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Missiles fell on a military academy in Ukraine.

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Russia intensified attacks on Ukrainian cities, including strikes on residential areas, as the government reshapes itself for a lengthening war.

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I'm Michelle Martin. That's Steve Inskeep, and this is Up First from NPR News. Israel's Prime Minister is facing increasingly pointed criticism over Gaza, both outside Israel and in, as protests there continue for a third day. Rivals accuse Benjamin Netanyahu of prioritizing his political survival over Israel's security. Is he losing his grip on power?

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Also, a longtime aide to New York State's governor is accused of secretly working for China. I'm furious and I'm outraged and absolutely shocked at how brazen her behavior was.

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It was a betrayal of trust.

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How deep does China's influence go? Stay with us. We've got the news you need to start your day.

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That's the indicator from Planet Money and NPR.

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Ukrainians received two reminders that they are far from the end of the war.

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Their President is reshaping his government for the next phase of the conflict, and Russia sent waves of missiles into the country, including some that landed on a military academy.

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Npr's Joanna Kikisis is covering this story from Kyiv, Ukraine. Joanna, what is this military academy?

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Steve, it's called the Military Communications Institute, and it's in the city of Polkava, in the central Eastern part of the country. Cadets there learn about digital innovation to help with drone and electronic warfare. We spoke to Denise Kleop. He's in charge of a local rapid response team in Polkava. He said the explosions at this academy were so intense that he felt them almost two miles away. When he arrived to the scene, He says he saw the worst tragedy he's witnessed in the war. He's saying, I have never seen so many dead bodies in one place and so mutilated. In some cases, I couldn't make out that this was a human being lying there. He said the injured were so dazed and that the missiles came so fast that there wasn't time to shelter.

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Wow. I want to try to get this in perspective, Joanna, because from this distance from the United States, We may lose track a little bit. Is this happening all the time to some degree that missiles are constantly raining on the country?

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Yes, it's a daily occurrence in Ukraine. There are strikes every day, but this last stretch, last couple of days has been especially bad. Last night, a university in the northeastern city of Sumi was hit, and early this morning, Russia launched guided missiles and drones all over Ukraine. A missile hit a residential building near a train station in Lviv, which is on the far west on the border with Poland. Officials there say at least seven people have died and more than a dozen are injured.

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How is Ukraine's government responding to these attacks?

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Ukraine's President, Volodymyr Zelensky, repeated something he said a lot, That the way to respond is for the White House to finally allow Ukraine to use these long-range weapons from the US to strike at military targets deep into Russia.

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He's saying Russian strikes will become absolutely impossible if Ukraine has the ability to destroy launch sites, military airfields, and logistics hubs.

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He's insisting that this will end the war sooner. The White House, though, is saying these strikes could actually escalate the war.

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Yeah, the concern is, of course, that at some point Russia brings in nuclear weapons. But haven't we already crossed this line? Because Ukraine has literally invaded a portion of Russia in recent weeks.

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Yeah, Ukraine's offensive into Russia's Kursk region shocked Everyone, including the Ukrainians themselves, Ukrainian troops now occupy part of that region. And Zelensky seemed to hope that it could force Russia to the negotiating table. But after the attacks of the last couple of days, that doesn't seem to be happening.

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What is happening, of course, is that Zelenskyy is reshaping the government. What is he doing?

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So he announced last night that he wanted to restructure state institutions, and shortly thereafter, all these letters of resignations from his cabinet started pouring in. This morning, Foreign Minister Dimitro Kuleba, he's one of the most prominent cabinet ministers, he also offered to resign. If parliament accepts these resignations, it's going to be the biggest shakeup since the war began, and it comes at such a precarious time because as Ukraine pushes forward with that offensive in Russia, it's also losing land to Russia in the East.

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Trying to reorganize for whatever may come next. Joanna, thanks so much. You're welcome. That's NPRs Joanna Kikisis. Israelis are growing even louder in demanding that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu make a ceasefire with Hamas.

