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The near-global unity in condemning Russia for waging war on Ukraine triggered an unprecedented use of sanctions to effect change of the most dramatic kind. But with smaller efforts failing to work with North Korea and Iran, will it be enough? Or will Vladimir Putin simply wait out the West, continuing his daily killing of Ukrainian civilians while letting the Russian economy collapse?
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Colombia’s First Black Vice President Brings Climate Focus
America’s Top 1% Lose $1.5 Trillion on Stocks Before Bear Market
Gold Billionaire to Moonlight as DJ at Sold-Out Cairo Club
Turkey Unveils Mid-Year Budget to Meet Rising Public Spending
Ceccon Sets World Record, Ledecky Claims Yet Another Title
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The Weakness of Putin’s Economic Show of Force
NATO Must Bring Finland, Sweden and Turkey Together
China’s Consumer Confidence Crisis Will Leave Permanent Scars
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Black Equity on Wall Street Two Years After George Floyd
Health-Care Providers Brace for Surge of Out-of-State Abortions If Roe Is Overturned
How Employers Can Make Juneteenth More Than a Day Off
China Hit by Floods and Heat Waves in Climate Double Whammy
PG&E Wants to Add ‘Scope 4’ Emissions to Your Climate Dictionary
From Ruins of a Ku Klux Klan Hall, Fort Worth Reshapes Racial Narrative
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The Museum Seeking to Unlock a War-Hit Nation’s Mineral Wealth
Bitcoin Holds Above $20,000 After Week of Forced Crypto Selling
Crypto ‘Smart Contracts’ May Need Oversight, Bank of Israel Says
Distressed Crypto Lender Babel Wins Reprieve on Debt Repayments
Photographer: Frederic J. Brown/AFP/Getty Images
Lucid Group Inc. will sell as many as 100,000 electric vehicles to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia over the next decade, ranking among the largest-ever purchases of plug-in models.
The automaker reached a deal with Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Finance for 50,000 EVs over that span, with the option for another 50,000, according to a statement Tuesday. Lucid said it would start delivering the vehicles by the second quarter of 2023.