Russia has moved some long-range artillery and rocket launchers into firing position, threatening Ukraine, according to a U.S. official.

Some Russian units have left their assembly areas — the bumper-to-bumper formations seen in satellite photos — and are beginning to move into “attack positions,” according to the official. This movement marks a change since Sunday, when some of the units had left the assembly areas but had not yet taken what could be viewed as attack positions.

The U.S. believes Russia will attack Ukraine by the end of the week, although it’s not yet certain what form it will take, the official said. 

Once the Russian attack begins, U.S. knowledge of what is happening will dramatically decrease. Americans will have no troops on the ground and no reconnaissance planes over the air, and Russian cyber attacks and electronic warfare will blot out communications.  

U.S. officials say Russia now has 80% of the forces it will need to launch a full-scale invasion, and the rest are en route. More than 100,000 Russian troops are amassed along Ukraine’s borders — to the east, in Russia, and the north, in Belarus.   

National security adviser Jake Sullivan warned Sunday morning on “Face the Nation” that Russian President Vladimir Putin could give the orders for an invasion “essentially at any time.”

“We have seen over the course of the past 10 days a dramatic acceleration in the build-up of Russian forces and the disposition of those forces in such a way that they could launch a military action essentially at any time,” Sullivan said. “They could do so this coming week, but of course, it still awaits the go-order” from Putin.  

Sullivan acknowledged that there is a distinct possibility that Russia may launch a false-flag attack, perhaps in the Donbas region of Ukraine, in order to justify an invasion, and he said that the U.S. is “watching very carefully.” In that scenario, Russian intelligence services might “conduct some kind of attack on Russian proxy forces in eastern Ukraine or on Russian citizens, and then blame it on the Ukrainians,” Sullivan said Sunday.

Sullivan is briefing congressional leaders on the latest developments on Ukraine Monday.

On Saturday, President Biden warned Russian President Vladimir Putin that the U.S. will “respond decisively and impose swift and severe costs,” should Russia invade Ukraine. 

— This is a developing story.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/russia-ukraine-attack-by-end-week/

OTTAWA — As of March 1, the province of Ontario will no longer require people show proof of vaccination to enter any indoor spaces, the premier, Doug Ford, announced on Monday morning.

In a call with reporters, Mr. Ford said that the change in public policy to rescind the so-called vaccine pass was based on the diminishing number of coronavirus cases and hospitalizations, and was not a concession to the demonstrators who have camped out in trucks around Parliament Hill; choked international trade by blockading a key border crossing in Windsor, Ontario; and inspired copycat protests around the country and world.

“Let me be very clear: We’re moving in this direction because it’s safe to do so,’’ Mr. Ford said. “Today’s announcement is not because of what’s happening in Ottawa, or Windsor, but despite it.”

Starting Feb. 17, indoor capacity limits in the province will be loosened, and some outdoor gathering limits lifted entirely, Mr. Ford said. Mask mandates, however, will remain in place “a little while longer,” he said, adding he made the decision in consultation with his minister of health.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/14/world/canada/doug-ford-announcement-ontario.html

WASHINGTON—The U.S. is closing its embassy in the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv and relocating operations 340 miles west to Lviv near the Polish border, as allies warn that an attack by Russian forces on Ukraine may be imminent.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken described the relocation as a temporary move to protect embassy staff.

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/u-s-is-closing-kyiv-embassy-relocating-diplomatic-operations-to-western-ukraine-11644864455

MOSCOW (AP) — The Kremlin signaled Monday it is ready to keep talking with the West about security grievances that led to the current Ukraine crisis, offering hope that Russia might not invade its beleaguered neighbor within days as the U.S. and European allies increasingly fear.

Questions remain about Russian President Vladimir Putin’s intentions, however. And countries are evacuating diplomats and on alert for possible imminent war amid the worst East-West tensions since the Cold War.

On a last-ditch diplomatic trip, Germany’s chancellor said there are “no sensible reasons” for the buildup of more than 130,000 Russian troops on Ukraine’s borders to the north, south and east, and he urged more dialogue.

Britain’s prime minister said Europe is “on the edge of a precipice” — but added, “there is still time for President Putin to step back.” France’s foreign minister, Jean-Yves Le Drian, told French television that “all elements” were in place for Russian forces to conduct a “strong offensive,” but “nothing shows today” that Putin has decided to launch one.

Despite warnings from Washington, London and elsewhere that Russian troops could move on Ukraine as soon as Wednesday, Monday’s meeting between Putin and Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov suggested otherwise.

At the session with Putin, Lavrov argued that Moscow should hold more talks with the U.S. and its allies despite their refusal to consider Russia’s main security demands.

Moscow, which denies it has any plans to invade Ukraine, wants Western guarantees that NATO won’t allow Ukraine and other former Soviet countries to join as members. It also wants the alliance to halt weapons deployments to Ukraine and roll back its forces from Eastern Europe — demands flatly rejected by the West.

The talks “can’t go on indefinitely, but I would suggest to continue and expand them at this stage,” Lavrov said, noting that Washington has offered to conduct dialogue on limits for missile deployments in Europe, restrictions on military drills and other confidence-building measures. Lavrov said possibilities for talks “are far from being exhausted.”

His comments, at an appearance orchestrated for TV cameras, seemed designed to send a message to the world about Putin’s own position: namely, that hopes for a diplomatic solution aren’t yet dead.

Putin noted the West could try to draw Russia into “endless talks” and questioned whether there is still a chance to reach agreement. Lavrov replied that his ministry wouldn’t allow the U.S. and its allies to stonewall Russia’s main requests.

In a phone call Sunday, U.S. President Joe Biden and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy agreed to keep pushing both deterrence and diplomacy. Zelenskyy’s office also quoted him suggesting a quick Biden visit would help — a possibility that was not mentioned in the White House summary of the call. Such a visit would be unlikely as the U.S. is now operating with a skeleton diplomatic staff in the capital, Kyiv.