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Days of protests have followed the news that Hamas killed six hostages just as Israeli troops were approaching the part of Gaza where they were. Now, the Prime Minister's critics do blame Hamas for the killings, but they accused Netanyahu of blocking a deal that could have brought the hostages home. Now, the critics include one of Israel's leading political figures who was Allied with the Prime Minister until recently.

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And Pierre Hadeel Al-Shalchi is in Tel Aviv and covering this story. Welcome. Thank you. Okay, that political leader is Benny Gantz, who's a former general and a veteran Israeli politician. What's he saying?

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Yeah, well, last night, Gantz came out fighting. He demanded Netanyahu, make a deal or quit. Gantz is the leader of the Centrist National Unity Party, and he was part of Israel's emergency war cabinet that was formed after October seventh. But then he quit in June, protesting Netanyahu's handling of the war. Last night, he said Netanyahu should, quote, hand over the keys and go home.

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Have a listen.. Netanyahu has lost his way.

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He sees himself as the state, and that's dangerous, Gantt said. Now, Gantt actually doesn't have enough influence to sway Netanyahu. I mean, Netanyahu's own defense minister has tried to get the Minister to accept a deal, and he refuses to. But Gantz's voice yesterday does add to the ever-growing pressure from inside Israel, and frankly, the world, for Netanyahu to just accept a deal and eventually end the war in Gantz.

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I want to work through the different viewpoints on what Netanyahu is doing. His critics contend that he's being obstinate for self-preservation, that his far-right coalition doesn't want the deal and they would unseat him, or that if the shooting were to stop, there would have to be an election that he would lose. Those are the theories against him. But I want to understand the way the Prime Minister describes his situation. The outlines of a deal are Israeli stop their assault, Hamas releases hostages. What does Netanyahu say is wrong with that deal?

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Well, the thing is, we don't know all the details of the ceasefire proposal that's on the table right now, but we do know that a major sticking point is the presence of Israeli troops on a strip of land called the Philadelphia border on the Gaza-Egypt border. Netanyahu is opposed to withdrawing Israeli troops from it. He says that Hamas could smuggle weapons through the tunnels under it and rebuild its military capabilities or even smuggle hostages the other way into Egypt. And Hamas wants the Israeli military to withdraw completely from the area, which actually is something that Netanyahu's own defense minister is ready to do and says it could be done relatively safely.

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Another one of the points of opposition between Netanyahu and some of his fellow Israelis. I want to ask about another news item. Just after these hostages were killed, including an American, the American Justice Department issued indictments against Hamas leaders. What's going on there?

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Right. So the Department of Justice announced last night that they were unsealing indictments of six Hamas leaders, including the group's head, Yehia Szehmar. He's believed to be somewhere in a tunnel under Gaza, directing operations. And the charges say that they carried out attacks that killed Americans, including Hirsch Goldberg, Poland. He was one of the hostages whose death sparked the mass protests in Israel in the past couple of days. And this is a largely symbolic movie. Three of those Hamas leaders named are already dead.

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Although I suppose others are alive and Israeli airstrikes continue and other kinds of strikes continue on Gaza, correct?

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Yeah. So in Gaza, the death toll mount. Latest figures after nearly 11 months of war is more than 40,800, according to health officials in Gaza. Evacuation orders continue displacing Palestinians numerous times to ever-shrinking so-called humanitarian zones, which are really just squalet and not all that safe. And also, Israel's largest military operation in the West Bank in almost two years continues. News. Israeli troops have encircled a number of urban refugee camps like Janine, saying they want to root out militants. Their Palestinian officials say 33 Palestinians have been killed so far in those raids, dozens of arrests, and Israel says militants have killed three Israeli police officers.

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Okay. Npr, Sadil Al-Shalchi in Tel Aviv. Thanks so much.

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You're welcome.

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Okay, Today, an aid to New York State's Democratic governor is accused of working secretly for China's government.

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The US Justice Department alleges that she was taking payments from China's Communist Party. Linda Sun and her husband, Chris Hu, pleaded not guilty late yesterday at a Brooklyn courthouse.

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And Paris Brian Mann is following all of this. Brian, good morning. Good morning, Steve. Okay, what does the indictment say?

