The Biden administration has struggled to offer a specific number of Americans still in Afghanistan in recent days, prompting criticism from conservatives and others about the administration’s preparedness to evacuate U.S. citizens.

White House national security adviser Jake SullivanJake Sullivan National security adviser doesn’t rule out more sending additional US troops to Afghanistan Sunday shows – Afghanistan’s collapse in the spotlight Sullivan: US taking Afghanistan ISIS threat ‘absolutely deadly seriously’ MORE said Monday the difficulty pinpointing an exact number was because some Americans did not notify the U.S. Embassy when they arrived in Afghanistan or when they left.

“Many people have asked, reasonably, why we can’t provide a precise number of American citizens still in country,” Sullivan said at a White House press briefing.

“When Americans have come to Afghanistan over the years, we asked them to register with the embassy. Many have left without deregistering. Others never registered at all,” Sullivan said. “That is their right, of course. And it’s our responsibility to find them, which we are now doing hour by hour. In the days remaining, we believe we have the wherewithal to get out the American citizens who want to leave Kabul.”

Sullivan said a “significant majority” of the 37,000 individuals evacuated by the U.S. military over the last nine days are Afghan civilians and allies of the war effort because there are several thousand more Afghans seeking to leave the country. But Sullivan estimated “a few thousand Americans” have been evacuated from Afghanistan since the Taliban began taking over major cities en route to seizing the capital of Kabul.

Biden administration officials have been asked repeatedly in recent days about how many American citizens are in Afghanistan that need to be evacuated. Spokespeople have struggled to offer an answer more specific than several thousand.

Sullivan said the government has tried contacting those believed to be in Afghanistan through email, text, phone calls and public means, such as radio.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/569046-white-house-explains-why-it-cant-pinpoint-number-of-americans-still

WASHINGTON – The Pentagon said Monday that the U.S. has evacuated or facilitated the evacuation of approximately 37,000 people from Afghanistan since August 14, with about 10,400 of them airlifted out over the weekend.

The weekend tally represents an apparent acceleration in the military’s colossal efforts to relocate as many people as possible amid a Taliban takeover. In addition, coalition forces evacuated approximately 5,900 people over the weekend.

Since the end of July, the U.S. has relocated approximately 42,000 people. There are still thousands more awaiting evacuation.

The Pentagon said that evacuees are flying from Kabul to temporary safe haven locations across the Middle East and Europe, including U.S. installations in Qatar, United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Bahrain, Italy, Spain and Germany.

Afghan nationals arriving in the United States will be housed at Ft. McCoy in Wisconsin, Ft. Lee in Virginia, Joint Base McGuire Dix Lakehurst in New Jersey and Ft. Bliss in Texas.

The latest update on evacuation efforts comes as U.S. and NATO coalition forces rush to airlift thousands of people out of the country ahead of a self-imposed deadline to depart Afghanistan in eight days.

President Joe Biden has previously said that he may consider extending the departure date past August 31 but has yet to do so.

A Taliban spokesman told Sky News that the group will not accept such an extension.

“It’s a red line. President Biden announced that on 31 August they would withdraw all their military forces. So if they extend it that means they are extending occupation while there is no need for that,” Suhail Shaheen said, according to the report.

“If the U.S. or U.K. were to seek additional time to continue evacuations, the answer is no. Or there would be consequences,” he added.

When asked about the looming deadline at the Pentagon and the Taliban warning, Defense Department spokesman John Kirby said that the “focus is on getting this done by the end of the month.”

“We are well aware of the stated desire by the Taliban to have this mission completed by the 31st of August, I will tell you that we are still planning on completing it by the 31st of August. That is the mission that has been signed by the commander in chief and assigned to us and that’s what we’re trying to execute,” Kirby added.

Earlier on Monday, the U.S. military confirmed that a brief firefight broke out at one gate into Kabul’s Hamid Karzai International Airport.

Navy Capt. William Urban, a spokesman for U.S. Central Command, the combatant command that oversees American military operations in the region, said the incident “appeared to begin when an unknown hostile actor fired upon Afghan security forces.”

He added no American or NATO coalition forces were injured.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/08/23/us-evacuates-37000-from-afghanistan-as-taliban-calls-august-31-withdrawal-deadline-red-line.html

Rioters try to break through a police barrier at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

John Minchillo/AP


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Rioters try to break through a police barrier at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

John Minchillo/AP

The officer who shot and killed rioter Ashli Babbitt during the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection acted within department policy, the U.S. Capitol Police announced on Monday.

“After interviewing multiple witnesses and reviewing all the available evidence, including video and radio calls, the United States Capitol Police has completed the internal investigation into the fatal shooting of Ms. Ashli Babbitt, which occurred in the Speaker’s Lobby on January 6,” the department said in a statement.

“USCP’s Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) determined the officer’s conduct was lawful and within Department policy, which says an officer may use deadly force only when the officer reasonably believes that action is in the defense of human life, including the officer’s own life, or in the defense of any person in immediate danger of serious physical injury.”

