1
VANG VIENG, Laos — Along the jungle-covered mountains of Laos, squads of Chinese engi- neers are drilling hundreds of tun- nels and bridges to support a 260- mile railway, a $6 billion project that will eventually connect eight Asian countries. Chinese money is building power plants in Pakistan to ad- dress chronic electricity short- ages, part of an expected $46 bil- lion worth of investment. Chinese planners are mapping out train lines from Budapest to Belgrade, Serbia, providing an- other artery for Chinese goods flowing into Europe through a Chi- nese-owned port in Greece. The massive infrastructure projects, along with hundreds of others across Asia, Africa and Eu- rope, form the backbone of China’s ambitious economic and geopoliti- cal agenda. President Xi Jinping of China is literally and figuratively forging ties, creating new markets for the country’s construction companies and ex- porting its model of state-led de- velopment in a quest to create deep economic connections and strong diplomatic relationships. The initiative, called “One Belt, One Road,” looms on a scope and scale with little precedent in mod- ern history, promising more than $1 trillion in infrastructure and spanning more than 60 countries. To celebrate China’s new global in- fluence, Mr. Xi is gathering dozens of state leaders, including Presi- dent Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, in Beijing on Sunday. It is global commerce on China’s terms. Mr. Xi is aiming to use China’s wealth and industrial know-how to create a new kind of globaliza- tion that will dispense with the rules of the aging Western-domi- nated institutions. The goal is to refashion the global economic or- der, drawing countries and com- Chinese workers and engineers at a tunnel being created near Vang Vieng, Laos, as part of a $6 billion Chinese rail project. PHOTOGRAPHS BY ADAM DEAN FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Remaking Global Trade in China’s Image As U.S. Turns Inward, Beijing Acts to Upend Economic Order A poster for a Chinese high-speed train at a construction site for a bridge spanning the Mekong River near Luang Prabang, Laos. Continued on Page 10 By JANE PERLEZ and YUFAN HUANG SAN FRANCISCO — Hackers are discovering that it is far more profitable to hold your data hostage than it is to steal it. A decade-old internet scourge called ransomware went main- stream on Friday when cyber- criminals seized control of com- puters around the world, from the delivery giant FedEx in the United States to Britain’s public health system, universities in China and even Russia’s powerful Interior Ministry. On Saturday, investigators could not yet tell who was behind the attack as security experts around the world raced to contain it. Across Asia, several universi- ties and organizations said they had been affected. Renault, the European automaker, said on Sat- urday that its French operations had been hit, while one of its plants in Slovakia was shut down because of the digital outbreak. Computer users in the United States so far were less affected af- ter a 22-year-old British cyber- security researcher inadvertently stopped the ransomware attack from spreading more widely. Ransomware is nothing new. For years, there have been stories of individuals or compa- nies horrified that they have been WITH NEW TOOLS, EVEN NONEXPERTS CAN LOCK UP DATA Thieves Exploit System Weaknesses as Way to Extort Money By NICOLE PERLROTH Continued on Page 14 WASHINGTON — The premo- nition came in a Winston-Salem conference room, on an otherwise happy election night in 2004, be- fore Richard M. Burr of North Car- olina had even declared victory in his bid to join the Senate. News out- lets had begun calling the race. A watch party was waiting for him. But his mind was else- where, at least for a moment. “He said, ‘I hope they don’t put me on the In- telligence Committee,’” recalled Paul Shumaker, a top strategist for Mr. Burr who sat with him to follow the returns. “‘It’s hard enough to sleep at night the way it is.’” Mr. Burr’s present sleep habits are unknown, particularly as he tiptoes at last toward criticism of a president he had generally praised — until the firing of James Liking It or Not, Senator Leads Russia Inquiry By MATT FLEGENHEIMER Richard Burr Continued on Page 20 It’s just for kids and packed with fun projects, including how to make your own slime. Special Section CHICAGO — The sixth graders at Newton Bateman, a public ele- mentary school here with a classic red brick facade, know the Google drill. In a social-science class last year, the students each grabbed a Google-powered laptop. They opened Google Classroom, an app where teachers make assign- ments. Then they clicked on Google Docs, a writing program, and began composing essays. Looking up from her laptop, Masuma Khan, then 11 years old, said her essay explored how schooling in ancient Athens dif- fered from her own. “Back then, they had wooden tablets and they had to take all of their notes on it,” she said. “Nowadays, we can just do it in Google Docs.” Chicago Public Schools, the third-largest school district in the United States, with about 381,000 students, is at the forefront of a profound shift in American educa- tion: the Googlification of the classroom. In the space of just five years, Google has helped upend the sales methods companies use to place their products in classrooms. It has enlisted teachers and admin- istrators to promote Google’s products to other schools. It has directly reached out to