NASA counts down for first crewed lunar mission in half a century

By Joey Roulette

Reuters

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida, April 1 (Reuters) - NASA is set to launch four astronauts as soon as Wednesday evening on a 10-day flight around the moon, marking the most ambitious U.S. space mission in decades and a major step toward returning humans ‌to the lunar surface before China's first crewed landing.

NASA mission managers on Monday polled "go" to launch the Artemis II mission's towering, 322-ft (98-m) ‌Space Launch System (SLS) rocket topped with the astronauts' Orion crew capsule as early as 6:24 p.m. EDT (2224 GMT) on Wednesday.

It will launch from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida just one ​pad away from where the last moon-bound astronauts of the U.S. Apollo program lifted off more than half a century ago.

The Artemis II crew includes NASA astronauts Christina Koch, Victor Glover and Reid Wiseman and Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen, who landed in Florida from Houston on Friday.

They had been in a two-week quarantine leading up to liftoff and spent time with their families over the weekend at the Kennedy Space Center's beach house, a spot where astronauts rest before blasting off ‌into space.

"Certainly all indications are right now, we are ⁠in excellent, excellent shape as we get into count," launch director Charlie Blackwell-Thompson told reporters on Monday.

Weather conditions appeared favorable for an on-time liftoff, with only a 20% chance of souring within the agency's two-hour launch window on Wednesday. If ⁠the weather worsens and triggers a scrub, NASA could try again to launch any day until April 6, after which it would wait until April 30 for its next opportunity.

The launch had originally been planned for as early as February 6, and then March 6, until a pesky hydrogen leak prompted NASA to roll the rocket ​back ​to its vehicle assembly building for scrutiny.

FARTHEST TRIP IN HISTORY

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The Artemis II mission will ​send the crew on a winding, nearly 10-day journey around ‌the moon and back, sending them some 252,000 miles (406,000 km) into space - the farthest humans have ever traveled.

The current record for the farthest spaceflight at roughly 248,000 miles is held by the three-man crew of the Apollo 13 lunar mission in 1970, which was beset by technical problems after an oxygen tank exploded and was unable to land on the moon as planned.

Humans have not left Earth's orbit since the final Apollo mission in 1972.

NASA launched its first Artemis mission without crew in 2022, sending the gumdrop-shaped Orion spacecraft on a similar path around the moon and back.

Artemis II will pose a greater ‌test of Orion and the SLS rocket. The astronauts on board will test critical life-support ​systems, crew interfaces and communications. They will also take manual control of Orion in space ​roughly three hours after launch to test its steering and maneuverability, ​a key feature should its automated systems fail.

Lockheed Martin builds Orion, while Boeing and Northrop Grumman have led the development ‌of SLS since 2010, a program partly known for its ​ballooning costs at an estimated $2 billion to $4 ​billion per launch.

Elon Musk's SpaceX andJeff Bezos' Blue Origin are racing to develop lunar landers that NASA will use to put its astronauts on the lunar surface.

The Artemis II mission is a key early step in the agency's multibillion-dollar Artemis program that envisions a long-term ​settlement on the lunar south pole. NASA is pressing ‌hard to land its first crew of astronauts there on the Artemis IV mission by 2028, before China does around 2030.

Artemis III ​had been set to be the agency's first astronaut moon landing, but new NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman in February added an ​extra test mission before the landing.

(Reporting by Joey Roulette; Editing by Jamie Freed)

NASA counts down for first crewed lunar mission in half a century

By Joey Roulette CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida, April 1 (Reuters) - NASA is set to launch four astronauts as soon as...
US Supreme Court considers Trump's effort to limit birthright citizenship

By Andrew Chung

Reuters

WASHINGTON, April 1 (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court is set on Wednesday to consider the legality of President Donald Trump's directive to restrict birthright citizenship in the United States, a contentious plan tied to his efforts to curb immigration that would upend the long-held understanding of a key constitutional provision.

The ‌justices will hear arguments in his administration's appeal of a lower court's decision that blocked his executive order directing U.S. agencies not to recognize the citizenship of ‌children born in the United States if neither parent is an American citizen or legal permanent resident, also called a "green card" holder.

Trump plans to attend the arguments, according to his official schedule.

His policy violated citizenship language in the ​U.S. Constitution's 14th Amendment as well as a federal law codifying birthright citizenship rights, the lower court found, acting in a class-action lawsuit by parents and children whose citizenship is threatened by the directive.