The officer, who is not being named to protect their safety, will not face disciplinary action from the department.

The USCP decision comes after the Justice Department in April said it would not pursue charges against the officer who fatally shot Babbitt as she attempted to breach a barricaded, shattered glass door leading to the House chamber.

Since Babbitt’s death, the far right has painted the rioter as a martyr who was felled by a system intent on villainizing Trump supporters.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/08/23/1030354113/capitol-police-officer-ashli-babbitt-riot

Vice President Kamala Harris at last spoke publicly on what is happening in Afghanistan as Americans and Afghans try to exit the country due to the Taliban’s swift takeover, but she refused to weigh in on the U.S. government’s decision-making that led to the current situation.

During an appearance alongside Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, both leaders were asked about the U.S. withdrawal and evacuation process, with Harris being asked what she thinks went wrong.

LA TIMES KAMALA HARRIS ‘OWNS’ AFGHANISTAN POLICY AFTER TOUTING HER ROLE IN WITHDRAWAL DECISION

“So, I understand and appreciate why you asked the question. And I think there’s going to be plenty of time to analyze what has happened and what has taken place in the context of the withdrawal from Afghanistan,” the vice president said. “But right now, we are singularly focused on evacuating American citizens, Afghans who worked with us, and Afghans who are vulnerable, including women and children.”

Harris added that “we have a responsibility and we feel a deep commitment to making sure that folks who helped us are safe.”

U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris attends a joint news conference with Singapore’s Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong in Singapore Monday, Aug. 23, 2021. (Evelyn Hockstein/Pool Photo via AP)
(Evelyn Hockstein/Pool Photo via AP)

The vice president went on to praise President Biden for having “shown great emotion in expressing sadness about some of the images we have seen” but reiterated that the U.S. cannot be “distracted in any way from what must be our primary mission right now, which is evacuating people from that region who deserve to be evacuated.”

BIDEN URGES TALIBAN TO PROVIDE FOR ‘WELL BEING’ OF AFGHANS

Later on, Harris was again asked about the withdrawal from Afghanistan, specifically whether or not she agreed with the steps taken in making the decisions, even if the results were not what were planned. The vice president said that “there will be and should be a robust analysis of what has happened” but repeated that “right now, there is no question that our focus has to be on evacuating American citizens.”

Lee was asked about American credibility in light of current events and said that what happens next will be key for how the U.S. is perceived in the future.

“What will influence perceptions of U.S. resolve and commitment to the region will be what the U.S. does going forward: how it repositions itself in the region, how it engages its broad range of friends and partners and allies in the region, and how it continues the fight against terrorism,” Lee said.

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“Countries make calculations and take positions, and they have to make recalculations and adjust their positions from time to time,” Lee continued. “Sometimes it can be done smoothly; sometimes there are hiccups.  Sometimes things go awry and take time to put right.”

Lee also discussed Singapore’s past involvement in Afghanistan, noting that the Singapore Armed Forces had helped international forces in Afghanistan and Singapore had also sent teams to assist with reconstruction. As for the present, Lee said he understood Biden’s reasons for the withdrawal and offered use of the Singapore Air Force’s Airbus 330 Multi-Role Tanker and Transporter for use in airlifting people who are still there.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/kamala-harris-afghanistan-singapore-prime-minister-withdrawal-went-awry

Henri made landfall as a tropical storm near the Connecticut-Rhode Island border on Sunday, bringing 60 mph winds.   

The system has weakened to a depression but will still bring the risk of heavy rain across the Northeast Monday.  

Flood advisories currently in effect in the Northeast.
(Fox News)

Heavy surf and high rip current risk will continue impacting Mid-Atlantic and Northeast beaches through Tuesday. 

Elsewhere, dangerous heat will be the story over the Lower Mississippi Valley and into the central and eastern United States, with heat indices soaring past the 100-degree mark. 

The national forecast for Monday, Aug. 23.
(Fox News)

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Excessive heat warnings have been issued for the ArkLaMiss region, where heat indices could approach the 110- to 115-degree range.

Scattered showers and a few severe thunderstorms will be possible across the northern and central Plains and Midwest. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/henri-tropical-depression-latest-track-heavy-rain-northeast

World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus on Monday called for a two-month moratorium on COVID-19 booster shots as many low- and middle-income countries still struggle to provide enough vaccine doses for their citizens.

The Associated Press reported Ghebreyesus made these remarks while speaking to reporters in Budapest. The WHO head argued that “vaccine injustice and vaccine nationalism” fuels the risk of more infectious COVID-19 variants emerging.

He had made a similar call for a moratorium on booster shots in richer nations earlier this month, arguing that it has yet to be proven whether a booster shot is any more effective at preventing COVID-19 transmission than the two shots that are normally administered.

Ghebreyesus’s call for a pause on booster shots comes as the U.S. prepares to begin administering third doses of COVID-19 vaccines to all Americans who received the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna vaccines beginning Sept. 20.

