
Ukraine-Russia peace talks in Geneva & Europe tightens sanctions on Russia - News (Feb 18, 2026)
February 18, 202610m 35s
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Today's topics: Ukraine-Russia peace talks in Geneva - US envoy Steve Witkoff says the Switzerland talks showed “meaningful progress,” but Kyiv remains wary as Russia holds to maximalist demands and Ukraine seeks firm Western security guarantees. Europe tightens sanctions on Russia - The EU is weighing a 20th sanctions package, including a potential ban on maritime services for Russian oil tankers and new anti-circumvention steps targeting re-exports via high-risk countries such as Kyrgyzstan. Sweden warns of hybrid threats - Sweden’s MUST intelligence service says Russia is escalating hybrid activity and risk-taking in the Baltic region, with pressure likely to persist regardless of how the Ukraine war develops. Russia upgrades long-range air missiles - RUSI analyst Justin Bronk reports wider Russian use of R-37M air-to-air missiles on Su-35s, extending theoretical engagement ranges to around 200 miles and complicating NATO air planning. US-Iran nuclear talks and threats - Indirect US-Iran nuclear talks in Geneva, mediated by Oman, produced agreement on “guiding principles,” as military posturing grows with US deployments and Iranian drills near the Strait of Hormuz. Kenya rolls out twice-yearly PrEP - Kenya received 21,000 starter doses of Lenacapavir for HIV prevention, a long-acting injectable PrEP given twice yearly, supported by Global Fund and additional expected US supply for phased rollout. New CRISPR light-based cancer test - Researchers report an ultra-sensitive optical blood sensor combining CRISPR-Cas12a, quantum dots, DNA nanostructures, and second-harmonic generation to spot trace cancer biomarkers at sub-attomolar levels. Ethiopia’s fast shift to EVs - After banning fossil-fuel car imports and cutting EV tariffs, Ethiopia has pushed EV adoption to nearly 6% of vehicles, leveraging cheap hydropower but still facing charger shortages and grid gaps. Japan exports surge despite tariffs - Japan’s January exports jumped 16.8% led by Asia and Europe, while US-bound shipments fell amid tariff pressure—markets cheered as the yen firmed and equities gained.
Episode Transcript
Ukraine-Russia peace talks in Geneva
Let’s start with the latest on the war in Ukraine and the diplomatic push around it.
In Switzerland, US special envoy Steve Witkoff said negotiations between Ukraine and Russia produced “meaningful progress,” as delegations prepared to enter a second day of talks in Geneva on Wednesday. Still, the mood music from Kyiv is cautious. President Volodymyr Zelensky has pushed back on what he sees as uneven pressure from President Donald Trump—arguing it’s “not fair” to press Ukraine to compromise without the same public scrutiny directed at Russia.
The gaps remain wide. Moscow is sticking to sweeping demands, including that Ukraine hand over the rest of the Donbas region—something Ukraine rejects outright. Russia currently occupies roughly 20% of Ukrainian territory, including large parts of eastern Donbas. Zelensky says any settlement needs strong Western security guarantees, and he indicated Ukraine is prepared to refrain from strikes under a US proposal presented to both sides.
Reporting from Russian media described Tuesday’s six-hour session as tense, with talks happening in a mix of bilateral and trilateral formats. Witkoff and Jared Kushner reportedly played mediation roles, while Putin aide Vladimir Medinsky led the Russian delegation. The timing is notable: these talks land just a week before the fourth anniversary of Russia’s full-scale invasion, and both sides continue to report overnight drone attacks—an unmissable reminder that diplomacy is happening in parallel with active combat.
Europe tightens sanctions on Russia
That diplomacy is also colliding with a harder line from Europe.
EU economy commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis says the bloc is prepared to go further—potentially adopting a full ban on maritime services for Russian oil tankers even if the G7 doesn’t move as one. This is being discussed as part of the EU’s planned 20th sanctions package, which Brussels hopes to finalize around February 24th.
