We’re covering impeachment testimony in Washington, a reversal of U.S. policy on Israeli settlements and a reappraisal of the artist Paul Gauguin. | | Four witnesses are to appear before the House Intelligence Committee today as it ramps up its investigation into President Trump’s efforts to extract political help from Ukraine while holding up $391 million in security aid. | | Response: Mr. Trump has largely remained out of sight in recent days, but he wrote on Twitter on Monday that he would “strongly consider” testifying. | | Givat Zeev, an Israeli settlement near the Palestinian city of Ramallah in the West Bank. Ahmad Gharabli/Agence France-Presse ? Getty Images | | It may also doom any peace efforts, as Palestinians have demanded the land for a future state — a goal supported by the United Nations, European governments and American allies across the Middle East. We have a guide on settlements’ legal status. | | President Trump’s decision last month to withdraw U.S. forces from northern Syria cleared the way for Turkey to take control of detained Islamic State members. | | The issue is further complicated because nearly two-thirds of the roughly 700 West European detainees are children, and many have lost at least one parent. | | Closer look: Officials in Turkey say that the country is holding 2,280 Islamic State members from 30 nations and that all of them will be deported. | | Ayanna Pressley, left, and Abigail Spanberger are part of a wave of Democrats who took office this year. Paola Kudacki for The New York Times | | When they took office in January, Representatives Ayanna Pressley and Abigail Spanberger were seen as possible future stars of the Democratic Party. | | Ms. Pressley, a former city councilwoman in Boston, is considered a progressive who can lure more first-time voters. Ms. Spanberger, an ex-C.I.A. officer, has a political platform that resonates with both Democrats and moderate Republicans in her historically conservative Virginia district. | | But both lawmakers have struggled in a bitterly divided Washington. Among the questions: What does it mean to “get things done” in the House if the Republican-controlled Senate won’t bring Democratic-led legislation to the floor? | | The Art Institute of Chicago | | The French painter Paul Gauguin, who died in 1903, is still popular with curators, but he had sex with teenage girls and called the Polynesian people he painted “savages.” Now, some museums are reassessing his legacy. | | But some worry that re-examining the past from a 21st-century perspective could lead to a boycott of great art. | | PAID POST: A MESSAGE FROM EMMA | Seeing the Unseen | There is a staggering 2.4 million STEM jobs going unfilled. And there's a major, unseen barrier standing in the way, Calculus. Almost all STEM fields require it and almost one-third of students drop or fail it. What do we need to do to fill the jobs of today, and the jobs of our future? Plug that leak in the STEM pipeline. Meet Aida. The first AI calculus tutor. | MEET AIDA |
| | Trump’s hospital visit: The president’s physician issued a late-night statement attributing an unannounced trip to Walter Reed Medical Center to “regular, primary preventive care.” | | Libby March for The New York Times | | Snapshot: Immigration policies aimed at controlling the frontier with Mexico are affecting crossings at the Canadian border. Nancy Davis, above, a cafe owner in Malone, N.Y., said that many of her Canadian customers had stopped coming. | | What we’re listening to: Slate’s “Slow Burn” podcast. “As a child of the ’90s,” writes our London-based home page editor Claire Moses, “I’m enjoying the third season, about the murders of Notorious B.I.G. and Tupac Shakur. (And there’s music!)” | | Johnny Miller for The New York Times | | News organizations are often competitors, but this was an extraordinarily fruitful collaboration that stretched over months. | | The Intercept shared an unprecedented leak of secret Iranian intelligence cables with The Times, drawing on our expertise in the region. | | We’ve maintained a bureau in Baghdad for more than 16 years, staying put — at great expense and risk — when many other news organizations moved on. | | Tim Arango, center, reporting in Iraq in 2014, when he was The Times?s Baghdad bureau chief. Bryan Denton for The New York Times | | I took the lead on The Times’s analysis of the material because I was the Baghdad bureau chief for seven years, including 2014 and 2015, the period covered by the cables. Those were the momentous years in which the Islamic State rose up and took control of about a third of Iraq. | | What I saw in the raw, unfiltered documents confirmed and added depth to my earlier reporting, revealing Iran’s use of agents, spies and bribery to infiltrate the highest echelons of the Iraqi government. | | It took time, resources and reporting experience to understand what the cables showed. If you want to be a part of more groundbreaking reporting, please subscribe to The Times. We’re offering a special price of $1 per week exclusively to our Morning Briefing readers. | | A correction: Yesterday’s briefing misstated how many episodes of “The Weekly” Times subscribers in the U.S. can watch on our website. The most recent episode and several more from early in the season are available, not the full season. (More episodes will be made available each week.) That’s it for this briefing. See you next time. | | Thank you Mark Josephson and Eleanor Stanford provided the break from the news. You can reach the team at [email protected]. | | Were you sent this briefing by a friend? Sign up here to get the Morning Briefing. | | Copyright 2019 The New York Times Company 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018 | | |