Ukrainian security and defense council chief Oleksiy Danilov downplayed the threat of invasion but warned of the risk of “internal destabilization” by unspecified forces.

“Today we do not see that a large-scale offensive by the Russian Federation can take place either on (Feb.) 16th or the 17th,” he told reporters after meeting lawmakers. “We are aware of the risks that exist in the territory of our country. But the situation is absolutely under control.”

As if to show defiance, Zelenskyy said Wednesday would be a “day of national unity,” calling on the country to display the blue-and-yellow flags and sing the national anthem in the face of “hybrid threats.”

“Our country today is as strong as ever. It is not the first threat the strong Ukrainian people have faced,” Zelenskyy said Monday evening in a video address to the nation. “We’re calm. We’re strong. We’re together. A great nation in a great country.”

The country is preparing nonetheless. Kyiv residents received letters from the mayor urging them “to defend your city,” and signs appeared in apartment buildings indicating the nearest bomb shelter. The mayor says the capital has about 4,500 such sites, including underground parking garages, subway stations and basements.

Dr. Tamara Ugrich said she stocked up on grains and canned food, and prepared an emergency suitcase.

“I don’t believe in war, but on TV the tension is growing every day and it’s getting harder and harder to keep calm. The more we are told not to panic, the more nervous people become,” she said.

Others heeded the advice of Ukraine’s leaders not to panic. Street music flooded central Maidan Square on Sunday night and crowds danced. “I feel calm. You should always be ready for everything, and then you will have nothing to be afraid of,” said Alona Buznitskaya, a model.

On the front line of Ukraine’s long-running conflict with Russia-backed separatists in the east, Ukrainian soldiers said shelling from rebel-controlled area has increased in the last three days. But they said they’re used to it and aren’t alarmed about an imminent incursion.

During what could be a crucial week for Europe’s security, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz visited Ukraine on Monday before heading to Moscow for talks with Putin on a high-stakes diplomatic foray.

After meeting Zelenskyy, Scholz urged Russia to show signs of de-escalation, and reiterated unspecified threats to Russia’s financial standing if it invades.

“There are no sensible reasons for such a military deployment,” Scholz said. “No one should doubt the determination and preparedness of the EU, NATO, Germany and the United States” in case of an military offensive.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres held talks with Lavrov and Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba, underlining “there is no alternative to diplomacy.”

Biden on Monday spoke by phone with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson. According to a Downing Street statement, the two “agreed there remained a crucial window for diplomacy and for Russia to step back from its threats towards Ukraine.”

NATO countries have also been building up forces in eastern Europe. Germany’s military said the first of 350 extra troops it is sending to bolster NATO forces in Lithuania were dispatched Monday. The U.S. said it will close its embassy in Kyiv and move all remaining staff there to Lviv, a city near the Polish border. Lithuania moved diplomats’ families and some nonessential diplomatic workers out of the country as well.

“It’s a big mistake that some embassies moved to western Ukraine,” Zelenskyy said. “It’s their decision, but ‘western Ukraine’ doesn’t exist. It’s united Ukraine. If something happens, God forbids, it (escalation) will be everywhere.”

The U.S. and its NATO allies have repeatedly warned Russia will pay a high price for any invasion — but they have sometimes struggled to present a united front. Scholz’s government, particularly, has been criticized for refusing to supply lethal weapons to Ukraine or spell out which sanctions it supports, raising questions about Berlin’s resolve. No new specifics emerged from his visit to Kyiv.

So far, NATO’s warnings appear to have had little effect: Russia has only bolstered troops and weapons in the region and launched massive drills in its ally Belarus, which also neighbors Ukraine. The West fears that the drills, which run through Sunday, could be used by Moscow as a cover for an invasion from the north.

Russia has repeatedly brushed off the concerns, saying it has the right to deploy forces on its territory.

One possible off-ramp emerged this week: Ukraine’s ambassador to the U.K., Vadym Prystaiko, pointed at a possibility of Ukraine shelving its NATO bid — an objective that is written into its constitution — if it would avert war with Russia.

“We might — especially being threatened like that, blackmailed by that, and pushed to it,” Prystaiko told BBC Radio 5.

On Monday, Prystaiko appeared to back away from that. Some lawmakers called for Prystaiko’s dismissal — but the fact the idea was raised at all suggests it is being discussed behind closed doors.

Pressed over Ukraine’s NATO ambitions Monday, the Ukrainian president remained vague, referring to them as a “dream.”

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russia would welcome such a move.

Meanwhile, a meeting will take place Tuesday by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe on the Russian deployments. But it is unclear whether it could defuse tensions.

Russia and Ukraine have been locked in a bitter conflict since 2014, when Ukraine’s Kremlin-friendly leader was ousted by a popular uprising. Moscow responded by annexing the Crimean Peninsula and backing the separatists in the east, where fighting has killed over 14,000 people.

A 2015 peace deal brokered by France and Germany helped halt large-scale battles, but regular skirmishes have continued, and efforts to reach a political settlement have stalled.

___

Karmanau reported from Kyiv, Ukraine. Associated Press writers Angela Charlton and Sylvie Corbet in Paris, Geir Moulson in Berlin, Jill Lawless in London, Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations and Jan M. Olsen in Copenhagen, Denmark, contributed.

Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/russia-ukraine-olaf-scholz-moscow-vladimir-putin-europe-ddf76e8b58bfa88a1022fef99bbaf3be

​Former President Donald Trump ripped the ​”LameStream” ​media Monday for its failure to cover allegations by special counsel John Durham that Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign paid an internet company to spy on Trump.

“Can you imagine that, what should be the biggest story of our time, bigger than Watergate, is getting absolutely no mention, ZERO, in the New York Times, Washington Post, ABC Fake News, NBC Fake News, CBS Fake News, ratings-dead CNN, and MSDNC,” the former president said in an emailed statement from his Save America PAC.

“​This in itself is a scandal, the fact that a story so big, so powerful, and so important for the future of our Nation is getting zero coverage from LameStream, is being talked about all over the world​,” Trump added. 