Limiting who qualifies for citizenship at birth is a top priority for the Republican president, who issued the order last year on his first day back in office as part of a suite of policies to crack down on legal and illegal immigration. Critics have accused him of racial and religious discrimination in his approach to immigration.

The 14th Amendment has long been interpreted as guaranteeing citizenship ‌for babies born in the United States, with only narrow exceptions ⁠such as the children of foreign diplomats or members of an enemy occupying force.

The provision at issue, known as the Citizenship Clause, states: "All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they ⁠reside."

The administration has asserted that the phrase "subject to the jurisdiction thereof" means that being born in the United States is not enough for citizenship, and excludes the babies of immigrants who are in the country illegally or whose presence is lawful but temporary, such as university students or those on work visas.

Citizenship is granted only to the children of those whose "primary allegiance" is to the United States, including ​citizens ​and permanent residents, the administration has argued. Such allegiance is established through "lawful domicile," which lawyers for the administration ​define as "lawful, permanent residence within a nation, with intent to remain."

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'BIRTH TOURISM'

The ‌administration has said that granting citizenship to virtually anyone born on U.S. soil has created incentives for illegal immigration and led to "birth tourism," by which foreigners travel to the United States to give birth and secure citizenship for their children.

An eventual ruling by the Supreme Court endorsing the administration's view could affect the legal status of as many as 250,000 babies born each year, according to some estimates, and require the families of millions more to prove the citizenship status of their newborns.

The 14th Amendment was ratified in 1868 in the aftermath of the Civil War of 1861-1865 that ended slavery in the United States, and overturned a notorious 1857 Supreme Court decision that had declared that people of African descent could never be U.S. citizens.

Concord, ‌New Hampshire-based U.S. District Judge Joseph Laplante last July let the challenge to Trump's order by these ​plaintiffs proceed as a class, allowing the policy to be blocked nationwide.

The challengers have said the Supreme Court already ​settled the question of birthright citizenship in an 1898 case called United States v. ​Wong Kim Ark, which recognized that the 14th Amendment grants citizenship by birth on U.S. soil, including to the children of foreign nationals.

The administration ‌contends that the 1898 precedent supports Trump's order because, according to the ​court's ruling in that case, at the time ​of his birth, Wong Kim Ark's parents had permanent domicile and residence in the United States.

The Supreme Court is expected to rule by the end of June.

The court last year gave Trump an initial victory in the birthright citizenship context in a ruling restricting the power of federal judges to curb presidential policies nationwide. Though arising from ​early-stage judicial rulings declaring Trump's directive unconstitutional, the court's ruling did ‌not resolve its legality.

The court, which has a 6-3 conservative majority, has backed Trump on other major immigration-related policies since he returned to the presidency. It ​let Trump expand mass deportation measures on an interim basis while legal challenges play out, such as ending humanitarian protections for migrants or allowing them to ​be deported to countries where they have no ties.

(Reporting by Andrew Chung; Editing by Will Dunham)

US Supreme Court considers Trump's effort to limit birthright citizenship

By Andrew Chung WASHINGTON, April 1 (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court is set on Wednesday to consider the leg...
Luigi Mangione due in court in bid to delay federal trial over CEO killing

By Luc Cohen

Reuters FILE PHOTO: Luigi Mangione attends an evidentiary hearing in the murder case of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, at the Manhattan Supreme Court in New York, U.S., December 18, 2025. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/Pool/File Photo FILE PHOTO: Luigi Mangione attends an evidentiary hearing in the murder case of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, at the Manhattan Supreme Court in New York, U.S., December 18, 2025. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/Pool/File Photo

FILE PHOTO: Luigi Mangione appears at the Manhattan Supreme Court

NEW YORK, April 1 (Reuters) - Luigi Mangione, the man accused of gunning down a health insurance executive in Manhattan, is due in federal court on Wednesday for ‌a hearing on his bid to delay a trial on charges that could land ‌him in prison for the rest of his life.

In-person jury selection is currently scheduled to begin on September 8 for Mangione's ​federal trial on stalking charges stemming from the December 4, 2024 killing of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson. Opening statements are scheduled for October 13.

Lawyers for Mangione, 27, are seeking to delay the federal trial until January because he also faces a separate trial on New York state murder charges starting on June 8. ‌They argue that the overlapping schedules ⁠would inhibit Mangione's ability to prepare for the federal trial.

