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Daily News Brief

October 2, 2025

Welcome to CFR’s Daily News Brief. Today we’re covering U.S. President Donald Trump’s new security assurance for Qatar, as well as...

  • Australia and Papua New Guinea’s security pact

  • Lapsing U.S. trade benefits for Haiti and African countries
  • Pope Leo’s climate appeal
 
 

Top of the Agenda

The United States guarantees it will defend Qatar if it is attacked, including through the use of military force, Trump pledged in an executive order. The order was published yesterday and dated Monday. Qatar is already a major non-NATO ally of the United States, but this order offers a new level of support, with language that resembles NATO’s mutual defense clause. It comes in the wake of Israel’s attack targeting Hamas officials in Doha last month, which sparked security concerns among Gulf nations. Following the Doha strike, Saudi Arabia signed a mutual defense treaty with nuclear-armed Pakistan.

 

The details. The executive order states that the United States “shall regard any armed attack on the territory, sovereignty or critical infrastructure of the State of Qatar as a threat to the peace and security of the United States” and respond with “all lawful and appropriate measures—including diplomatic, economic, and, if necessary, militarily” to defend both countries’ interests and restore peace. U.S. defense treaties typically require Senate approval, an obligation Trump bypassed by issuing an executive order. That leaves the security guarantee more vulnerable in the long term, as executive orders can be undone by future presidents.


The context. Qatar has been shaken in recent months by both Israel’s September attack and Iran’s June attack on a U.S. airbase in Qatar, which came in response to U.S. attacks on Iranian nuclear facilities. The Israeli and Iranian attacks occurred despite Qatar’s already close security partnership with the United States. The new executive order struck some Trump supporters as contradicting his so-called America First approach by doubling down on U.S. military commitment in the Middle East.

 
 

“This is the equivalent of a defense treaty with Qatar of the sort the United States has with Japan and South Korea, or to NATO’s Article Five. But those commitments were made by treaty, and approved by the Senate…This is a commitment made by the president without any public discussion or debate or any congressional consultations, much less approval.”

—CFR expert Elliott Abrams tells the Financial Times

 

AGOA: The U.S.-Africa Trade Program

A worker sews at an export processing zone factory in Athi River, Kenya.

Thomas Mukoya/Reuters

The African Growth and Opportunity Act has been the cornerstone of U.S. efforts to cultivate deeper economic relations with sub-Saharan Africa since 2000, CFR’s Mariel Ferragamo, Helena Kopans-Johnson, and Ivana Lefebvre d'Argence write in this Backgrounder.

 
 

Across the Globe

Australia-Papua New Guinea treaty. The cabinet of Papua New Guinea (PNG) approved a mutual defense pact with Australia, paving the way for its signing. The treaty alliance, Australia’s first in more than seventy years, allows PNG soldiers to serve in Australia’s military. China, a major economic partner to PNG, indirectly criticized the pact, saying a bilateral treaty should not “prevent a sovereign country from cooperating with a third party.” 

 

UK synagogue attack. Two people were killed in an attack at a Manchester synagogue and the suspect is believed to be dead, local police said today. The attack is being investigated as terrorism and occurred on Yom Kippur, an important holiday. Prime Minister Keir Starmer is flying back early from a Denmark summit and said extra police assets would be deployed to British synagogues. The incident comes after German authorities yesterday said they detained three people who they suspect of being Hamas members and of planning to attack Jewish or Israeli institutions.

 

Expiring U.S. trade benefits. U.S. programs offering duty-free access to Haitian textile products and various African goods expired on Tuesday. African and Caribbean officials, as well as the American Apparel and Footwear Association, had called for their extension. An unnamed White House official told news organizations that the Trump administration supports a one-year extension of the Africa program.

 

Ruling on Fed governor. The U.S. Supreme Court will wait until January to hear arguments in a case over the Trump administration’s efforts to fire Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook. The court has backed Trump’s efforts to remove government workers from their posts in other cases. Trump is the first president to try to remove a Fed governor in the bank’s more than one-hundred-year history. 

 

Pope’s climate appeal. Pope Leo on Wednesday called for more global pressure on politicians to protect the climate and criticized people who “deride the increasingly evident signs of climate change.” His remarks came  a week after Trump called warnings about climate change a “con job” while speaking at the United Nations. Leo was speaking at an event marking the ten-year anniversary of the publication of Pope Francis’s 2015 climate treatise, which built momentum toward the Paris Agreement the same year.

 

Gaza aid boats blocked. Israeli forces intercepted more than a dozen boats sailing to provide humanitarian aid to Gaza and protest Israel’s war. Organizers of the flotilla—which included more than five hundred participants from dozens of countries—called the interception an “illegal attack” on humanitarians. Israel countered that the activists were “not interested in aid, but provocation.” Israel maintains a blockade around Gaza and tightly controls what aid can enter, even as Gazans in parts of the enclave have been suffering from famine. 

 

Argentina’s currency woes. A drop in the value of the Argentine peso led the country’s central bank to sell dollar reserves on Tuesday and Wednesday to try to prop it up. The interventions came after U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent pledged last week to provide U.S. economic support to shore up Argentine President Javier Milei’s reform program through mechanisms like the U.S. Treasury’s Exchange Stabilization Fund. Washington has yet to act on Bessent’s pledge.

 

U.S. stake in lithium firm. The U.S. government is taking a 5 percent stake in mining company Lithium Americas, which is developing a mine in Nevada. Energy Secretary Chris Wright said the deal “helps reduce our dependence on foreign adversaries for critical minerals.” It follows the government’s move to take a 10 percent stake in Intel, as well as a 15 percent cut of Nvidia and AMD’s chip sales to China. 

 
 

A Tribute to Jerome A. Cohen

Jerry Cohen sits in his office at New York University.

Eduardo Munoz/Reuters

Longtime CFR Senior Fellow Jerome A. Cohen was a legal pioneer, China expert, mentor, and friend. He passed away on September 22. CFR President Michael Froman and several others honor his legacy in this article.

 
 

What’s Next

  • Today, the European Political Community is meeting in Denmark.

  • Today, the U.S.-Japan Business Council’s flapship conference begins in Tokyo.

  • Tomorrow, parliamentary elections begin in the Czech Republic.

 
 

The Problem With Milei’s Approach in Argentina

U.S. President Donald Trump shakes hands with Argentina's President Javier Milei as they meet during the 80th United Nations General Assembly, in New York City, September 23, 2025.

Al Drago/Reuters

The U.S. Treasury needs to ensure Argentina is on a better policy path before Washington blows through its Exchange Stabilization Fund to support Buenos Aires, CFR expert Brad W. Setser and Oxford’s Stephen Paduano write in the Financial Times.

 
 

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