​The 45th president further accused the media of ignoring the “many Biden corruption scandals” before the 2020 election and “​they won’t talk about this, which is potentially even bigger.​”

“It shows how totally corrupt and shameless the media is​,” he continued.

Durham, who was appointed by then-Attorney General William Barr in May 2019 to investigate the origins of the FBI’s Russia probe, filed documents Friday claiming that Clinton’s campaign paid an internet company to “infiltrate” computer servers at Trump Tower and the White House in an effort to link Trump to Russia. 

Special counsel John Durham alleged in a filing that Hillary Clinton’s campaign paid a company to spy on former President Donald Trump.
AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall
Trump released a statement criticizing the “LameStream” media for not covering the probe’s allegations.
AP Photo/Tony Dejak
Donald Trump’s statement from Feb. 14, 2022.

The filing pertained to conflicts of interests in the case of Michael Sussmann, a Clinton campaign lawyer, who is charged with lying to the FBI.

Sussmann allegedly told then-FBI general counsel James Baker that Sussmann wasn’t working for the Clinton campaign when he handed over documents in September 2016 that purportedly tied the Trump Organization to a Kremlin-connected bank.

In fact, the indictment alleges, Sussmann had billed the Clinton campaign for calls and meetings with tech executive Rodney Joffe and the campaign’s general counsel, Marc Elias, in which they “coordinated and communicated” about the allegations

Trump said the allegation against Clinton’s campaign should be the “biggest story of our time.”
AP Photo/ Evan Vucci

“Can you imagine if the roles were reversed and the Republicans, in particular President Donald Trump, got caught illegally spying into the Office of the President?” Trump asked. “All hell would break loose and the electric chair would immediately come out of retirement​.

“The good news is, everybody is talking about not only this atrocity against our Nation, but that the press refuses to even mention the major crime that took place​,” the former president said. ​

Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), the leading GOPer on the House Judiciary Committee, said Durham’s filing shows that Trump was right all along when he accused the Clinton campaign of spying on him and called Russian collusion allegations a hoax.

“Yep, there was spying going on, and it was worse than we thought because they were spying on the sitting ​p​resident of the United States,” Jordan told “Fox & Friends” Sunday. “And it goes right to the Clinton campaign. So God bless John D​urham​.”

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2022/02/14/trump-blasts-media-for-ignoring-claims-clinton-spied-on-him/

Gregory McMichael, 66, and his son Travis, 36, along with Bryan, 52, have said they chased Arbery after Travis encountered him at an under-construction house in their neighborhood. They followed Arbery in pickup trucks and cut off his path before Travis confronted him and fatally shot him.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2022/02/14/arbery-hate-opening-statements/

MOREHEAD CITY, N.C. — Crews are searching the ocean off North Carolina on Monday after finding a debris field where a small plane carrying eight people went down a day earlier, the Coast Guard said.

Watchstanders received a report of a possible downed aircraft about 4 miles (6.4 kilometers) east of Drum Inlet from a Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point air traffic controller Sunday, the Coast Guard said. The air traffic controller reported that the aircraft was behaving erratically on radar, then disappeared from the screen.

FlightAware listed a departure for that plane from Hyde County Airport at 1:35 p.m. Sunday and noted it was last seen near Beaufort at 2:01 p.m. A total of eight people were aboard, the Coast Guard said in a statement.

Coast Guard spokesperson Petty Officer Edward Wargo said searchers have found a debris field in the area. The search included boat crews launched from Coast Guard Station Fort Macon and Coast Guard Station Hatteras Inlet, an MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter aircrew from Air Station Elizabeth City, local fire and sheriff’s department personnel and and National Park Service beach crews, the agency said.

The National Transportation Safety Board tweeted Monday that it is investigating the crash.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/coast-guard-searches-downed-plane-aboard-82882753



Weather

“That was one of the more bizarre and poorly forecast events I can remember in years.”

Twins Walden, left, and Stephen Maglione, 22 months, of Somerville, take in the sights Sunday as Chinese New Year is celebrated in Boston’s Chinatown. Pat Greenhouse / The Boston Globe

You don’t have to rub it in.

They know.

“Welp….that forecast didn’t age well,” 7News’s Jeremy Reiner tweeted Monday morning. “At least Saturday verified with record warmth…….Call it even?!”

“Nothing but Valentine’s [love] for you trolls,” NBC10 Boston’s Pete Bouchard said. “Nope, didn’t see this much snow coming Friday. Nope, I’m not happy about it. Sometimes Mother Nature sneaks one by you.”

“Predicting the future is challenging, but also rewarding and at times like this storm… humbling,” Sarah Wroblewski of WBZ weighed in. “It’s always a learning process and an opportunity to push yourself forward after mistakes.”

Yes, Boston meteorologists underestimated Sunday’s snowfall.

For instance, here was the National Weather Service’s last expected snowfall map on Saturday:

The snowfall forecast as of 3:55 p.m., Saturday, Feb. 12. – National Weather Service

And here is their snow totals map Monday morning:

The snowfall totals on Monday morning. – National Weather Service

So what exactly happened?

Local meteorologist David Epstein said there were some hints on Saturday that the earlier forecasts had it wrong.

By Saturday, “the models were sort of onto the fact that there was going to be more snow,” Epstein said Monday on his Weather Wisdom podcast, which he titled, “Why The Heck Did It Snow So Much?”

Epstein said “lift” occurred Sunday morning when the cold air arrived, which caused the initial snowfall.

“Lift is necessary in the atmosphere in order to create precipitation and clouds, so if you see a cloud, there’s lift,” he said on his podcast. “Our lift [Sunday] with that first round of snow in the morning came from a temperature difference, and those two temperatures as they met, warm air is lighter, it went up, it cooled, it condensed, it formed snowflakes, and we got that little bit of snow and then we had the lull.”

WBZ Chief Meteorologist Eric Fisher also cited lift in a Twitter explanation Monday morning.

“That was one of the more bizarre and poorly forecast events I can remember in years,” he said.