educators to test its products — effectively bypassing senior district officials. And it has outmaneuvered Apple and Microsoft with a powerful combination of low-cost laptops, called Chromebooks, and free classroom apps. Today, more than half the na- tion’s primary- and secondary- school students — more than 30 million children — use Google ed- ucation apps like Gmail and Docs, the company said. And Chrome- books, Google-powered laptops that initially struggled to find a purpose, are now a powerhouse in America’s schools. Today they ac- count for more than half the mo- bile devices shipped to schools. “Between the fall of 2012 and now, Google went from an inter- How Google Conquered The American Classroom Schools Transformed by Tech Giant May Be Giving More Than They’re Getting By NATASHA SINGER Students at Newton Bateman Elementary School in Chicago use Google-powered laptops and Google education apps. WHITTEN SABBATINI FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page 18 EDUCATION DISRUPTED Cultivating Future Customers Most cities now shun the Olympics as too expensive. Not Los Angeles, which is ardently seeking to host the 2024 Summer Games. PAGE 16 NATIONAL 16-23 Grabbing for Olympic Rings Noncompete clauses, once just for top executives, are spreading across the labor landscape — making it tougher for Americans to get better jobs. PAGE 1 SUNDAY BUSINESS Signing Away Job Rights A group of Polish climbers, reputed to be among the world’s most audacious, will attempt K2, the world’s most dan- gerous mountain — in winter. PAGE 1 SPORTS SUNDAY Braving a Monumental Climb Lesley Stahl PAGE 10 SUNDAY REVIEW U(D547FD)v+$!z!/!=!/ BOGOTÁ, Colombia — Cheers erupted as the protesters toppled the statue of former President Hugo Chávez, the metal cracking against concrete. The scenes, dis- tributed around Venezuela on so- cial media, showed a crowd smashing the sculpture on a curb- side as others came to set a fire in- side its shattered belly. But when the authorities rounded up suspects for the van- dalism, they were not taken to an ordinary court. Instead, they were hauled off to a military base, where they faced the judges of a military tribunal this past week. President Nicolás Maduro, be- leaguered by a second month of protests against him, has prosecuted political rivals under terrorism laws and expanded his powers by emergency decrees. His backers on the Supreme Court have even tried to dissolve the na- tional legislature, which is led by the political opposition. Now, the president is turning to military courts to tighten his grip further, prosecuting demonstra- tors and other civilians in tri- bunals that the government closely controls. At least 120 people have been jailed by military courts since early April, when demonstrators began taking to the streets to call for new elections, according to Pe- nal Forum, a legal group assisting those arrested. Another group monitoring cases, Provea, counted at least 90 people jailed by the military. Both groups con- tend that the country has never used the military courts against so many civilians this way outside of wartime. “Military justice sows the great- est terror in our population,” said Juan Miguel Matheus, an opposi- tion congressman in the state of Carabobo. He said at least 69 peo- ple there had been jailed by the military since early April. Those held include students, store owners, mechanics and farmers, rights groups say. An en- tire family was arraigned before a military tribunal in Caracas this past week and charged with incit- ing rebellion. In one case in the city of Valencia, two people were brought before military courts on suspicion of stealing legs of ham during a round of looting — then charged with rebellion as well, ac- cording to Penal Forum. “They are being treated like they are combatants,” said Al- fredo Romero, the director of the Venezuela Tries Protesters in Its Military Courts An Embattled President Treats Civilians ‘Like We Are in a War’ Continued on Page 4 By NICHOLAS CASEY ‘NEVER QUIT’ President Trump gave a pep talk to Liberty University graduates after vowing a quick decision on a new F.B.I. chief. PAGE 20 The missile, the first launched since a new president took office in the South, flew 430 miles before landing in the sea, the South Korean military said. PAGE 14 INTERNATIONAL 4-15 North Korea Tests Missile Late Edition VOL. CLXVI . . . No. 57,597 © 2017 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, SUNDAY, MAY 14, 2017 WASHINGTON — In the small dining room next to the Oval Office where he works much of the time, President Trump keeps a stack of color- coded maps of the United States representing the results of the 2016 election. The counties he won are blotchy red and span most of the nation. Mr. Trump sometimes hands the maps out to visitors as a kind of parting gift, and a framed portrait-size version was hung on a wall in the West Wing last week. In conversations, the president dwells on the map and its import, reminding visitors about how wrong the polls were and inflating the scope of his victory. At the root of Mr. Trump’s unpredictable presidency, ac- cording to people close to him, is a deep frustration about attacks on his legitimacy, and a worry Months Later, Trump Craves Credit for Win NEWS ANALYSIS By PETER BAKER and MAGGIE HABERMAN Continued on Page 21 Today, some sunshine, a few show- ers and thunderstorms, windy, high 66. Tonight, cloudy, gusty breeze, low 52. Tomorrow, sunny, high 68. Details in SportsSunday, Page 10. $6.00