If that maritime-services ban happens, it would effectively sideline the oil price-cap mechanism inside EU jurisdiction, because EU firms would be barred from servicing Russian tankers regardless of the sale price. Some member states are wary—Greece, for example, has warned it could accelerate “deflagging” and strengthen Russia’s shadow fleet, while also shifting advantage to competitors outside the EU.
Another key idea in the package: using the EU’s Anti-Circumvention Tool for the first time, aiming to curb diversion of sensitive goods—like computer numerical machines and radios—through third countries. Kyrgyzstan is in the spotlight, after EU exports there surged from about €263 million in 2021 to €2.5 billion in 2024, raising fears some of that machinery may be finding its way to Russia’s war effort.
This is all unfolding as many European leaders watch the Switzerland talks with skepticism, and as EU leaders prepare visits to Ukraine around the anniversary date.
Sweden warns of hybrid threats
On the security front in Northern Europe, Sweden is also sharpening its warnings.
Thomas Nilsson, the head of Sweden’s military intelligence service MUST, says Russia has stepped up hybrid activity and appears more willing to take risks in Sweden’s vicinity—particularly around the Baltic Sea region. His assessment is blunt: the trend is likely to continue whether Russia “wins” or “fails” in Ukraine. Success could embolden Moscow; failure, he argues, could breed desperation and renewed risk-taking.
MUST’s annual review again labels Russia as the main military threat to Sweden and to NATO, warning that the danger may grow as Russia pours more resources into its armed forces and reinforces capabilities around the Baltic.
Russia upgrades long-range air missiles
And there’s a specific military development that defense watchers say matters for NATO air operations.
RUSI analyst Justin Bronk reports that Russia is increasingly arming Su-35 fighter jets—and also Su-30SM2s—with the long-range R-37M air-to-air missile. The headline detail is range: the R-37M is believed to reach roughly 200 miles in ideal conditions, far beyond the older R-77-1’s estimated range of about 62 miles, though real-world effectiveness depends on many factors.
Bronk’s point isn’t that every shot lands at maximum distance; it’s that routine fielding of a longer-reach weapon changes the threat picture and can push opposing aircraft to operate more cautiously. RUSI has also linked the missile’s Ukraine-war performance to factors like speed, seeker design, and Ukraine’s limitations in radar warning receivers—while noting NATO aircraft generally have more robust warning systems.
He also estimates Russia’s Su-35 fleet has grown since 2020, despite wartime losses—suggesting Moscow has managed to replenish and expand capability in ways some early-war forecasts didn’t expect.
US-Iran nuclear talks and threats
Now to the Middle East, where diplomacy is active—but backed by unmistakable military signaling.
A second round of indirect nuclear talks between the US and Iran has ended in Geneva, hosted at the Omani mission and mediated by Oman. Iran’s foreign minister Abbas Araqchi says the sides reached an understanding on the main “guiding principles,” but emphasized that significant work remains. The US has not yet publicly commented on the outcome.
The atmosphere around these talks is tense. President Trump said he believes Iran wants a deal, but warned of “consequences” if it doesn’t—pointing to last summer’s US strikes on Iranian nuclear sites and arguing an agreement could have avoided that escalation.
Iran, for its part, says it wants the discussion centered on its nuclear program and the lifting of US economic sanctions, while Washington has previously signaled it also wants to address issues like missile development. Meanwhile, BBC Verify has tracked a US military build-up in the region, including reports of the USS Gerald R Ford deploying alongside more destroyers, combat ships, and fighter jets.
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei rebuked US threats in characteristically sharp terms, warning that the danger isn’t only the aircraft carrier—it’s the weapon that could sink it. And Iran’s IRGC has staged a maritime drill in the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint for global oil shipping.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio summed up where things stand: a diplomatic deal is possible, but “very difficult,” and expectations should be kept in check.
Kenya rolls out twice-yearly PrEP
Let’s shift to public health—starting with a major prevention rollout in Kenya.