Epstein said the unexpected totals Sunday night were partly caused by what he called a “hybridized Norlun Trough,” or, in layman’s terms, an arm that stuck out out to the west of the storm.

“The Norlun Troughs can get stuck, and so you can see snow hour after hour after hour after hour in an area,” he said.

Also, the conditions in the clouds were forming perfect snowflakes.

“If you look at the snow [Monday] morning, it’s basically like dust, because the snowflakes are perfect and, as they came down, the air [was] allowed to pile up between them, and so it really piles up quite a lot more than it would otherwise because it’s so light,” Epstein explained. “You know, like a pillow that’s really fluffed up, and you could compress this down and it’s not going to be a lot of water.”

Overall, Epstein admitted Sunday’s snow was “certainly not well forecasted.”

“This is the great thing about weather is that there’s still surprises, it’s still why you need people … looking at this stuff,” he said. “I also think that Saturday was just so beautiful it was hard to wrap your head around the fact, ‘Hey, we’re going to see up to half a foot of snow in so many areas.’”

Source Article from https://www.boston.com/weather/weather/2022/02/14/boston-ma-wrong-snow-forecast-sunday-feb-13-2022/

Washington — White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said Sunday that Russia’s ramp-up of forces around Ukraine over the past few days indicates Russian President Vladimir Putin could give an order for military action “essentially at any time.”

“We have seen over the course of the past 10 days a dramatic acceleration in the build-up of Russian forces and the disposition of those forces in such a way that they could launch a military action essentially at any time,” Sullivan said in an interview with “Face the Nation.” “They could do so this coming week, but of course, it still awaits the go-order” from Putin.

Still, he said the U.S. “cannot predict the precise day or time” that Russia might decide to take action.

Tensions between Ukraine and Russia have escalated as more than 100,000 Russian forces have amassed along Ukraine’s borders, even as the U.S. and Western allies have urged Putin to engage in diplomacy. 

Despite the continued message of de-escalation, pushed by the Biden administration, the risk of a Russian invasion of Ukraine has continued to rise, as Russia has 80% of the forces in place that would be needed for a full-scale invasion, a U.S. official told CBS News last week.

The State Department on Saturday ordered non-emergency employees at the U.S. embassy in Kyiv to leave the country. Sullivan on Friday urged all U.S. citizens in Ukraine to swiftly leave the country, and warned there is “no prospect of a U.S. military evacuation” for those who choose to stay.

“If there is military action, if there is a war between Russia and Ukraine started by a Russian invasion of Ukraine, President Biden is not intending to send in American forces to fight Russia in that war,” he reiterated Sunday.

President Biden spoke with Putin for roughly an hour on Saturday and warned him that the U.S. will “respond decisively and impose swift and severe costs” if Russia invades Ukraine. Mr. Biden is also set to speak with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Sunday, a White House official said.

Sullivan, who was on the call with Putin, said he couldn’t predict what the Russian leader would do, but stressed that U.S. officials would continue to “test the proposition that we can find a diplomatic path forward.”

“If Russia wants to continue engaging diplomatically to find a way forward to address their security concerns and our security concerns, we’re prepared to do that,” he said. “If Russia decides instead to take major military action against Ukraine, we’re prepared to respond decisively.”

In the event Russia invades Ukraine, Sullivan said the U.S. would continue to support Ukraine and said doing so is “one of the three fundamental elements” of the Biden administration’s response.

“Continue to support Ukraine as it seeks to resist Russian aggression, second, impose severe and swift economic measures sin concert with our allies and partners to go at Russia’s financial system and its defense-industrial base, and then third, reinforce, reassure and deter, that is reinforce NATO territory, reassure our allies on the eastern flank and deter Russia from any action against NATO allies,” he said.

Asked about the new alliance between Russia and China, Sullivan said he does not believe China “will be in a position to compensate Russia for the losses it will endure” if the U.S. and allies hit Russia with economic sanctions.

“We all have to have a bit more confidence in ourselves, the United States, the West, the leading democracies of the world,” he said. “We’re more than 50% of the world’s economy. China and Russia are less than 20%. We’ve got innovation, we’ve got entrepreneurship and yes we’ve got freedom.”

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/russia-ukraine-invasion-any-time-jake-sullivan-face-the-nation/

  • Trump reacted to a report saying the Clinton campaign hired a firm to access Trump Tower servers.
  • The former president said the allegations were crimes that “would have been punishable by death.”
  • Jim Jordan echoed Trump’s talking points, saying his statement was “right on target.”

GOP Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio said former President Donald Trump’s statement in which he suggested executing Hillary Clinton campaign aides was “right on target” on Sunday.

Jordan, a staunch Trump ally, was reacting to the 45th president’s Saturday statement on a new court filing by the special counsel John Durham, reported by Fox News.

The filing said that former aides to Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign paid a tech company to access servers belonging to Trump Tower and afterward the Trump White House in an effort to find links to Russia.

In his Saturday statement, Trump said the filing “provides indisputable evidence” that the Clinton team spied on his campaign and presidency “in an effort to develop a completely fabricated connection to Russia.”

Trump and his allies have long said that the special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation from 2017 to 2019 into his campaign’s links to Russia was a “witch hunt.”

“This is a scandal far greater in scope and magnitude than Watergate and those who were involved in and knew about this spying operation should be subject to criminal prosecution,” Trump said. 

“In a stronger period of time in our country, this crime would have been punishable by death.”

Jordan echoed Trump’s talking points, telling Fox News on Sunday: “That is what is so frightening here. You had the government working with the Clinton campaign to go after the Republican Party’s nominee for president to spy on that campaign.”

Jordan didn’t provide any proof of his assertion that the US government was involved.

“We’ve never seen anything like this in history. So President Trump’s statement yesterday I think is right on target. This is truly unprecedented, truly something that has never happened in the history of our great country.”

Durham was appointed by then-Attorney General Bill Barr in October 2020 to investigate the US government investigation of the Trump 2016 campaign’s connections with Russia.

The Durham investigation has since become a popular talking point among conservatives.