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Yeah, it says that Linda Sun, who is an important player in New York politics and government for more than a decade, worked in secret for China early as 2016, failing to register as an agent of a foreign government. What the FBI says is that one of her missions, Steve, was to quietly use her influence to block New York officials from having contact with representatives of Taiwan. China of course, has worked for decades to isolate Taiwan diplomatically. Sun also allegedly rewrote official pronouncements issued by former New York governor Andrew Cuomo and the current governor, Cathy Hochul, shaping those announcements to be more pro-China.

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Okay, so working for different word choices by a New York state governor, what did China allegedly pay for that?

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According to the indictment, Beijing officials funneled millions of dollars in cash into businesses owned by Linda Sun's husband, Chris Hu. Money the couple allegedly disguised, in part by laundering it through luxury real estate. The FBI also says one Chinese government official, Steve, showed gratitude to the family by having a chef in the Chinese consulate in New York repeatedly send Nan Jing style salted duck. These payments and gifts allegedly continued for years. Again, to be clear, Sun and Who have pleaded not guilty to these charges. They're free on bond this morning with court-ordered restrictions on their travel.

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Okay, so a little bit of duck, a few million dollars. What does Governor Cathy Hochul say about these allegations against one of her own aides?

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Hochul says her team first identified misconduct by Sun last year and quickly fired her, reporting her alleged activity to law enforcement. Hochul spoke last night to NPR member WNYC.

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I'm furious and I'm outraged and absolutely shocked at how brazen her behavior was. It was a betrayal of trust. The scope of what she was capable of doing is shocking.

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Linda Sun also worked as a top aid to Grace Meng. When Meng was in the New York State Assembly, she's now a member of Congress from New York. Through much of that time, again, Steve, the FBI said she was actually working for China.

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Okay, so I'm trying to think this through, Brian. These are allegations about an aid to the governor of one state. I mean, a big and important state, but one American state. It makes me think that if these allegations were true, there must be a very widespread Chinese influence campaign in the United States.

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The FBI has been warning about this activity for years, urging government officials, state and federal to be vigilant. I spoke with Casey Michel, who's an expert on foreign lobbying in the US. He says there is evidence of influence networks funded by China that operate underground.

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We have seen, though, other suspicious, other shady, other potentially unregistered, potentially criminal Chinese-related foreign lobbying networks.

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Last month in a separate case, Steve, another New York resident, Xi Jun Wang, was convicted on federal charges. He worked as a spy on China's behalf. Prosecutors say Wang could be sentenced, stuck to 25 years behind bars. If they're found guilty, Linda Sun and Chris Who also face serious prison time.

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Are there other countries that are also trying to influence officials across the United States?

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Yeah, absolutely, I believe US officials say other governments are using similar criminal tactics. In July, NPR reported a former CIA analyst had been arrested for allegedly working as an undeclared agent for the South Korea government, maintaining secret ties as in that case, to South Korean intelligence officials for more than a decade. Then last month, former US Senator Bob Menendez from New Jersey resigned. He, of course, was convicted of taking bribes from Egyptian officials in exchange for secretly working on Egypt's behalf in Washington. The Justice Department describes these latest arrests in New York as another sign they're working aggressively to root out foreign agents and their schemes.

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Thanks for the reminder of the gold bars, Brian. Appreciate it. You've got That's NPR's Brian Mann. That's up first for this Wednesday, September fourth. I'm Steve Inskeep.

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And I'm Michelle Martin. Your next listen is Consider This from NPR. Supreme Court Justice Kataanji Cee Brown Jackson is sharing the story of her life in her new memoir, Lovely One. Hear how the first Black woman to sit in the Supreme Court was lifted up by her family. Listen to Consider This from NPR.

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Today's Up First was edited by Cary Cohn, Rebecca Rossman, Louise Clemens, Mohamed El Bardisi, and Jan Johnson, produced by Zyad Butch, Nia Dumas, and Lindsay Tate. We get engineering support from Nisha Hynes, and our technical director is Carly Strange.

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Join us tomorrow.

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