Health experts have warned that as long as large populations of people remain unvaccinated, the risk of more infectious COVID-19 variants like the delta variant arising will remain.

“The virus will get the chance to circulate in countries with low vaccination coverage, and the delta variant could evolve to become more virulent, and at the same time more potent variants could also emerge,” Ghebreyesus said.

On Sunday, U.S. Surgeon General Vivek MurthyVivek MurthyPeople who received J&J vaccine will likely need booster, surgeon general says Sunday shows – Afghanistan’s collapse in the spotlight US can administer booster shots at home while enhancing global vaccinations, Murthy says MORE asserted that the U.S. will be able to administer booster shots domestically while still helping to enhance vaccinations worldwide, either through donations or by boosting vaccine production abroad.

“This is a critical issue because we know that to end this pandemic and to prevent the development of future variants, we need to vaccinate both America and the world. … We have to do both,” Murthy said while appearing on “Fox News Sunday.”

Source Article from https://thehill.com/policy/international/568988-who-chief-calling-for-two-month-halt-on-vaccine-boosters

Staff at the US Embassy in Kabul are “deeply disheartened” by the botched evacuation efforts in Afghanistan — with at least one saying they’d rather “die under the Taliban’s bullet” than be crushed to death at the airport, according to a report.

The staffers accused the US of betrayal after they were advised to head to the airport — but instead suffered a “brutal experience” without protection, according to a diplomatic cable obtained by NBC News.

They complained to the State Department about being attacked and spat on by Taliban fighters at checkpoints near the airport and also targeted by criminals, NBC said.

Others said they almost lost their children in the stampede to flee the Taliban’s brutal rule, while some were hospitalized after collapsing in a crush of people. Others said they had collapsed on the road because of heat exhaustion, NBC said.

“It would be better to die under the Taliban’s bullet” than face the crowds again, one staff member was quoted as saying in the cable.

Taliban fighters stand guard at a checkpoint near the US Embassy that was previously manned by American troops, in Kabul, Afghanistan.
AP

Another said, “Happy to die here, but with dignity and pride.”

At least one staffer also said his home had been tagged with spray paint — a Taliban tactic to mark homes with people needing to be questioned, the cable reportedly said. That family fled and was unable to get to the airport, NBC said.

The cable was sent Saturday, according to the network — a day before at least seven people, including a young child, were crushed to death in some of the most heartbreaking scenes from the attempted mass exodus.

US Embassy personnel from Afghanistan are assisted by Air Force members as they board a Qatar Airways flight to Kuwait as part of Operation Allies Refuge, at Al Udeid Air Base, Qatar.
EPA/Senior Airman Noah Coger / US Air Force
A US Chinook military helicopter flies above the US Embassy in Kabul on August 15, 2021.
WAKIL KOHSAR/AFP via Getty Images

On Monday, an Afghan guard was shot dead and several others injured when a gun battle broke out, reportedly after an attack by snipers amid fears that ISIS will also try to take advantage of the chaos. Others have fallen to their deaths while clinging onto outbound US military planes.

A State Department spokesperson insisted to NBC that the US has a “special commitment” to local embassy staff members who “have suffered hardship, pain and loss because of their dedication to working with us to build a better future for all Afghans.”

The US has been “working tirelessly to improve access to the airport” and to assist people eligible for flights, the spokesperson said.

A staff member at the US Embassy reportedly said they are “happy to die” in Afghanistan, “but with dignity and pride.”
AP

President Biden on Sunday tried to deflect international outrage at the humanitarian crisis, saying the evacuation was always “going to be hard and painful, no matter when it started.”

“It would have been true if we’d started a month ago, or a month from now. There is no way to evacuate this many people without pain and loss of heartbreaking images you see on television,” he said.

The White House said that since Aug. 14, the US has helped evacuate approximately 37,000 people. 

With Post wires

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/08/23/us-embassy-staff-face-brutal-experience-to-kabul-airport/

Waves pound a seawall in Montauk, N.Y., on Sunday, as Tropical Storm Henri affects the Atlantic Coast.

Craig Ruttle/AP


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Waves pound a seawall in Montauk, N.Y., on Sunday, as Tropical Storm Henri affects the Atlantic Coast.

Craig Ruttle/AP

NEW YORK — Henri was downgraded to a tropical depression as it churned deeper inland early Monday, with experts predicting it will settle for awhile near the New York-Connecticut border before heading back east. Here’s everything to know about the Northeast weather that’s tropical in name, but far from its titular home:

Is Henri still a hurricane?

No. The National Hurricane Center downgraded it to a tropical storm early Sunday and then to a tropical depression later in the day. It weakened as it made landfall in Rhode Island at midday. By Sunday evening, it was weaker still as it moved over parts of western Massachusetts and Connecticut.

What’s the difference when it comes to hurricanes, tropical storms and depressions?

It’s all about the wind. Specifically, the sustained wind speeds. The maximum sustained winds for a hurricane is anything above 74 mph. A tropical storm? 73 mph.