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/jim-jordan-trump-right-on-target-suggest-executing-clinton-aides-2022-2

Windsor — Hours after Canadian police removed protesters camped nearly a week near the Ambassador Bridge, a critical U.S.-Canadian border crossing, the bridge reopened for traffic and commerce, the company that owns the bridge and Canadian authorities said. 

“The Detroit International Bridge Company is pleased to announce that the Ambassador Bridge is now fully open allowing the free flow of commerce between the Canada and US economies once again,” said Esther Jentzen, a representative for the bridge, in an email at 11:05 p.m. “This action follows a state of emergency declared in Ontario and an injunction granted by an Ontario judge which took effect Friday.”

At nearly midnight, the Canada Border Services Agency announced normal border processing had resumed at the bridge.

“Non-essential travel is not advised,” it tweeted.

With those announcements, the agency’s website for border wait times displayed “No delay” for entry to the Ambassador Bridge for the first time in a week.

Source Article from https://www.detroitnews.com/story/news/local/detroit-city/2022/02/13/ambassador-bridge-protesters-arrests-blockade-border/6775095001/

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Super Bowl LVI was shaping up to be a supersized disappointment for the Los Angeles Rams.

They had lost their lead during a disastrous start to the second half. They had lost one of their best players in wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. to a knee injury. They were about to waste MVP-caliber performances from Aaron Donald and Von Miller, not to mention what might be their best shot at a championship in the foreseeable future.

Then, as they have so many times during the Rams’ championship season, quarterback Matthew Stafford and wide receiver Cooper Kupp came to the rescue.

In a drive that will go down in NFL lore, Kupp converted a fourth down with an end around, drew three straight penalties and caught four passes from Stafford, the last of which produced a 1-yard touchdown with 1:25 left, capping a 79-yard drive that started with 6:13 remaining.

Donald then closed the door with another pressure of Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow.

The Rams’ return to the top of the NFL world is the perfect ending to a story that reads like a Hollywood script.

They mortgaged their future, trading high draft choices in an all-in effort to win Super Bowl LVI at SoFi Stadium — in the first season with fans at owner Stan Kroenke’s $5 billion venue — and it paid off with a 23-20 victory over the Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday. It was the Rams’ second Super Bowl championship and first title in Los Angeles since 1951.

They moved back to Los Angeles in 2016, a homecoming that followed a 21-year run in St. Louis that was highlighted by a win in Super Bowl XXXIV in 2000. They fell hard in Super Bowl LIII to the Patriots after the 2018 season, setting the stage for eventual redemption.

They got it thanks to a string of bold moves.

  • Hiring 30-year-old Sean McVay as head coach in 2017, making him the youngest head coach in the league’s modern history.

  • Trading two first-round draft choices to the Jacksonville Jaguars for cornerback Jalen Ramsey in October 2019.

  • Trading quarterback Jared Goff, two first-round picks and a third-round pick to the Detroit Lions for Stafford in January 2020.

  • Trading a second- and third-round pick to the Denver Broncos for Miller on Nov. 1.

  • Signing Beckham Jr. to a one-year contract on Nov. 11.

Kroenke brought his team back to a highly saturated sports market long owned by the Los Angeles Dodgers and Los Angeles Lakers and their 24 combined world championships, a relocation that came with the promise of a new stadium and later led to a lawsuit from St. Louis settled for $790 million.

The Rams also took a chance on McVay after a bad and boring 4-12 campaign under coach Jeff Fisher in the team’s first season in L.A. McVay, who has openly pondered his future as he tries to balance his professional and personal life, is now the youngest head coach to win a Super Bowl at 36.

“Many people had danced around Los Angeles,” Rams chief operating officer Kevin Demoff said earlier this month. “No one had been willing to say, ‘I’m going to go buy land, build a stadium, bring my team and really plant my flag without knowing the outcome.’ That first risk followed by Sean McVay, those two risks set us up for where we are today.”

There was plenty of risk in the way the Rams built their championship roster. They continually gave up high-end draft capital while trading for one marquee player after another — Ramsey, Miller, receivers Sammy Watkins and Brandin Cooks and cornerback Marcus Peters, to name a few. They believed that approach was necessary to capture the attention of a city that loves its stars and to build up what remains a lukewarm fan base.

But their biggest trade of all was the blockbuster for Stafford, which gave them a needed upgrade over Goff — whom they drafted first overall in 2016 after trading up 15 spots — and, as they had hoped, the missing piece to a Super Bowl run. It was well worth the risk.

Stafford told ESPN after the trade he wanted to play in big games after going winless in all three of his playoff appearances over 12 seasons with the Lions. He got that chance after leading the Rams to a 12-5 record and NFC West title. He proved worthy of the big stage by leading game-winning drives in the divisional round, NFC Championship Game and Super Bowl.

Not that it was an entirely smooth ride for the Rams or their quarterback.

Stafford looked like an early-season MVP candidate as the Rams raced to a 7-1 start, but then he committed six turnovers as they lost three straight November games to eventual playoff teams. They also lost receiver Robert Woods to a season-ending knee injury during that skid, immediately turning their addition of Beckham from a luxury to a necessity as the No. 2 wideout behind Kupp, the NFL Offensive Player of the Year.

The Rams won their next five games despite Stafford’s turnover problems continuing and a COVID-19 surge hitting their locker room, leading the NFL to move back their Week 15 game with the Seattle Seahawks to a Tuesday.

They had a chance to eliminate the San Francisco 49ers from playoff contention in Week 18 but blew a 17-0 lead at home — in front of a sea of red-clad Niners fans who had invaded SoFi — en route to a sixth straight loss to their divisional rivals.

The Beckham and Miller signings further signaled their all-in approach to 2021. In 11 games, including playoffs, Beckham caught seven touchdown passes while Miller recorded nine sacks.

“They were very impactful down the stretch,” general manager Les Snead said earlier this week, “and that was the intention in bringing them in.”

