US Vice President JD Vance is scheduled to visit Armenia next Monday and Azerbaijan later this month, signaling a renewed US focus on the South Caucasus region, according to Euronews. The visit underscores Washington's efforts to implement a peace framework agreed upon last year and promote trade, investment, and infrastructure through the Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity corridor (TRIPP).
Meanwhile, in the United States, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) is investigating Nike over claims of discrimination against white workers, BBC Business reported. The EEOC has demanded company records dating back to 2018 to examine claims that Nike engaged "in a pattern or practice of disparate treatment against white employees, applicants, and training program participants," according to court documents. Nike stated it was "committed to fair and lawful employment practices" and called the inquiry "a surprising and unusual step."
In other news, San Francisco 49ers running back Christian McCaffrey was named the recipient of the NFL's 2026 Salute to Service Award, presented by USAA, Fox News reported. McCaffrey launched "23 and Troops" in 2021 to focus on post-traumatic stress and athlete-level care for veterans. The foundation has raised $700,000 for military support and paid off holiday layaway for 515 military families. McCaffrey said it was a "true honor" to receive the award.
Also, Al Jazeera reported that US news anchor Savannah Guthrie posted a video on social media making an emotional appeal for the return of her mother, who is missing in a suspected abduction.
Finally, TechCrunch reported on Anthropic's Super Bowl commercial, one of four ads the AI lab dropped on Wednesday. The commercial features a chatbot offering advice and then twisting into an ad for a fictitious cougar-dating site. Anthropic stated that while ads are coming to AI, they won't be coming to its own chatbot, Claude.
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