As of early Sunday evening, Henri’s sustained winds topped out at 40 mph, well below hurricane status.

It dropped to a tropical depression when sustained winds fell below 39 mph.

But don’t write Henri off. The greatest threat from a storm this size is water. Heavy rains cause storm surges and inland flooding, and historically, those things have threatened life and property more than high winds.

What areas are forecast to be affected by Henri?

After coming ashore, Henri veered west, dumping massive amounts of rain on Connecticut and New York’s Hudson River Valley, which could cause dangerous flooding. So far, the storm surge hasn’t been significant like it was with 2012′s Superstorm Sandy — the effects of which are still plaguing New York. It’s forecast to bank east early Monday and skirt parts of Vermont and New Hampshire before heading out into the Gulf of Maine.

Who is Henri? Who is Bob? Who Is Gloria?

A stormy trio. Henri had strengthened into a hurricane Saturday morning before losing steam Sunday. Had it made landfall as a hurricane, it would have been New England’s first in 30 years. Bob was its predecessor, responsible for the deaths of 17 and $1.5 billion in damage in August 1991. But with Connecticut in Henri’s path, some might better remember Gloria — the September 1985 hurricane made landfall on both Long Island and Connecticut and caused eight deaths and nearly $1 billion in damage.

Why do I share a name with a storm?

These storms have human names courtesy the World Meteorological Association, which draws up a list of 21 names for each Atlantic hurricane season.

So what are the conditions needed for an Henri (or Bob or Gloria)?

There are two ingredients needed for a storm to track this far up north: a tropical system itself and steering currents. Most tropical systems in the northern hemisphere run out or recur before they can make their way north, according to the National Weather Service.

Is Henri’s path connected to climate change?

It’s just a tropical weather phenomenon, the National Weather Service says. But at the same time, climate change isn’t off the hook when it comes to tropical weather — global warming exacerbates hurricanes, making them stronger and wetter.

How does Henri compare to Sandy?

Sandy’s known as a superstorm around these parts, because it technically wasn’t a hurricane when it did its worst to New York City, its suburbs and the Jersey Shore in October 2012. Henri has not been that hard on the city or the shore, but it could cause calamitous flooding in the saturated Hudson River Valley. Power outages throughout the greater region could last a week or more. And with Sandy, at least, there was more time to prepare. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo brought up Sandy in a Saturday news conference, saying Henri comparatively offered “short notice.”

Cuomo is governor until 11:59 p.m. EDT Monday, so he’s technically still in charge for now.

We’re in the dog days of August — are there still tourists on the Atlantic Coast?

Oh, yes. School is back in session in parts of the east coast, but there are still thousands of tourists enjoying the beaches of Cape Cod, the Hamptons and elsewhere.

Is Henri a fast or slow-moving storm?

Henri isn’t winning any races. Its slow churn could be a good thing, increasing the chance it will falter quickly. But it could also mean a lot of concentrated rain, which translates to flooding.

Was Hurricane Bob the same as the “perfect storm?”

Nope, though both storms were in 1991. The so-called “perfect storm” — also known as the Halloween Storm — hit New England about two months later. It started as a nor’easter, in which form it inflicted the most damage. A hurricane eventually formed at its center — but it purposely went unnamed, because meteorologists worried it would be distracting.

Say it had been named, what would it have been known as?

Henri.

Seriously?

Yep! Atlantic hurricane names are recycled every six years, unless they’re retired out of notoriety — we’re never going to see another hurricane named Katrina, or even Bob, again. And the “H” name — Henri in 1991 — was next on the list when the storm struck.

So that movie isn’t about Bob?

Correct. “The Perfect Storm” was a 2000 movie starring George Clooney and New England’s own Mark Wahlberg, based on a book of the same name by Sebastian Junger. We’re getting a little off-topic, here, though.

What about Irene?

2011’s Irene was indeed a hurricane, but by the time it ravaged Vermont, it was technically a tropical storm.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/08/23/1030224289/overstayed-welcome-tropical-storm-henri-takes-its-time-drenching-the-northeast

Mr. de Blasio’s push is likely to be unpopular with some D.O.E. employees, but is broadly supported by the city’s powerful teachers’ union. The city is still negotiating with the United Federation of Teachers and other unions representing education staff on what will happen to employees who do not comply with the mandate. The city announced last month that educators who did not comply with the requirement to be vaccinated or submit to testing would be suspended without pay, and a similar consequence is likely for staffers who refuse to be vaccinated under the new mandate.

On Monday, Michael Mulgrew, U.F.T. president, acknowledged that the city had the legal right to create such a mandate, but said key details were still being hashed out.

“While the city is asserting its legal authority to establish this mandate, there are many implementation details, including provisions for medical exceptions, that by law must be negotiated with the U.F.T. and other unions, and if necessary, resolved by arbitration,” Mr. Mulgrew said in a statement.

Mr. de Blasio said that, even if bargaining is stalled or does not succeed, the mandate will still go forward.