Miller and Beckham were the latest stars to join an ensemble cast that included Kupp (who won the NFL’s receiving triple crown during the regular season), Ramsey (who led the team with four interceptions) and Donald (who had another Defensive Player of the Year-worthy season). All three were named first team All-Pro.

Yet the Rams might not have gotten to Super Bowl LVI if not for some of their lesser-known players coming through with big plays in the playoffs. There was backup safety Nick Scott picking off Tom Brady in the divisional round and linebacker Travin Howard sealing the NFC Championship Game by coming down with an errant Jimmy Garoppolo throw that Donald’s pressure had forced. And there was Matt Gay kicking the winning field goal vs. Tampa Bay, then doing it again vs. the 49ers, capping the Rams’ rally from a 10-point fourth-quarter deficit.

“To come back, to fell your biggest rival in the biggest game in your new stadium for the right to play a Super Bowl, that is the Hollywood story,” Demoff said. “I don’t want to have to write the sequel where we disappoint at the end of the first version and come back and have to try to climb the mountain again.”

That would have been especially tough given the questions about the long-term viability of a roster that was built to win now. The Rams aren’t scheduled to pick in the first round until 2024 — which would mark seven years without doing so — after giving up their 2022 and 2023 No. 1s in the Stafford trade. They parted with this year’s second- and third-rounders for Miller, which leaves them without a pick within the top 100.

They’re also nearly $14 million over the 2022 salary cap, which will make it tough to re-sign pending free agents such as Beckham and Miller, and to keep high-priced starters like left tackle Andrew Whitworth, who might retire anyway.

“It is not for the faint of heart,” Demoff said about the approach the Rams have taken in building their roster. “It’s not for the faint of wallet. We have to prove that this is going to be successful … We need to go prove that this can work and that we can continue to do it.”

But the Rams don’t have to worry about pulling off the sequel right now after nailing the perfect ending in Super Bowl LVI.

Source Article from https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/33268372/los-angeles-rams-all-star-heavy-approach-results-super-bowl-lvi-win-cincinnati-bengals

(CNN)President Joe Biden told Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in a roughly hour-long call Sunday that the US would respond “swiftly and decisively” if Russia takes further steps toward invasion, according to a White House readout of the call.

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    WASHINGTON/KYIV, Feb 13 (Reuters) – Russia could invade Ukraine at any time and might create a surprise pretext for an attack, the United States said on Sunday, as it reaffirmed a pledge to defend “every inch” of NATO territory.

    Russia has more than 100,000 troops massed near Ukraine, which is not part of the Atlantic military alliance, and Washington – while keeping open the diplomatic channels that have so far failed to ease the crisis – has repeatedly said an invasion is imminent.

    Moscow denies any such plans and has accused the West of “hysteria”.

    German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, on the eve of a trip that takes him to Kyiv on Monday and Moscow for talks with President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday, called for Russia to de-escalate and warned of sanctions if Moscow did invade.

    A German official said Berlin did not expect “concrete results” but diplomacy was important.

    In Washington, President Joe Biden’s National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said an invasion could begin “any day now”.

    “We cannot perfectly predict the day, but we have now been saying for some time that we are in the window,” Sullivan told CNN.

    U.S. officials said they could not confirm reports that U.S. intelligence indicated Russia planned to invade on Wednesday.

    Sullivan said Washington would continue sharing what it learned with the world in order to deny Moscow the chance to stage a surprise “false flag” operation that could be a pretext for an attack.

    It would also “defend every inch of NATO territory … and Russia we think fully understands that message,” Sullivan added in a separate CBS interview.

    Biden spoke to his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelenskiy on Sunday and they agreed on the importance of continuing to pursue diplomacy and deterrence in response to Russia’s military build-up, the White House said after the call.

    Zelenskiy’s office said he invited Biden to visit Ukraine soon. The White House declined to comment.

    Agreeing with the U.S. assessment that an invasion could happen “at any moment,” a British government spokesperson said Britain was working on a package of military support and economic aid for Ukraine to be announced in coming days. Prime Minister Boris Johnson will make a trip to Europe later this week to build support to end the standoff with Russia.

    Biden told Putin in a phone call on Saturday that the West would respond decisively to any invasion and such an attack would harm and isolate Moscow.

    Service members take part in military exercises held by the armed forces of Russia and Belarus at the Gozhsky training ground in the Grodno region, Belarus, February 12, 2022. Leonid Scheglov/BelTA/Handout via REUTERS

    Ukrainian Defence Minister Oleksii Reznikov said on Twitter that Kyiv had so far received almost 1,500 tonnes of ammunition from allies delivered on 17 flights, including about 180 tonnes from the United States. read more

    Canada’s defense ministry said it has temporarily withdrawn its Ukraine-based military personnel to an undisclosed location in Europe. Canada, which is home to the world’s third-largest Ukrainian population after Ukraine and Russia, has kept a 200-strong training mission in western Ukraine since 2015.

    RUSSIAN SECURITY DEMANDS

    The Kremlin said Putin told Biden during their call on Saturday that Washington had failed to take Russia’s main concerns into account, and that it had received no “substantial answer” on key elements of its security demands.

    Putin wants guarantees from the United States and NATO that include blocking Ukraine’s entry into NATO, refraining from missile deployments near Russia’s borders and scaling back NATO’s military infrastructure in Europe to 1997 levels.

    Washington regards many of the proposals as non-starters but has pushed the Kremlin to discuss them jointly with Washington and its European allies.

    “The diplomatic path remains open. The way for Moscow to show that it wants to pursue that path is simple,” U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken said after he held talks on Saturday with Asian allies.

    Washington and its European allies and others have been scaling back or evacuating embassy staff and urging citizens to depart immediately or avoid travel to Ukraine.

    U.S. staff at the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) began leaving by car from the rebel-held city of Donetsk in east Ukraine on Sunday, a Reuters witness said.

    The OSCE conducts operations in Ukraine including a civilian monitoring mission in Russian-backed, self-proclaimed separatist republics in the regions of Donetsk and Luhansk, where a war that began in 2014 has killed more than 14,000 people.

