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Today — 10 December 2025Main stream

Inside the Pentagon’s Scramble to Deal With Boat Strike Survivors

Officials initially weighed sending survivors of U.S. attacks on boats suspected of drug smuggling to a notorious prison in El Salvador, to keep them away from American courts.

© Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times

Recent news reports on strike orders given by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth have raised questions of potential war crimes.

Democrats Say Hegseth Balked at Call for Full Video of Boat Strike

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth briefed congressional leaders on Tuesday about the monthslong military campaign targeting people suspected of being drug traffickers at sea.

© Eric Lee for The New York Times

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth at the Capitol on Tuesday.

Legal Groups Sue Justice Dept. for Secret Memo Justifying Boat Strikes

10 December 2025 at 05:53
“The public deserves to know how the Trump administration has justified the outright murder of civilians as lawful,” the organizations said in their lawsuit.

© Doug Mills/The New York Times

The lawsuit, filed by the American Civil Liberties Union and other legal groups, seeks the release of a secret memo that provides a legal rationale for the Trump administration’s strikes.
Yesterday — 9 December 2025Main stream

A Frustrated Congress Pushes the Pentagon to Produce Its Boat Strike Orders

9 December 2025 at 06:19
In a sign of bipartisan frustration with the Defense Department, the final defense policy bill aims to compel the Pentagon to share execute orders and video documentation.

© Doug Mills/The New York Times

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth has posted edited footage of the strikes on social media, but has so far refused to share the full video with lawmakers.
Before yesterdayMain stream

Must the Military Disobey Unlawful Orders? Pam Bondi Has Said Yes.

8 December 2025 at 18:03
As a lawyer for a conservative think tank, Ms. Bondi, now the attorney general, filed a Supreme Court brief last year saying service members who followed such orders were committing crimes.

© Eric Lee for The New York Times

Attorney General Pam Bondi and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth at the White House last month.

Democrats Call for Releasing Video of Deadly Boat Strike in the Caribbean

8 December 2025 at 04:45
Top Democratic lawmakers who have seen the footage said Sunday that making the video public would provide transparency around the strikes that killed two survivors on Sept. 2.

© Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times

Representative Jim Himes said that the two survivors “were barely alive, much less engaging in hostilities.”

Hegseth Skirts Questions About Releasing Video of Sept. 2 Boat Attack

7 December 2025 at 10:44
At an appearance in California, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth was noncommittal about releasing the full video of a U.S. military attack on a boat in the Caribbean.

© Caylo Seals/Getty Images

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth at the Reagan National Defense Forum in Simi Valley, Calif., on Saturday.

Pete Hegseth Is Ordering Executions at Sea

Did Pete Hegseth break the law after authorizing Venezuelan boat strikes? The Times Opinion editor, Kathleen Kingsbury, argues that there are multiple reasons the strikes were legally dubious.

Medium and Message: Industrial chemistry

By: hoakley
4 November 2025 at 20:30

Traditional oil paints were the mainstay medium used by professional painters in the west from the Renaissance until the late twentieth century, a period of well over half a millennium. Although other media have been used widely and successfully, until recently the apparently infinite flexibility of effects and painting styles made oil paint dominant. Over that period, much effort has been expended getting oil paint to dry more quickly, and discovering how to create stable paint layers using principles such as the ‘fat over lean’ rule.

In the nineteen-thirties Otto Röhm invented a new synthetic resin formed from acrylate molecules, dubbed acrylic resin. This first became available dispersed in liquid during that decade, and was steadily developed into paints during the nineteen-forties. Their biggest market was in commercial paints for general use, particularly for the outside of buildings.

In the late nineteen-forties, Leonard Bocour and Sam Golden developed and brought to market Magna paints, in which acrylates were suspended in mineral spirits to form an emulsion. Golden later developed a paint based on water, which lives on in his company Golden Artist Colours. In the nineteen-fifties they were joined by Liquitex, then in the sixties by Rowney’s Cryla paints. Acrylic paints were starting to rival oils.