The mayor and Meisha Porter, the schools chancellor, said they expect a high level of compliance from schools staff on the new mandate. “I do not expect a staffing shortage,” Ms. Porter said.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/23/nyregion/nyc-schools-employee-vaccine-mandate.html

Brian Mitchell (right) looks through the damaged home of his mother-in-law along with family friend Chris Hoover on Sunday in Waverly, Tenn. Heavy rains caused flooding Saturday in Middle Tennessee and have resulted in multiple deaths as homes and rural roads were washed away.

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Brian Mitchell (right) looks through the damaged home of his mother-in-law along with family friend Chris Hoover on Sunday in Waverly, Tenn. Heavy rains caused flooding Saturday in Middle Tennessee and have resulted in multiple deaths as homes and rural roads were washed away.

Mark Humphrey/AP

Some areas in Tennessee saw almost a quarter of their average annual rainfall in only a few hours over the weekend— and the rain brought devastating flash flooding too. At least 21 people are dead and dozens are still missing as residents continue to assess the damage.

Within a six-hour period, 9 to 17 inches of rain fell across a portion of Middle Tennessee. Once confirmed by researchers, that rainfall will likely top the state’s record for most rainfall in 24 hours. In Dickson County, Chief Deputy Teddy Murphy reports flash flooding destroyed houses and washed away some major roadways.

Vehicles come to rest in a stream Sunday, Aug. 22, 2021, in Waverly, Tenn. Heavy rains caused flooding Saturday in Middle Tennessee and have resulted in multiple deaths as homes and rural roads were washed away.

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Vehicles come to rest in a stream Sunday, Aug. 22, 2021, in Waverly, Tenn. Heavy rains caused flooding Saturday in Middle Tennessee and have resulted in multiple deaths as homes and rural roads were washed away.

Mark Humphrey/AP

Philip Albritton and his family were caught in the surge.

“There was water up to my knees at the front porch. And my brother-in-law had my daughter, one of my daughters in his arms, and he was waist-deep in water. My other daughter was climbing on my wife. And my dogs were swimming.”

By the time Hope Collier and her grandmother realized they needed to escape the waters, it was too late — their Jeep disappeared and was later found in a tree. The force of the water dragged Collier into the flood and the powerful current swept her for more than half a mile before she escaped. She says it was like, “a roller coaster with no rules.”

Collier and her grandmother survived, and Collier spoke with Caroline Eggers from NPR member station WPLN about the disaster. You can listen to her story here.

A woman looks at debris washed up against a bridge over a stream Sunday, Aug. 22, 2021, in Waverly, Tenn. Heavy rains caused flooding Saturday in Middle Tennessee and have resulted in multiple deaths as homes and rural roads were washed away.

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A woman looks at debris washed up against a bridge over a stream Sunday, Aug. 22, 2021, in Waverly, Tenn. Heavy rains caused flooding Saturday in Middle Tennessee and have resulted in multiple deaths as homes and rural roads were washed away.

Mark Humphrey/AP

This is at least the second major flooding incident in Tennessee this year, after Nashville got hit in late March, and tracks with predictions of how climate change is shaping and will shape the state. The EPA has said there will be increased flooding, and a tool from Climate Central estimates that more than a quarter million Tennesseans live at greater risk of flooding as the climate heats up.

This story first appeared in the Morning Edition liveblog.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/08/23/1030264228/tennessee-deadly-flooding-devastation

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2021/08/23/donald-trump-tells-alabama-rally-covid-19-vaccine-gets-booed/8237487002/

Richard Azzopardi, a senior adviser and spokesman for the governor, lashed out at the allegation that the governor has been looking for someone to care for the canine. He said the arrangement was only “temporary” because the governor, who is scheduled to resign from office at 11:59 p.m. Monday, is planning to take a vacation.

Azzopardi also said that he and the governor had more important things to deal with as the tropical system Henri was bearing down on southern New York and New England.

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“Captain is part of the governor’s family and for your nameless ill-informed source to imply they’ve been trying to give him away is untrue,” Azzopardi said in a statement Saturday. “Someone offered to watch him for a few days while the transition was ongoing but for that to be weaponized and morph from a game of telephone into the pages of your paper is absurd — now excuse us we’re preparing for a major storm.”

In an earlier conversation, Azzopardi had said: “He wants to go on vacation. They love that dog. … That’s not what he asked: He didn’t ask to give away the dog. … This nameless source is crazy. … I can’t believe this is what I’m dealing with right now, when I’m dealing with a major storm.”

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But a State Police source said they were told “he tried giving the dog to the (a mansion employee). … Apparently (the employee) took the dog home and it didn’t work — the dog walks him, he don’t walk the dog.”

The source, in an interview on Saturday, also said the dog had nipped at “several State Police members” as well as staff members, “and the governor would just laugh. … The dog remains at the mansion.”

Cuomo first introduced the dog, then 14 weeks old, in 2018 to a delegation from the state Conference of Mayors when they visited the Executive Mansion.