    Ukraine said on Sunday it wanted talks with Russia and members of the OSCE within 48 hours to discuss Russia’s military build-up. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said Moscow had not responded after Kyiv on Friday invoked a part of the Vienna Document, a set of security agreements, to demand Moscow explain its military activities.

    Dutch carrier KLM said it would stop flying to Ukraine and Germany’s Lufthansa said it was considering suspending flights.

    An adviser to Zelenskiy, Mykhailo Podolyak, said that regardless of what airlines chose to do Kyiv would not close its airspace as that would resemble “a kind of partial blockade”.

    A French presidency official said on Saturday, after President Emmanuel Macron spoke with Putin, that there were no indications from what the Russian leader said that Moscow was preparing an offensive, though Paris remained “extremely vigilant”.

    British defence minister Ben Wallace cautioned against putting too much hope in talks, telling The Sunday Times of London that there was “a whiff of Munich in the air from some in the West”, referring to a 1938 pact that failed to halt German expansionism under Adolf Hitler.

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

    Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/us-says-diplomacy-still-open-end-ukraine-standoff-with-russia-2022-02-13/

    Maryland Gov. Larry HoganLarry HoganSunday shows preview: White House says Russia could invade ‘any day’; RNC censure resolution receives backlash The Hill’s Morning Report – Presented by Facebook – Americans struggle with soaring prices Hogan calls for end to statewide school mask mandate MORE (R) on Sunday said he is “certainly going to take a look” at a 2024 bid for president, days after he announced that he will not run for Senate in the Old Line State despite members of his party urging him to campaign for a seat in the upper chamber.

    Asked by co-anchor Jake TapperJacob (Jake) Paul TapperThe Hill’s 12:30 Report: Congress nears yet another funding deadline Manchin crosses party lines in officially endorsing Murkowski Manchin: Social spending bill elements must go through committee process MORE on CNN’s “State of the Union” if he is considering a presidential run, Hogan emphasized that he is focused on completing his term as governor, which expires in January 2023.

    “I’m going to run through the tape as governor until January of next year. I’m going to try to be the very best governor I can be. I’m going to continue to stand up and be a voice. I’m not going to sit back and not be involved in the issues of the day,” Hogan said.

    “I’m concerned about the direction of the party and the country. And I will make a decision about 2024 after I finish this job,” he added.

    Pressed on if he is considering a presidential bid, Hogan said “We’re certainly going to take a look at it after January of ’23.”

    Hogan put an end to speculation on Tuesday when he announced at a press conference that he would not wage a bid for U.S. Senate. He said he considered a campaign but ultimately decided that he should focus on finishing his second term as governor.

    His announcement came despite a lobby from a number of top Republicans urging the moderate GOP governor to run.

    He is now the second Republican governor to pass on a Senate run. New Hampshire’s Gov. Chris SununuChris SununuGOP falters in effort to recruit star governors for Senate Lewandowski says Trump asked him to look for challenger to Sununu Press: Trump is running out of gas MORE announced in November that he would seek another term as governor of the the Granite State.

    Hogan on Sunday said part of his decision not to run for senator involved lack of productivity in Washington. 

    “I have been a lifelong executive. I have much more power as a governor of Maryland. I make decisions every day that impact people’s lives, and I like to get things done,” he said.

    “And, in Washington, it seems as if there’s just a lot of divisiveness and dysfunction, and not a lot gets done. So, it wasn’t the right job, right fit for me,” he added.

    Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/sunday-talk-shows/594039-hogan-certainly-going-to-take-a-look-at-2024-presidential-bid

    MSNBC panel on parallels between Trump documents and Clinton email investigation

    As a US congressional committee prepares to investigate Donald Trump’s handling of administration documents after 15 boxes of records were transferred from his Florida resort, the former president is insisting he was “under no obligation” to hand over any materials – despite laws requiring him to do exactly that.

    US Rep Carolyn Maloney, chair for the House of Representatives Oversight Committee, said that she was “deeply concerned” as the documents “appear to have been removed from the White House in violation of the Presidential Records Act.”

    The news of the document haul, which appears to have contained sensitive or even top secret papers, has sent many experts pondering the chances that Mr Trump could face legal sanction for mishandling documents.

    On Friday, the former president lashed out at the House select committee investigating the attack on the US Capitol as “out of control” while reviving baseless voter fraud narratives and attacking journalist Maggie Haberman over reporting from a forthcoming book about his term in office. Then, on Saturday morning, he described his presidency to Fox News as a “romantic period.”

    “Our country was thriving. We were just beating everybody,” the former president said.

    Mr Trump’s former communications director Alyssa Farah, meanwhile, has said her onetime boss is “terrified” about the book’s revelations into his character and behaviour, including that the former president flushed documents down toilets and remains in touch with North Korea’s Kim Jong-un.

    1644553123

    Welcome to The Independent’s Friday’s coverage of Donald Trump and the White House

    1644553606

    Ex-Trump comms chief says former president ‘terrified’ of new book

    Ex-White House communications director Alyssa Farah said on Thursday that her former boss is “terrified” of the potential revelations that could come from an upcoming book on his presidency and campaigns.

    “I still talk to some folks in Trumpworld, the ones who have not engaged in criminality,” Ms Farah told co-hosts of The View on Thursday. “The former president is terrified of Maggie Haberman’s book. This is the first big anecdote, but there is quite a bit more to come.”

    The book authored by The New York Times’s Maggie Haberman is set to be published in October. Haberman won the Pulitzer Prize in 2018 for her coverage of the Trump White House.

    Read Joe Bowden’s full report.

    Former Trump comms chief says ex-president ‘terrified’ of Maggie Haberman’s book

    Veteran NYT reporter had nearly unmatched access to former president for years

    1644554542

    ‘Toilet water-gate’: Jimmy Kimmel takes dig at Trump for flushing documents

    Jimmy Kimmel mocked former president Donald Trump on Thursday over recent accusations that his White House staff found clogged toilets as he reportedly tried to flush documents.