"Mr. Mangione is now in the position of needing to prepare for two complicated and serious trials ⁠at the same time," his lawyers wrote in a March 18 letter to Manhattan-based U.S. District Judge Margaret Garnett.

Mangione has pleaded not guilty to all charges.

PROSECUTORS OPPOSE DELAY

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Prosecutors with the Manhattan U.S. Attorney's office have said ​they oppose ​delaying in-person jury selection and opening statements in the ​federal case.

But they said in a March ‌21 court filing that they were open to modifying the timeline for distributing and reviewing screening questionnaires to roughly 800 prospective jurors to make sure Mangione has the chance to evaluate them. The questionnaires are currently scheduled to be distributed on June 29.

Mangione has been jailed since his arrest in Pennsylvania five days after the shooting death of Thompson, who led UnitedHealth Group's health insurance business, outside a ‌Hilton hotel in midtown Manhattan.

DEATH PENALTY OFF THE TABLE

Mangione ​initially faced a possible death sentence in the federal case. ​That was taken off the table in ​January, when Garnett dismissed the federal murder charge he faced. Garnett called that ‌charge legally incompatible with the two stalking charges ​he still faces. Federal ​murder statutes carry different legal requirements than comparable state laws.

Mangione could still face a life sentence if convicted of the federal stalking charges and 25 years to life in prison if ​found guilty at the state trial.

While ‌public officials widely condemned Thompson's killing, Mangione became a folk hero of sorts to ​some Americans who decry high costs for U.S. medical care and health insurer practices.

(Reporting ​by Luc Cohen in New YorkEditing by Bill Berkrot)

Luigi Mangione due in court in bid to delay federal trial over CEO killing

By Luc Cohen FILE PHOTO: Luigi Mangione appears at the Manhattan Supreme Court NEW YORK, April 1 (Reuters) -...
Trump says U.S. strongly considering NATO exit, Telegraph newspaper says

LONDON, April 1 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump said he ‌was strongly considering pulling ‌the United States out of NATO ​after allies failed to back U.S. military action against Iran, according to an interview with Britain's ‌Daily Telegraph.

Reuters

Trump ⁠described the alliance as a "paper tiger" and said ⁠removing the United States from the defence pact was now "beyond ​reconsideration," the ​newspaper reported. ​He said he ‌had long held doubts about NATO's credibility.

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"Oh yes, I would say [it's] beyond reconsideration," Trump told the newspaper when asked about ‌whether he would ​reconsider U.S. membership ​of the ​alliance after the conflict.

"I ‌was never swayed by ​NATO. ​I always knew they were a paper tiger, and Putin ​knows ‌that too, by the way."

(Reporting ​by Sam Tabahriti; editing ​by Michael Holden)

Trump says U.S. strongly considering NATO exit, Telegraph newspaper says

LONDON, April 1 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump said he ‌was strongly considering pulling ‌the United States out ...
Chinese chipmakers claim nearly half of of local market as Nvidia's lead shrinks, IDC says

By Che Pan and Laurie Chen

Reuters

BEIJING, April 1 (Rtrs) - Chinese GPU and AI chip makers captured nearly 41% of China's AI accelerator server ‌market last year, erodingNvidia's once-dominant position in one of its ‌most important overseas markets, according to data from an IDC report reviewed by Reuters.

The gains ​come as Beijing grows increasingly cautious about dependence on foreign chips, pushing government agencies and companies to adopt domestic alternatives after successive waves of U.S. export controls cut China off from Nvidia's most advanced products.

Total shipments of AI accelerator cards ‌by Nvidia, AMD, and ⁠Chinese chipmakers reached approximately 4 million units in China in 2025, the data showed.

Nvidia remained the market leader, shipping around ⁠2.2 million cards and holding a 55% share. But that figure marks a significant retreat for the U.S. chipmaker, which held a dominant market share in China's ​AI chip ​market. AMD carved out a modest ​presence, shipping roughly 160,000 cards for ‌a 4% share, the IDC data showed.

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Chinese vendors collectively shipped 1.65 million cards, accounting for 41% of the total market — a milestone that underscores how aggressively domestic players have moved to fill the void left by tightening U.S. export controls.