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VANG VIENG, Laos — Alongthe jungle-covered mountains ofLaos, squads of Chinese engi-neers are drilling hundreds of tun-nels and bridges to support a 260-mile railway, a $6 billion projectthat will eventually connect eightAsian countries.

Chinese money is buildingpower plants in Pakistan to ad-dress chronic electricity short-ages, part of an expected $46 bil-lion worth of investment.

Chinese planners are mappingout train lines from Budapest toBelgrade, Serbia, providing an-other artery for Chinese goodsflowing into Europe through a Chi-nese-owned port in Greece.

The massive infrastructureprojects, along with hundreds ofothers across Asia, Africa and Eu-rope, form the backbone of China’sambitious economic and geopoliti-cal agenda. President Xi Jinpingof China is literally andfiguratively forging ties, creatingnew markets for the country’sconstruction companies and ex-porting its model of state-led de-velopment in a quest to createdeep economic connections andstrong diplomatic relationships.

The initiative, called “One Belt,One Road,” looms on a scope andscale with little precedent in mod-ern history, promising more than$1 trillion in infrastructure andspanning more than 60 countries.To celebrate China’s new global in-fluence, Mr. Xi is gathering dozensof state leaders, including Presi-dent Vladimir V. Putin of Russia,in Beijing on Sunday.

It is global commerce on China’sterms.

Mr. Xi is aiming to use China’swealth and industrial know-howto create a new kind of globaliza-tion that will dispense with therules of the aging Western-domi-nated institutions. The goal is torefashion the global economic or-der, drawing countries and com-

Chinese workers and engineers at a tunnel being created near Vang Vieng, Laos, as part of a $6 billion Chinese rail project.PHOTOGRAPHS BY ADAM DEAN FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Remaking Global Trade in China’s ImageAs U.S. Turns Inward, Beijing Acts to Upend Economic Order

A poster for a Chinese high-speed train at a construction site fora bridge spanning the Mekong River near Luang Prabang, Laos.

Continued on Page 10

By JANE PERLEZand YUFAN HUANG

SAN FRANCISCO — Hackersare discovering that it is far moreprofitable to hold your datahostage than it is to steal it.

A decade-old internet scourgecalled ransomware went main-stream on Friday when cyber-criminals seized control of com-puters around the world, from thedelivery giant FedEx in theUnited States to Britain’s publichealth system, universities inChina and even Russia’s powerfulInterior Ministry.

