted that he wrote Noem in January expressing "grave concerns" about actions by some of her officers in Minnesota.

"With her departure, I hope that what happened in Minnesota won't happen anywhere else," Abeler said in a statement.

Brook reported from New Orleans, while Raza reported from Sioux Falls, S.D.

Noem's firing is little comfort to Minneapolis residents struggling to recover from crackdown

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Daniel Hernandez's grocery store in south Minneapolis has served Latino families for over 5 years...

 

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