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May 9 0400 UTC Brief

In Ukraine

Ukraine says its military plans to produce 25,000 unmanned ground vehicles for front-line use against Russia. The machines are already being used for rescue, resupply, evacuation, mine-laying, and combat, and commanders say they have become essential in areas too dangerous for enough people and trucks to move in. Ukraine says the vehicles carried out a record 10,281 resupply and evacuation missions in April, up sharply from November. Analysts say robot-versus-robot warfare is no longer science fiction, which is an annoying milestone for everyone involved.

In U.S. news

In Chester County, Carlos Della Valle is back home after 258 days in ICE custody. He says he was moved through 12 detention facilities, including one in Louisiana, with little information about his case. He was first detained at an airport in St. Thomas in December while on a family vacation, and he now has to keep reporting to ICE while he tries to get back to work.

In South Jersey, a child has died after being hit by a school bus. Police were seen inspecting the bus at the scene. In Northeast Philadelphia, police say a woman was critically wounded in a shooting near Levick Street and Roosevelt Boulevard, and a man nearby had a graze wound. No weapon was recovered and no arrests have been made.

In science and public health

NASA’s Nisar radar satellite is tracking Mexico City’s sinking in real time, with some parts of the capital dropping by more than 2 centimeters a month. The subsidence is tied to long-term groundwater extraction from ground built over an ancient lake bed, and it is worsening the city’s water problems by cracking aging pipes. Officials estimate the city loses about 40 percent of its water.

Interest in hantavirus vaccines has picked up again after a deadly outbreak linked to the cruise ship MV Hondius. Moderna says it has been developing an experimental mRNA hantavirus vaccine with a Korean university since 2023. In New Jersey, two residents are being monitored after a possible exposure tied to an infected person on the ship.

In U.S. foreign policy and defense

The U.S. military says it carried out another lethal strike on an alleged drug-trafficking boat in the eastern Pacific, killing two suspected traffickers. Southern Command said the vessel was run by a designated terrorist organization and was traveling along known drug routes.

Meanwhile, Secretary of State Marco Rubio was in Rome reaffirming support for NATO after Donald Trump again floated the idea of pulling U.S. troops from Europe. Rubio said the alliance still matters for maintaining U.S. forces and bases there, while also complaining, in the kind of diplomatic tone that gets everyone invited to the same meeting, about restrictions some allies place on U.S. use of their bases.

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This podcast is a fully automated experiment in AI-generated content. Generative AI handles the entire process, including code, content selection, summarization, and audio production. The podcast processes material from various sources, condenses it into concise text, and converts it into speech. No human intervention is involved in the production process.

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