Kenya has received an initial 21,000 starter doses of Lenacapavir, a long-acting injectable medication used for HIV prevention. The nationwide rollout is planned for March 2026, with the Ministry of Health working alongside the Global Fund. Officials expect another 12,000 continuation doses by April, plus an additional 25,000 doses expected from the US government to support early implementation.
This drug is drawing attention because it’s given twice a year, which could meaningfully improve adherence compared with daily oral PrEP. Kenya’s rollout will be phased through NASCOP, beginning in 15 high-burden counties and expanding in stages as systems and supply chains prove they can keep up.
Lenacapavir was approved by the US FDA in June 2025 and endorsed by the WHO in July 2025. Kenya’s Pharmacy and Poisons Board registered both oral and injectable forms in January 2026. And one more detail that matters for access: the estimated annual cost is about 7,800 Kenyan shillings per patient—far below earlier headline prices that made the drug seem out of reach.
New CRISPR light-based cancer test
And now to the health story teased at the top—an early look at what may become a powerful new tool for cancer detection.
Scientists have developed an ultra-sensitive, light-based blood sensor that can detect trace cancer biomarkers—potentially flagging disease before tumors show up on imaging scans. The work was reported February 16th in Optica and published in the journal Optica.
Here’s the core idea: combine DNA nanotechnology, quantum dots, and CRISPR—specifically Cas12a—with a low-noise optical technique called second harmonic generation, or SHG. The sensing happens on a two-dimensional semiconductor surface made of molybdenum disulfide, where incoming light is converted into light at half the wavelength.
In their proof-of-concept, the researchers targeted miR-21, a microRNA associated with lung cancer, and demonstrated detection at extremely low concentrations—down to sub-attomolar levels—in tests that progressed from buffer solutions to human serum from lung cancer patients. In plain terms: the sensor is tuned to notice very faint biological “signals,” with less background noise than many existing approaches.
The team says the platform is programmable and could be adapted to other targets—think viruses, bacteria, toxins, or biomarkers tied to conditions such as Alzheimer’s. Their next big engineering challenge is shrinking the optics into something portable enough for routine clinic use.
Ethiopia’s fast shift to EVs
Across Africa, there’s also a striking policy-driven shift underway in transportation.
Ethiopia has seen a surge in electric-vehicle adoption after banning imports of fossil-fuel-powered cars in 2024 and cutting EV tariffs. Government figures suggest EVs have risen from under 1% to nearly 6% of vehicles on the road in just two years—above the global average of around 4%.
What’s powering the economics is, quite literally, power. Ethiopia’s hydropower capacity—boosted by the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam completed in 2025—helps keep electricity relatively cheap, and officials say electrifying transport improves “energy sovereignty” by reducing exposure to global fuel price shocks.
But challenges are real: charging infrastructure is still limited, with roughly 500 chargers installed, mostly in Addis Ababa, and uneven electricity access nationwide. The government is also trying to build an assembly industry—17 assembly plants now, with a target of 60 by 2030—though analysts caution that percentage growth can look dramatic when the overall vehicle base is still small.
Still, with Ethiopia aiming to host COP32 in 2027, transport electrification has become a flagship piece of its climate strategy.
Japan exports surge despite tariffs
Finally, a quick check on global trade—Japan just posted a notably strong export number.
Japan’s exports rose 16.8% year on year in January, the fastest growth since late 2022 and well above expectations. The jump was driven by stronger shipments to Asia and Western Europe. Exports to China surged 32%, even as a diplomatic standoff simmers over comments about Taiwan by Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi.
The US picture looks weaker: shipments to the United States fell 5%, extending a prior decline, with transport equipment—one of Japan’s biggest export categories—barely growing under continued tariff pressure.
Imports, meanwhile, fell 2.5%, which helped markets take the report positively: Japanese equities rose, the yen strengthened a touch, and government bond yields eased. The data also lands against a broader backdrop of slower export growth last year and ongoing efforts to manage trade and investment ties with Washington ahead of a planned Takaichi–Trump meeting.
