What We're Watching

NATO goes to the White House, Anthropic’s new model, Cameroon soldiers fighting in Russia

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte react as they meet at the Department of State in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 8, 2026.

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte react as they meet at the Department of State in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 8, 2026.

REUTERS/Anna Rose Layden TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

Anthropic limits the rollout of powerful new AI tool

Artificial intelligence giant Anthropic has built what it calls a powerful new AI model – but it is limiting access to it. On Tuesday, Anthropic said the technology will only be available to a group of 40 companies, like Amazon, Microsoft, and Apple, who will use it to locate and patch up security vulnerabilities in their software. But according to Anthropic, the model, named Mythos, broke out of its “sandbox” during testing and is capable of “circumventing” the company’s safeguards. The technology is reportedly capable of bringing down parts of the internet or even national defense systems. Anthropic said it has no plans to release the new model widely, citing concerns around cybersecurity risks and potential misuse.

NATO chief to meet with Trump administration

On a scale of awkward meetings, you’d have to give this one at least an 8 out of 10, as NATO Secretary General Mark Ruttecomes to the White House just days after Donald Trump called the alliance “a paper tiger.” Trump has long questioned the value of NATO to the US and, in recent years, has successfully browbeaten other members into spending more on defense. But transatlantic tensions have soared over the past month as European allies – jilted by Trump’s decision not to read them into his Iran war plans – rebuffed Washington’s demands that they help “open” the Strait of Hormuz. Rutte, however, is regarded as something of a Trump whisperer, even if his approach to the US president (whom he once called “Daddy”) strikes many Europeans as overly sycophantic. Can Rutte’s deft touch put the world’s most formidable military alliance back on firmer footing, or are the rifts only going to deepen from here on out?

Russia confirms Cameroon soldiers died fighting Ukraine

As the Russia-Ukraine war of attrition grinds ever onwards, Moscow acknowledged the death of 16 soldiers from Cameroon fighting on its behalf. This is fast becoming a trend: several African countries, including South Africa and Zimbabwe, have said their citizens were lured to Russia under false pretenses and sent into combat, while Ukraine claims 1,000 Kenyans have also been recruited to fight for Russia. From a Russian point of view, this makes a certain sense. They have not been able to replace their combat losses in any of the last four months. But keep perspective: Cameroon has 34,000 soldiers; the number of recruits involved is — at least for now — still essentially a rounding error. Russia isn’t alone in its use of foreign fighters, either. Citizens of 65 countries have contributed to Kyiv’s fight against Moscow.

More For You

Vietnam's Communist Party General Secretary To Lam receives a bouquet from National Assembly Chairman Tran Thanh Man after taking his oath as Vietnam's President in Hanoi, Vietnam, April 7, 2026.
National Assembly Handout via REUTERS

In an unprecedented move, Vietnam’s parliament has elected Communist Party Secretary General To Lam as state president for the next five years.

In this new episode of Tools and Weapons, Microsoft Vice Chair and President Brad Smith sits down with Ryan Roslansky, CEO of LinkedIn and EVP at Microsoft, for a timely conversation on how AI is reshaping the world of work. Drawing on insights from his new book, Open to Work, they explore how rethinking jobs as collections of tasks and treating skills as currency can help people, organizations, and economies adapt to a rapidly changing labor market. Watch the episode here.