On Saturday, investigatorscould not yet tell who was behindthe attack as security expertsaround the world raced to containit. Across Asia, several universi-ties and organizations said theyhad been affected. Renault, theEuropean automaker, said on Sat-urday that its French operationshad been hit, while one of itsplants in Slovakia was shut downbecause of the digital outbreak.

Computer users in the UnitedStates so far were less affected af-ter a 22-year-old British cyber-security researcher inadvertentlystopped the ransomware attackfrom spreading more widely.

Ransomware is nothing new.For years, there have beenstories of individuals or compa-nies horrified that they have been

WITH NEW TOOLS,EVEN NONEXPERTSCAN LOCK UP DATA

Thieves Exploit SystemWeaknesses as Way

to Extort Money

By NICOLE PERLROTH

Continued on Page 14

WASHINGTON — The premo-nition came in a Winston-Salemconference room, on an otherwisehappy election night in 2004, be-fore Richard M. Burr of North Car-olina had even declared victory inhis bid to join the Senate.

News out-lets had beguncalling therace. A watchparty waswaiting forhim. But hismind was else-where, at leastfor a moment.

“He said, ‘Ihope they don’t put me on the In-telligence Committee,’” recalledPaul Shumaker, a top strategistfor Mr. Burr who sat with him tofollow the returns. “ ‘It’s hardenough to sleep at night the way itis.’”

Mr. Burr’s present sleep habitsare unknown, particularly as hetiptoes at last toward criticism of apresident he had generallypraised — until the firing of James

Liking It or Not,Senator Leads Russia Inquiry

By MATT FLEGENHEIMER

Richard Burr

Continued on Page 20

It’s just for kids and packedwith fun projects, includinghow to make your own slime.

Special Section

CHICAGO — The sixth gradersat Newton Bateman, a public ele-mentary school here with a classicred brick facade, know the Googledrill.

In a social-science class lastyear, the students each grabbed aGoogle-powered laptop. Theyopened Google Classroom, an appwhere teachers make assign-

ments. Then they clicked onGoogle Docs, a writing program,and began composing essays.

Looking up from her laptop,Masuma Khan, then 11 years old,said her essay explored howschooling in ancient Athens dif-fered from her own. “Back then,they had wooden tablets and theyhad to take all of their notes on it,”she said. “Nowadays, we can justdo it in Google Docs.”

Chicago Public Schools, thethird-largest school district in theUnited States, with about 381,000students, is at the forefront of aprofound shift in American educa-

tion: the Googlification of theclassroom.

In the space of just five years,Google has helped upend the salesmethods companies use to placetheir products in classrooms. Ithas enlisted teachers and admin-istrators to promote Google’sproducts to other schools. It hasdirectly reached out to educatorsto test its products — effectivelybypassing senior district officials.And it has outmaneuvered Appleand Microsoft with a powerfulcombination of low-cost laptops,called Chromebooks, and freeclassroom apps.

Today, more than half the na-tion’s primary- and secondary-school students — more than 30million children — use Google ed-ucation apps like Gmail and Docs,the company said. And Chrome-books, Google-powered laptopsthat initially struggled to find apurpose, are now a powerhouse inAmerica’s schools. Today they ac-count for more than half the mo-bile devices shipped to schools.

“Between the fall of 2012 andnow, Google went from an inter-

How Google ConqueredThe American Classroom

Schools Transformed by Tech Giant May BeGiving More Than They’re Getting

By NATASHA SINGER

Students at Newton Bateman Elementary School in Chicagouse Google-powered laptops and Google education apps.