Cuomo, who struggled to control the dog during that public introduction, said his daughters had suggested getting the dog but were “nowhere to be found now.”

“He will only urinate indoors,” Cuomo said three years ago. “He has some kind of climate sensitivity that overpowers his bowel movements.”

Source Article from https://www.timesunion.com/state/article/Cuomo-s-dog-Captain-left-at-mansion-after-16402902.php

A firefight broke out in the chaos at Kabul’s Hamid Karzai International Airport early Monday morning as foreign forces continued to assist with evacuations and thousands of Afghans attempted to escape the country taken over by the Taliban a week ago.

One Afghan security personnel was killed and three others wounded when the firefight erupted between Afghan security forces and unknown attackers, the official account of the German Joint Forces Operations Command said in a tweet Monday.

The German military also said that American and German forces involved in the progression of the fighting, but that all of the German forces on the ground were unharmed.

The last week at Kabul’s airport saw images of desperation as mothers handed their babies to foreign soldiers over barbed-wire walls and Afghan civilians clung to airplanes as they took off in desperate attempts to flee their country.

The violence comes as the Joe Biden administration grapples with a torrent of criticism over the fallout of its pullout from Afghanistan.

Biden said Sunday that the U.S. military has evacuated 28,000 people from Afghanistan since Aug. 14, but many thousands of Americans still remain there. The Pentagon said last week that the U.S. military could not ensure safe passage for Americans to Kabul airport, despite several thousand forces now being on the ground.  

On Sunday Biden activated the Civil Reserve Air Fleet, a rarely-used program whereby the Pentagon ordered civilian airlines to provide planes to help accelerate Afghanistan evacuation efforts. The activation is for 18 aircraft from six airlines.

The administration is considering extending the deadline for the complete troop withdrawal beyond its original Aug. 31 date, Biden added.

“Our hope is we will not have to extend, but there are going to be discussions, I suspect, on how far along we are in the process,” he said.

But the Taliban will not extend the Aug. 31 deadline, according to reporting by Reuters citing two anonymous Taliban sources. The sources added that no Western authorities had contacted the group about extending the deadline.

Speaking to press during a visit to Singapore on Monday, Vice President Kamal Harris said, “Right now we are singularly focused on evacuating American citizens, Afghans who worked with us and Afghans who are vulnerable, including women and children.”

“We have a responsibility and we feel a deep commitment to making sure that folks who helped us are safe,” Harris added, saying that there should be a “robust analysis of what happened” later.

Despite her assurances, Afghan staff working at the U.S. embassy in Kabul feel “deeply disheartened” by the U.S.’s evacuation efforts, according to a diplomatic cable seen by NBC News.

The Taliban, with which the U.S. had negotiated a cease-fire agreement, made a series of stunning gains across the country and finally seized the power center of Kabul on Aug. 15, taking essentially complete control of the country within roughly 10 days.

As a consequence, the Islamic extremist militants now have access to billions of dollars worth of American weapons surrendered by the Afghan military, which the U.S. trained and equipped for two decades.

And tens of thousands of Afghans have made desperate attempts to escape, particularly those who worked with U.S. personnel and fear reprisal killings by the Taliban. While Biden has said these Afghans will be supported, advocacy groups say that up to 20,000 remain in the country, unable to board an evacuation flight out due to bureaucratic barriers or lack of safe passage to Kabul airport.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/08/23/deadly-firefight-erupts-at-kabul-airport-as-evacuation-chaos-continues.html

BOSTON (CBS) – Henri made landfall near Westerly, Rhode Island Sunday afternoon at approximately 12:15 p.m. Unbelievably, this is just about the exact same location where Tropical Storm Elsa made landfall earlier this summer. Before this year, we hadn’t had a landfalling tropical storm in 15 years (Beryl in 2006 on Nantucket). Let’s hope that will be the last of the landfalls this year.

(WBZ-TV graphic)

Winds topped out at 78 miles per hour at Point Judith, Rhode Island and 68 mph in Newport and Block Island. Peak gusts in Massachusetts included 55 mph in Falmouth, 54 mph in Westport and several other between 45-to-55 mph.

Photos: Tropical Storm Henri Hits New England

The heaviest rainfall from here on out will occur in western New England and eastern New York, to the left side of Henri’s track. Parts of that area will receive 5-to-10 inches of rain when all is said and done.

In fact, with some upsloping in the elevations in New York State, its not out of the question that localized rainfall totals could top a foot! Needless to say, there are going to be some major flooding problems in eastern New York. Western Connecticut and western Massachusetts should escape the worst of the heavy rain and flooding, but this needs to be closely monitored (dependent upon how far west the center of Henri moves inland).

We aren’t completely out of the woods in central and eastern Massachusetts as the remnants of Henri will get swept up by a front Monday afternoon and evening bringing one last round of downpours through the area.

(WBZ-TV graphic)

Worcester County could see downpours arrive mid-to-late afternoon. In eastern Massachusetts, it will take a bit longer. The window of opportunity for downpours will be closer to 6 p.m. to midnight. We cannot rule out a severe storm or two, perhaps even a spin-up tornado. As seen with the remnants of Fred last week, this is always a concern with a tropical system or its remnants moving through.