    “I know that sounds like just a crude joke, but you know how Trump had a habit of tearing up the documents at the White House?” Kimmel said beginning his monologue

    He went to introduce guest Arnold Schwarzenegger, again taking a dig by saying, former California governor “the host of Celebrity Apprentice who did not clog up the White House toilet.”

    “Today Mar-a-Cloggo put out a statement that said, ‘Also, another fake story that I flushed papers and documents down a White House toilet is categorically untrue, and simply made up by a reporter in order to get publicity for a mostly fictitious book,” he said.

    1644555592

    Trump’s political future may be threatened by Mar-a-Lago docs, experts say

    The Independent’s Andrew Feinberg writes how Mr Trump’s own explanation could prove especially damning for him.

    Trump’s freedom could be at risk over documents found at Mar-a-Lago

    Former president may have broken the law by taking 15 boxes of documents to Florida with him – and his own explanation could prove especially damning, writes Andrew Feinberg

    1644556662

    Texas: 40% mail ballots rejected under stricter voting law

    About 40 per cent of the mail-in ballots received by elections officials in Harris County — a Democratic stronghold that includes Houston and more than 2.4 million voters — were rejected.

    The officials of the county said it was because the ballots had missing information or signatures which are now required under the Texas voting law passed in August.

    More than 1,300 ballots flagged were mandatory identification such as voter ID or Social Security numbers, while others were missing signatures, said Leah Shah, a spokesperson for the Harris County Elections Administrator’s office.

    “As we get closer to the deadline to return mail ballots, we just want to make sure that everyone understands that these new requirements to include identification are important,” Ms Shah said.

    “Take a close look at the envelope and make sure you are filling them out, and when in doubt fill them both out or give us a call so we can help walk them through. It is confusing and challenging, and we are here to help.”

    The law requires counties to notify the voters in case of rejections of their ballot to give voters another chance to correct it before Election day.

    1644557250

    Virginia district AG forced to resign over damning Jan 6 posts

    Monique Miles, deputy attorney general in Virginia, was forced to resign on Thursday after she faced backlash for her resurfaced Facebook post where she called January 6 rioters “patriots”.

    “News Flash: Patriots have stormed the Capitol. No surprise. The deep state has awoken the sleeping giant,” Ms Miles wrote on the day of the riot, according to The Washington Post.

    “Patriots are not taking this lying down. We are awake, ready, and will fight for our rights by any means necessary.”

    The Virginia attorney general’s office denounced the Facebook post by Ms Miles but said they were not aware of the comments she made.

    1644558888

    Kim Jong-un was ‘very important’ to Trump

    North Korean leader Kim Jong-un was “very important” to Donald Trump and the former president had pictures of him in his office, New York Times journalist Maggie Haberman said in an interview with CNN.

    The journalist, who has an upcoming book that has some explosive revelation about Mr Trump, said that while what the former president “says and what’s actually happening are not always in concert,” he “has been telling people that he has maintained some kind of correspondence or discussion with Kim Jong-un”.

    She remarked that it is not “necessarily unusual” for an ex-president of the country to have contact with other leaders but Mr Trump’s relationship with Mr Kim seems strange.

    “Those letters, you know, from Kim Jong-un, that The Washington Post in terrific reporting, reported on the fact that he had taken with him to the White House, the original copies, he would wave them around, as I understand, he would wave them around in the White House and he would wave them around at Mar-a-Lago,” she said.

    “He would have them in his boxes, and he would take them out and show them to people.”

    1644560027

    Biden doing ‘deep dive’ on Supreme Court candidates

    Joe Biden said he is doing a “deep dive” on “about four people” as he is set to nominate a successor for retiring Justice Stephen Breyer on the US Supreme Court.

    “I’ve taken about four people and done the deep dive on them, meaning thorough background checks, to see if there’s anything in the background that would make them not qualified,” Mr Biden told NBC News’ Lester Holt in an interview on Thursday.

    The president did not mention the names of the candidates but said the White House shortlisted nominees “are incredibly well qualified and documented”.

    “I’m not looking to make an ideological choice here,” he said, adding that he was looking someone very similar to Mr Breyer, “with an open mind, who understands how the Constitution, interprets it in a way that is consistent with the mainstream interpretation of the Constitution”.

    1644561308

    Former RNC chair mocks Trump by eating paper live on air

    Michael Steele, former Republican National Committee chair, ridiculed Donald Trump by shoving paper in his mouth over the former president’s latest scandal involving the flushing of White House documents.

    “Well, first, could you pass the salt?” Mr Steele, who appeared on MSNBC said after host Joy Reid questioned him over the controversy before putting a piece of paper in his mouth.

    “Yummy, yummy. Pass the salt, please,” Mr Steele said as he imitated Mr Trump’s voice.

    It came as an upcoming book by a New York Times journalist that would reveal Mr Trump reportedly destroyed White House documents by flushing them in the toilet in violation of the Presidential Records Act.

    1644562288

    Trump’s calls records missing in data obtained by 6 Jan panel

    White House calls logs received by the House panel investigating the 6 January insurrection at the Capitol do not have records of calls made by Donald Trump, two sources familiar with the probe said.

    The records also do not have data of the calls made directly to the president on 6 January as he watched the violence unfold on television.

    The missing data has apparently presented a new challenge to investigators to create the most comprehensive record yet of the attack in which Mr Trump was allegedly an instigating factor.

    The committee is also receiving more evidence from the National Archives and other sources.

    Source Article from https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/trump-polls-today-durham-investigation-latest-b2014188.html

    Canadian police on Sunday arrested protesters and towed vehicles to clear access to a crucial bridge connecting Detroit with the Canadian border city of Windsor, Ontario, a move local officials say marks an end to a week of economic turbulence.

    Law-enforcement and border officials didn’t immediately say when the 1.6-mile Ambassador Bridge might reopen. Windsor police said Sunday afternoon that they were working as fast as they could to restore the flow of traffic on the bridge.

    Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/canadian-police-begin-to-clear-protesters-disrupting-cross-border-bridge-traffic-11644759497