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Support The Automated Daily directly:
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Today's topics: Ukraine-Russia peace talks in Geneva - US envoy Steve Witkoff says the Switzerland talks showed “meaningful progress,” but Kyiv remains wary as Russia holds to maximalist demands and Ukraine seeks firm Western security guarantees. Europe tightens sanctions on Russia - The EU is weighing a 20th sanctions package, including a potential ban on maritime services for Russian oil tankers and new anti-circumvention steps targeting re-exports via high-risk countries such as Kyrgyzstan. Sweden warns of hybrid threats - Sweden’s MUST intelligence service says Russia is escalating hybrid activity and risk-taking in the Baltic region, with pressure likely to persist regardless of how the Ukraine war develops. Russia upgrades long-range air missiles - RUSI analyst Justin Bronk reports wider Russian use of R-37M air-to-air missiles on Su-35s, extending theoretical engagement ranges to around 200 miles and complicating NATO air planning. US-Iran nuclear talks and threats - Indirect US-Iran nuclear talks in Geneva, mediated by Oman, produced agreement on “guiding principles,” as military posturing grows with US deployments and Iranian drills near the Strait of Hormuz. Kenya rolls out twice-yearly PrEP - Kenya received 21,000 starter doses of Lenacapavir for HIV prevention, a long-acting injectable PrEP given twice yearly, supported by Global Fund and additional expected US supply for phased rollout. New CRISPR light-based cancer test - Researchers report an ultra-sensitive optical blood sensor combining CRISPR-Cas12a, quantum dots, DNA nanostructures, and second-harmonic generation to spot trace cancer biomarkers at sub-attomolar levels. Ethiopia’s fast shift to EVs - After banning fossil-fuel car imports and cutting EV tariffs, Ethiopia has pushed EV adoption to nearly 6% of vehicles, leveraging cheap hydropower but still facing charger shortages and grid gaps. Japan exports surge despite tariffs - Japan’s January exports jumped 16.8% led by Asia and Europe, while US-bound shipments fell amid tariff pressure—markets cheered as the yen firmed and equities gained.
Episode Transcript
Ukraine-Russia peace talks in Geneva
Let’s start with the latest on the war in Ukraine and the diplomatic push around it.
In Switzerland, US special envoy Steve Witkoff said negotiations between Ukraine and Russia produced “meaningful progress,” as delegations prepared to enter a second day of talks in Geneva on Wednesday. Still, the mood music from Kyiv is cautious. President Volodymyr Zelensky has pushed back on what he sees as uneven pressure from President Donald Trump—arguing it’s “not fair” to press Ukraine to compromise without the same public scrutiny directed at Russia.
The gaps remain wide. Moscow is sticking to sweeping demands, including that Ukraine hand over the rest of the Donbas region—something Ukraine rejects outright. Russia currently occupies roughly 20% of Ukrainian territory, including large parts of eastern Donbas. Zelensky says any settlement needs strong Western security guarantees, and he indicated Ukraine is prepared to refrain from strikes under a US proposal presented to both sides.
Reporting from Russian media described Tuesday’s six-hour session as tense, with talks happening in a mix of bilateral and trilateral formats. Witkoff and Jared Kushner reportedly played mediation roles, while Putin aide Vladimir Medinsky led the Russian delegation. The timing is notable: these talks land just a week before the fourth anniversary of Russia’s full-scale invasion, and both sides continue to report overnight drone attacks—an unmissable reminder that diplomacy is happening in parallel with active combat.
Europe tightens sanctions on Russia
That diplomacy is also colliding with a harder line from Europe.
EU economy commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis says the bloc is prepared to go further—potentially adopting a full ban on maritime services for Russian oil tankers even if the G7 doesn’t move as one. This is being discussed as part of the EU’s planned 20th sanctions package, which Brussels hopes to finalize around February 24th.
If that maritime-services ban happens, it would effectively sideline the oil price-cap mechanism inside EU jurisdiction, because EU firms would be barred from servicing Russian tankers regardless of the sale price. Some member states are wary—Greece, for example, has warned it could accelerate “deflagging” and strengthen Russia’s shadow fleet, while also shifting advantage to competitors outside the EU.