We finally rid ourselves of Henri on Tuesday but we will be left with a very tropical-like airmass. Temperatures will reach near 90 degrees Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday with oppressive humidity to boot. It’s just another typical summer week in Boston 2021.

Currently, Boston is sitting at the sixth wettest summer on record (17.78 inches) with a real shot at getting as high as number two on that list (just a few more inches).

(WBZ-TV graphic)

If it hasn’t been the rain, the weather story has been the heat. This is also currently the warmest summer on record in Boston! The average temperature of 74.5 degrees is 0.4 degrees warmer than the summers of 1983 and 1949 (tied for number two on the list). Probably not an ideal summer for just about anyone interested in outdoor activities.

Again, here’s hoping that we have seen the last of the tropical activity in New England this year. We still haven’t had a landfalling hurricane here since Bob in 1991, let’s keep it that way.

Follow Terry on Twitter @TerryWBZ

Source Article from https://boston.cbslocal.com/2021/08/23/tropical-storm-henri-path-track-hurricane-storm-boston-weather-forecast-westerly-rhode-island-landfall/

The addition of 18 commercial airplanes — activated, the Pentagon announced Sunday, as part of the Civil Reserve Air Fleet — is intended to address those bottlenecks. The jetliners, contracted from domestic airlines United, American, Atlas, Delta, Omni and Hawaiian, will not be flown into Kabul, but used instead to move those taken to places like Qatar on to other destinations in Europe, the Americas, Africa and the Persian Gulf. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said earlier in the weekend that 13 countries had pledged to temporarily host evacuees, while an additional 12 had agreed to serve as transit points.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2021/08/22/afghanistan-biden-evacuations/

WAVERLY, TN (WSMV) – 22 people are now confirmed dead after devastating flooding in Humphreys County this weekend, according to the Associated Press. 

As of Monday morning, at least 20 people are still missing. 

“Today, we are trying to get a good evaluation picture,” Humphreys County Sheriff Chris Davis said.  

Catastrophic flooding in Humphreys County leaves 15 people dead and around 30 people are still missing, according to Sheriff Chris Davis.






The catastrophic flooding happened Saturday after 17 inches of rain fell on the town of Waverly in less than 24 hours, setting a new one-day rainfall record for Tennessee.

Davis said many of the people still missing were in the area most impacted by the flood waters.

“The ones we have missing are mainly from the area of the greatest impact of the watcher when it first came up,” said Davis. “From children to elderly is what our deceased is ranging from.”

Waverly Department of Public Safety Director Grant Gillespie said the number of missing went down from 40 to at least 20 after posting a list of names on social media.

Humphreys County officials provide an update on Saturday’s deadly flooding in the county that has left at least 21 people dead.






Gillespie also said there had been an arrest on Sunday for looting. Someone was caught trying to steal from a business that was damaged from the storm.

Humphreys County Schools announced classes would be canceled this week because of the flooding. Three schools were impacted by the flooding.

Davis said that they are having issues with notifying victims because of the infrastructure issues in the county.

Humphreys County first responders have released a list of names of people who have been reported missing after Saturday’s deadly floods.

Now, search efforts are underway as families search for missing loved ones. Emergency officials have reopened the reunification center at McEwen High School and it will remain open until 5 p.m. The mission of the center is to help loved ones get information from those searching.

Davis asks onlookers to avoid Waverly if possible. Power still remains out in much of the community and several businesses were damaged by the torrential flood waters.

“If you don’t have to come to Waverly, stay home. We’d rather ask you not to come into Waverly if you don’t have too,” the sheriff told News4 on Sunday morning.

Tennessee officials provide an update on the deadly flooding in Humphreys County after a tour of the area.






The 8 p.m. curfew in Waverly and Humphreys County will remain in place on Sunday.

There is also a boil water advisory in effect for the Waverly water system.

WAVERLY, TN (WSMV) – Humphreys County Sheriff Chris Davis said 10 people were dead and 31 missing after flooding on Saturday.

Anyone seeking shelter in Humphreys County is advised to go to the following locations: 

  • YMCA Dickson County, 225 Henslee Dr., Dickson
  • Fairfield Church of Christ, 1860 Tennessee 100, Centerville
  • Waverly Church of Christ, 438 W. Main St., Waverly
  • Waverly First Baptist Church, 300 E. Main St., Waverly

The Red Cross has setup an online resource, so flood survivors can register and let family and friends know they are safe. To access this resource, click here

American Red Cross disaster responders from across Tennessee are beginning to provide shelter, relief items and comfort for people impacted by floods in Hickman, Humphreys and Dickson counties early Saturday morning.

However, the Humphreys County Sheriff’s Office advises people to avoid travel unless “absolutely necessary.” Drivers are being told “not attempt to cross flooded roads or walkways. Turn around, don’t drown.”