Huawei Technologies emerged as the runaway leader among Chinese vendors, shipping ‌around 812,000 AI chips, roughly half of all ​domestically branded shipments. Alibaba's chip design unit ​T-Head claimed second place, shipping ​approximately 265,000 cards.

Baidu's Kunlunxin and Cambricon each shipped around 116,000 ‌cards, ranking them jointly third among ​Chinese vendors.

Hygon, GPU startups ​MetaX and Iluvatar CoreX accounted for 5%, 4% and 3% of total Chinese vendor shipments, respectively.

In 2025, the central government launched a new ​wave of AI infrastructure ‌spending, with local governments accelerating intelligent computing centers across provinces, many ​of which carried implicit directives to "buy Chinese."

(Reporting by Che Pan and ​Laurie Chen, Editing by Louise Heavens)

Chinese chipmakers claim nearly half of of local market as Nvidia's lead shrinks, IDC says

By Che Pan and Laurie Chen BEIJING, April 1 (Rtrs) - Chinese GPU and AI chip makers captured nearly 41% of Chi...
South Korea and Indonesia expand cooperation on defense and energy as Mideast war disrupts markets

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korea and Indonesia agreed Wednesday to expand cooperation in defense industries, technology and supply chains as their leaders pledged to upgrade their strategic partnership in face of uncertainties stemming from the war in the Middle East, Seoul's presidential office said.

Associated Press Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto, left, and South Korean President Lee Jae Myung pose for a photo before their meeting at presidential office in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (Kim Do-hun/Yonhap via AP) Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto, left, and South Korean President Lee Jae Myung walk toward for the welcoming ceremony at presidential office in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (Kim Do-hun/Yonhap via AP) Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto, third left, and South Korean President Lee Jae Myung, second right, attend a meeting at presidential office in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (Kim Do-hun/Yonhap via AP)

South Korea Indonesia

After a summit in Seoul between PresidentLee Jae Myungand Indonesian PresidentPrabowo Subianto,the two governments issued a joint statement pledging deeper economic ties and continued cooperation on joint defense projects, including fighter jets, trainer aircraft and anti-tank missile systems.

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The two countries agreed to deepen cooperation on supply chains for energy, critical minerals and other resources. Lee described Indonesia as a vital source of natural gas and coal amid global energy disruptions caused by the war in the Middle East.

According to Lee's government, South Korean companies will receive about 820,000 tons of liquefied natural gas from Indonesia this year, enough to power all of the country's gas-fired plants for about 12 days.

The leaders expressed satisfaction with the two countries' cooperation in developing South Korea's homegrown KF-21 supersonic fighter, a program launched in 2015 with Indonesia as a partner. The first of these planes were rolled out last week and South Korea reportedly plans to export 16 of them to Indonesia.

South Korea and Indonesia expand cooperation on defense and energy as Mideast war disrupts markets

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korea and Indonesia agreed Wednesday to expand cooperation in defense industries, technol...
Man due in court after pedestrians struck in UK city of Derby

LONDON (AP) — A man is set to appear in court Wednesday on charges related to an incident in which a car plowed into pedestrians enjoying a night out in the English city of Derby over the weekend, sending seven people to the hospital.

Associated Press A forensic investigator works on the scene in Friar Gate, Derby, Sunday March 29, 2026, where a number of people had been injured, some of them seriously, after being hit by a car in the city centre on Saturday night. (Jacob King/PA via AP) Forensic investigators work on the scene in Friar Gate, Derby, Sunday March 29, 2026, where a number of people had been injured, some of them seriously, after being hit by a car in the city centre on Saturday night. (Jacob King/PA via AP)

Britain Pedestrians Struck

Sandhu Ponnachan, 36, has been charged with six counts of causing grievous bodily harm with intent, one count of attempted grievous bodily harm and one count of possession of a bladed article, the Derbyshire Constabulary said.

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Counterterrorism officers assisted local police in the investigation, but Derbyshire police said that is common practice for this type of incident and they were "keeping an open mind" about the incident.

The incident occurred at about 9:30 p.m. Saturday on Friar Gate, a popular night spot in central Derby, a city of about 275,000 people northeast of Birmingham.

The victims, four men and three women, were aged between 36 and 52. Four have been discharged from hospital, Derbyshire police said.

Man due in court after pedestrians struck in UK city of Derby

LONDON (AP) — A man is set to appear in court Wednesday on charges related to an incident in which a car plowed into pede...

 

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