Another key idea in the package: using the EU’s Anti-Circumvention Tool for the first time, aiming to curb diversion of sensitive goods—like computer numerical machines and radios—through third countries. Kyrgyzstan is in the spotlight, after EU exports there surged from about €263 million in 2021 to €2.5 billion in 2024, raising fears some of that machinery may be finding its way to Russia’s war effort.
This is all unfolding as many European leaders watch the Switzerland talks with skepticism, and as EU leaders prepare visits to Ukraine around the anniversary date.
Sweden warns of hybrid threats
On the security front in Northern Europe, Sweden is also sharpening its warnings.
Thomas Nilsson, the head of Sweden’s military intelligence service MUST, says Russia has stepped up hybrid activity and appears more willing to take risks in Sweden’s vicinity—particularly around the Baltic Sea region. His assessment is blunt: the trend is likely to continue whether Russia “wins” or “fails” in Ukraine. Success could embolden Moscow; failure, he argues, could breed desperation and renewed risk-taking.
MUST’s annual review again labels Russia as the main military threat to Sweden and to NATO, warning that the danger may grow as Russia pours more resources into its armed forces and reinforces capabilities around the Baltic.
Russia upgrades long-range air missiles
And there’s a specific military development that defense watchers say matters for NATO air operations.
RUSI analyst Justin Bronk reports that Russia is increasingly arming Su-35 fighter jets—and also Su-30SM2s—with the long-range R-37M air-to-air missile. The headline detail is range: the R-37M is believed to reach roughly 200 miles in ideal conditions, far beyond the older R-77-1’s estimated range of about 62 miles, though real-world effectiveness depends on many factors.
Bronk’s point isn’t that every shot lands at maximum distance; it’s that routine fielding of a longer-reach weapon changes the threat picture and can push opposing aircraft to operate more cautiously. RUSI has also linked the missile’s Ukraine-war performance to factors like speed, seeker design, and Ukraine’s limitations in radar warning receivers—while noting NATO aircraft generally have more robust warning systems.
He also estimates Russia’s Su-35 fleet has grown since 2020, despite wartime losses—suggesting Moscow has managed to replenish and expand capability in ways some early-war forecasts didn’t expect.
US-Iran nuclear talks and threats
Now to the Middle East, where diplomacy is active—but backed by unmistakable military signaling.
A second round of indirect nuclear talks between the US and Iran has ended in Geneva, hosted at the Omani mission and mediated by Oman. Iran’s foreign minister Abbas Araqchi says the sides reached an understanding on the main “guiding principles,” but emphasized that significant work remains. The US has not yet publicly commented on the outcome.
The atmosphere around these talks is tense. President Trump said he believes Iran wants a deal, but warned of “consequences” if it doesn’t—pointing to last summer’s US strikes on Iranian nuclear sites and arguing an agreement could have avoided that escalation.
Iran, for its part, says it wants the discussion centered on its nuclear program and the lifting of US economic sanctions, while Washington has previously signaled it also wants to address issues like missile development. Meanwhile, BBC Verify has tracked a US military build-up in the region, including reports of the USS Gerald R Ford deploying alongside more destroyers, combat ships, and fighter jets.
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei rebuked US threats in characteristically sharp terms, warning that the danger isn’t only the aircraft carrier—it’s the weapon that could sink it. And Iran’s IRGC has staged a maritime drill in the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint for global oil shipping.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio summed up where things stand: a diplomatic deal is possible, but “very difficult,” and expectations should be kept in check.
Kenya rolls out twice-yearly PrEP
Let’s shift to public health—starting with a major prevention rollout in Kenya.
Kenya has received an initial 21,000 starter doses of Lenacapavir, a long-acting injectable medication used for HIV prevention. The nationwide rollout is planned for March 2026, with the Ministry of Health working alongside the Global Fund. Officials expect another 12,000 continuation doses by April, plus an additional 25,000 doses expected from the US government to support early implementation.