WHITTEN SABBATINI FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page 18

EDUCATION DISRUPTED

Cultivating Future Customers

Most cities now shun the Olympics astoo expensive. Not Los Angeles, whichis ardently seeking to host the 2024Summer Games. PAGE 16

NATIONAL 16-23

Grabbing for Olympic RingsNoncompete clauses, once just for topexecutives, are spreading across thelabor landscape — making it tougherfor Americans to get better jobs. PAGE 1

SUNDAY BUSINESS

Signing Away Job RightsA group of Polish climbers, reputed tobe among the world’s most audacious,will attempt K2, the world’s most dan-gerous mountain — in winter. PAGE 1

SPORTS SUNDAY

Braving a Monumental Climb Lesley Stahl PAGE 10

SUNDAY REVIEW

U(D547FD)v+$!z!/!=!/

BOGOTÁ, Colombia — Cheerserupted as the protesters toppledthe statue of former PresidentHugo Chávez, the metal crackingagainst concrete. The scenes, dis-tributed around Venezuela on so-cial media, showed a crowdsmashing the sculpture on a curb-side as others came to set a fire in-side its shattered belly.

But when the authoritiesrounded up suspects for the van-dalism, they were not taken to anordinary court. Instead, they werehauled off to a military base,where they faced the judges of amilitary tribunal this past week.

President Nicolás Maduro, be-leaguered by a second month ofprotests against him, hasprosecuted political rivals underterrorism laws and expanded hispowers by emergency decrees.His backers on the Supreme Courthave even tried to dissolve the na-

tional legislature, which is led bythe political opposition.

Now, the president is turning tomilitary courts to tighten his gripfurther, prosecuting demonstra-tors and other civilians in tri-bunals that the governmentclosely controls.

At least 120 people have beenjailed by military courts sinceearly April, when demonstratorsbegan taking to the streets to callfor new elections, according to Pe-nal Forum, a legal group assistingthose arrested. Another groupmonitoring cases, Provea,counted at least 90 people jailedby the military. Both groups con-tend that the country has never

used the military courts against somany civilians this way outside ofwartime.

“Military justice sows the great-est terror in our population,” saidJuan Miguel Matheus, an opposi-tion congressman in the state ofCarabobo. He said at least 69 peo-ple there had been jailed by themilitary since early April.

Those held include students,store owners, mechanics andfarmers, rights groups say. An en-tire family was arraigned before amilitary tribunal in Caracas thispast week and charged with incit-ing rebellion. In one case in thecity of Valencia, two people werebrought before military courts onsuspicion of stealing legs of hamduring a round of looting — thencharged with rebellion as well, ac-cording to Penal Forum.

“They are being treated likethey are combatants,” said Al-fredo Romero, the director of the

Venezuela Tries Protesters in Its Military Courts

An Embattled President Treats Civilians ‘Like

We Are in a War’

Continued on Page 4

By NICHOLAS CASEY

‘NEVER QUIT’ President Trump gave a pep talk to Liberty Universitygraduates after vowing a quick decision on a new F.B.I. chief. PAGE 20

The missile, the first launched since anew president took office in the South,flew 430 miles before landing in the sea,the South Korean military said. PAGE 14

INTERNATIONAL 4-15

North Korea Tests Missile

Late Edition

VOL. CLXVI . . . No. 57,597 © 2017 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, SUNDAY, MAY 14, 2017

WASHINGTON — In thesmall dining room next to theOval Office where he worksmuch of the time, PresidentTrump keeps a stack of color-coded maps of the United Statesrepresenting the results of the2016 election. The counties hewon are blotchy red and spanmost of the nation.

Mr. Trump sometimes handsthe maps out to visitors as a kindof parting gift, and a framedportrait-size version was hung ona wall in the West Wing lastweek. In conversations, thepresident dwells on the map andits import, reminding visitorsabout how wrong the polls wereand inflating the scope of hisvictory.

At the root of Mr. Trump’sunpredictable presidency, ac-cording to people close to him, isa deep frustration about attackson his legitimacy, and a worry

Months Later,Trump CravesCredit for Win

NEWS ANALYSIS

By PETER BAKERand MAGGIE HABERMAN

Continued on Page 21

Today, some sunshine, a few show-ers and thunderstorms, windy, high66. Tonight, cloudy, gusty breeze,low 52. Tomorrow, sunny, high 68.Details in SportsSunday, Page 10.

$6.00