In modern acrylic paints, the acrylics themselves are the binder, with water as its diluent. Wet paint is readily removed from brushes and skin using soapy water, making the use of organic solvents largely unnecessary except when dealing with dried paint. This is much more convenient than working with oils and their toxic organic solvents required for cleaning.

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Mrinal Kanty Das (dates not known), Apostles Discoursing Maternity (2015), acrylic on canvas, 60 x 50 cm, location not known. By courtesy of the artist https://www.gallery247.com.au/mrinal-kanty-das, via Wikimedia Commons.

Oil paints remain rooted in alchemy to a degree; although modern commercially made oil paints are sophisticated combinations of natural and synthetic ingredients, using them and controlling their visual effects owes as much to tradition as it does to industrial chemistry. Acrylics are thoroughly modern in their formulation and use, carefully packaged blends of polymers with surfactants, plasticisers, dispersants, defoamers, stabilisers, and of course pigments.

Some artists still grind their own oil colours, and many oil painters use traditional media and resins to control their properties. Acrylics are too chemically complex for artists to prepare themselves, although use of special additive media to alter their handling and properties is popular.

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Sylvia Oeggerli (b 1939), Piz Lagrev 1 (2015), mixed media, dimensions and location not known. By courtesy of the artist https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sylvia_Oeggerli, via Wikimedia Commons.

Early acrylics were fast to dry, making them excellent for painting in layers, but unsuitable for techniques such as ‘wet in wet’ relying on the interaction of wet paint on the ground. Hard edges were easily achieved, as were bright if not garish colours, but effects such as sfumato were simply not possible.

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Birgit Schweiger (dates not known), Icy (2010), acrylic on canvas, 100 x 140 cm, Private collection. By courtesy of the artist https://www.birgitschweiger.com, via Wikimedia Commons.

Over the last fifty years, formulation of acrylic paints and their media have not only resulted in products that remain ‘open’ for longer, but have let painters determine body, flow, finish, and other physical properties of acrylic paint. Paint manufacturers even have fine control over the size of acrylic particles within the paint emulsion, enabling this flexibility, and some offer acrylic inks far more robust and durable than traditional products.

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Annemarie Busschers (b 1970), Beyond Grief, Self-portrait (2011), acrylic, 180 x 180 cm, location not known. By courtesy of the artist, via Wikimedia Commons.

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Annemarie Busschers (b 1970), Portrait of Jacob Witzenhausen (2012), acrylic on canvas, 250 x 160 cm, Private collection. By courtesy of the artist, via Wikimedia Commons.

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Annemarie Busschers (b 1970), Stroke II (2013), acrylic, 180 x 130 cm, location not known. By courtesy of the artist, via Wikimedia Commons.

Acrylics are also able to adhere to a wide range of grounds. Professional artists often continue using prepared stretched canvas, but acrylic sizing is necessary on that and some others to prevent discolouration from the ground, termed ‘Support-Induced Discolouration’ or SID.

There are still remaining issues in using acrylic paints, though. Many oil paintings show evidence that at some stage part of their paint layer has been scraped off to enable the artist to repaint sections in pentimenti; this isn’t normally possible with acrylics, which tend to be overpainted without scraping, as the latter strips the entire paint layer and may also damage the ground.

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Kolbjørn Håseth (dates not known), Patterns of Movement (2007), acrylic, 89 x 116 cm, location not known. By courtesy of the artist http://www.khz.no, via Wikimedia Commons.

Experience from accelerated ageing of acrylic paints suggests that today’s acrylic paintings should last better than oils. However, the oldest acrylic paints are still well under a hundred years old, making it far too soon to arrive at any definitive conclusion. It’s also telling that even the innovative Golden Artist Colours offers Williamsburg oil paints, and QOR watercolours using a synthetic replacement as its binder.

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Jeylina Ever (?1960-), Vanitas Symbolizing Childhood Disease, Culture, Time Passing and Death (2009), acrylic on canvas, 42 cm x 26 cm, location not known. Wikimedia Commons.

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