This drug is drawing attention because it’s given twice a year, which could meaningfully improve adherence compared with daily oral PrEP. Kenya’s rollout will be phased through NASCOP, beginning in 15 high-burden counties and expanding in stages as systems and supply chains prove they can keep up.
Lenacapavir was approved by the US FDA in June 2025 and endorsed by the WHO in July 2025. Kenya’s Pharmacy and Poisons Board registered both oral and injectable forms in January 2026. And one more detail that matters for access: the estimated annual cost is about 7,800 Kenyan shillings per patient—far below earlier headline prices that made the drug seem out of reach.
New CRISPR light-based cancer test
And now to the health story teased at the top—an early look at what may become a powerful new tool for cancer detection.
Scientists have developed an ultra-sensitive, light-based blood sensor that can detect trace cancer biomarkers—potentially flagging disease before tumors show up on imaging scans. The work was reported February 16th in Optica and published in the journal Optica.
Here’s the core idea: combine DNA nanotechnology, quantum dots, and CRISPR—specifically Cas12a—with a low-noise optical technique called second harmonic generation, or SHG. The sensing happens on a two-dimensional semiconductor surface made of molybdenum disulfide, where incoming light is converted into light at half the wavelength.
In their proof-of-concept, the researchers targeted miR-21, a microRNA associated with lung cancer, and demonstrated detection at extremely low concentrations—down to sub-attomolar levels—in tests that progressed from buffer solutions to human serum from lung cancer patients. In plain terms: the sensor is tuned to notice very faint biological “signals,” with less background noise than many existing approaches.
The team says the platform is programmable and could be adapted to other targets—think viruses, bacteria, toxins, or biomarkers tied to conditions such as Alzheimer’s. Their next big engineering challenge is shrinking the optics into something portable enough for routine clinic use.
Ethiopia’s fast shift to EVs
Across Africa, there’s also a striking policy-driven shift underway in transportation.
Ethiopia has seen a surge in electric-vehicle adoption after banning imports of fossil-fuel-powered cars in 2024 and cutting EV tariffs. Government figures suggest EVs have risen from under 1% to nearly 6% of vehicles on the road in just two years—above the global average of around 4%.
What’s powering the economics is, quite literally, power. Ethiopia’s hydropower capacity—boosted by the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam completed in 2025—helps keep electricity relatively cheap, and officials say electrifying transport improves “energy sovereignty” by reducing exposure to global fuel price shocks.
But challenges are real: charging infrastructure is still limited, with roughly 500 chargers installed, mostly in Addis Ababa, and uneven electricity access nationwide. The government is also trying to build an assembly industry—17 assembly plants now, with a target of 60 by 2030—though analysts caution that percentage growth can look dramatic when the overall vehicle base is still small.
Still, with Ethiopia aiming to host COP32 in 2027, transport electrification has become a flagship piece of its climate strategy.
Japan exports surge despite tariffs
Finally, a quick check on global trade—Japan just posted a notably strong export number.
Japan’s exports rose 16.8% year on year in January, the fastest growth since late 2022 and well above expectations. The jump was driven by stronger shipments to Asia and Western Europe. Exports to China surged 32%, even as a diplomatic standoff simmers over comments about Taiwan by Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi.
The US picture looks weaker: shipments to the United States fell 5%, extending a prior decline, with transport equipment—one of Japan’s biggest export categories—barely growing under continued tariff pressure.
Imports, meanwhile, fell 2.5%, which helped markets take the report positively: Japanese equities rose, the yen strengthened a touch, and government bond yields eased. The data also lands against a broader backdrop of slower export growth last year and ongoing efforts to manage trade and investment ties with Washington ahead of a planned Takaichi–Trump meeting.
Subscribe to edition specific feeds:
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* Apple Podcast English
* Spotify English
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* Apple Podcast English Spanish French
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* Apple Podcast English Spanish French
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* RSS English Spanish French
- Hacker news
* Apple Podcast English Spanish French
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* RSS English Spanish French
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Visit our website at https://theautomateddaily.com/
Send feedback to [email protected]
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