TEMA released their fourth Flash Report before noon on Sunday, highlighting the following: 

  • A Reunification Center for flood survivors is open at McEwen High School from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sunday.
  • The American Red Cross has set up a Flood in Tennessee online resource at www.safeandwell.org where flood survivors can register and let family and friends know they are safe.
  • The State Emergency Operations Center is activated and supporting local assistance and resource requests in the storm-impacted counties.
  • Search and rescue operations, and missions to support human needs, will remain ongoing today.
  • Flood waters are receding and river levels are being monitored.

You can read the full report here. 

Neighbors should check in on the elderly and any people living alone. People should also monitor radio and television broadcasts for information and instructions as well as charge any electronic devices in case of loss of power.



Source Article from https://www.wsmv.com/news/at-least-22-dead-20-still-missing-after-flooding-in-humphreys-county/article_b6b48f46-0346-11ec-bb1c-e3538241b442.html

KABUL/WASHINGTON – A firefight broke out between unidentified gunmen, Western security forces and Afghan guards at the North Gate of Kabul airport on Monday, Germany’s armed forces said, as thousands of Afghans and foreigners thronged the airport, seeking to flee Taliban rule.

One Afghan guard was killed and three others were injured in the battle, which also involved US and German forces, the German military said on Twitter, without specifying whether the dead Afghan was one of the Taliban fighters deployed to guard the airport.

The airport has been a scene of chaos since the Taliban seized the Afghan capital on Aug. 15 as U.S. and international forces try to evacuate citizens and vulnerable Afghans.

On Sunday, Taliban fighters beat back crowds at the airport a day after seven Afghans were killed in a crush at the gates as the deadline for the withdrawal of foreign troops approaches.

Foreign forces in Afghanistan have not sought to extend the Aug. 31 deadline to leave the country, a Taliban official said on Monday, after President Joe Biden said US troops might stay longer to oversee a “hard and painful” evacuation.

The Taliban seized power in Afghanistan just over a week ago as the United States and its allies withdrew troops after a 20-year war aimed at overthrowing the Taliban and hunting down al Qaeda after the 9/11 attacks.

Foreign forces were working towards the end-August deadline agreed with the Taliban to leave the country and had not sought to extend it yet, a senior legal adviser to the Taliban leadership told Reuters on Monday.

Biden, who last week flagged the possibility of troops remaining longer, said on Sunday the security situation in Afghanistan was changing rapidly and remained dangerous.

“Let me be clear, the evacuation of thousands from Kabul is going to be hard and painful” and would have been “no matter when it began,” Biden said in a briefing at the White House.

“We have a long way to go and a lot could still go wrong.”

Asked by a reporter whether the United States would extend an Aug. 31 deadline for evacuations, Biden replied: “Our hope is we will not have to extend but there are going to be discussions I suspect on how far along we are in the process.”

Biden said he had directed the State Department to contact Americans stranded in the country, where Taliban checkpoints are in place.

“We’re executing a plan to move groups of these Americans to safety and to safely and effectively move them to the airport compound. For security reasons, I’m not going to go into detail … but I will say again today what I’ve said before: Any American who wants to get home will get home.”

Afghan allies of the West and vulnerable Afghans such as women activists and journalists would be helped too, he said.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/08/23/kabul-airport-firefight-breaks-out-involving-western-forces-says-germany/

Most of downtown Montauk, N.Y., at Long Island’s eastern tip, was shut down, save for a pancake house and a 7-Eleven with its windows boarded up and “open” spray-painted in neon orange.

To the west, in Long Beach, a few brave or foolhardy surfers rode towering waves. At Jones Beach nearby, Andy Lawrence, 76, and his 8-year-old granddaughter, Harper, were among the few human dots on the landscape. “We’re a family of storm-chasers,” Mr. Lawrence said.

Harper added, “I like how strong the wind is — it feels weird on my rain jacket.”

The storm gave New York’s outgoing governor, Andrew M. Cuomo, a final opportunity to prove his emergency-management mettle.

Mr. Cuomo, who received national attention for his leadership during the coronavirus pandemic, declared a state of emergency so New York could use federal funds to prepare for floods and other possible effects of the storm — though he acknowledged that officials did not expect “any real significant damage post the event.” Mr. Cuomo has announced he would step down on Monday night in the wake of a sexual harassment scandal. States of emergency were also declared in Rhode Island and Connecticut.

As the rains fell, the Metro-North Railroad and Long Island Rail Road canceled much of their service in New York and Connecticut, hundreds of flights were canceled at airports in the New York metropolitan area, and parts of New York City’s subway system briefly stopped service.

Officials in Connecticut issued evacuation orders in coastal parts of several towns, including East Haven, Madison, Groton and Branford. About 250 residents of four nursing homes — in Old Saybrook, Mystic, Guilford and West Haven — were evacuated, state officials said.

Rhode Island officials closed three bridges because of high winds, and the state banned motorcycles and tractor-trailers.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/22/nyregion/tropical-storm-henri.html