An hours-long barricade situation and shooting left nine police officers hurt, and two people, including the suspected gunman, dead at a home near 51st Avenue and Broadway early Friday morning.

Incident began as a shooting call

Officials say the incident began after a woman had reportedly been shot in a home just after 2 a.m. on Feb. 11.

When an officer approached the house, a male suspect reportedly invited him inside before shooting him multiple times in an ambush.

“The first officer was shot multiple times. He was injured the most significantly. Non-life-threatening. At this time, he’s expected to survive,” said Phoenix Police Sgt. Andy Williams. 

Backup officers later arrived, and surrounded the home with the suspect barricaded inside.

At some point during the standoff, a man inside the home walked out and placed a baby on the ground before being detained. He was seen on video walking outside dropping the child off, then walking toward police with his hands up. As officers approached the house to get the baby, the gunman opened fire. Two other officers on scene returned fire, but four more officers were hurt by ricocheting bullets and shrapnel.

Eventually, police were able to get inside the home and found the suspect dead inside, along with the woman.

A photo of Morris Richard Jones III that was taken in 2006 (Courtesy: Oklahoma Department of Corrections)

Officials have confirmed the suspect’s name as 36-year-old Morris Jones.

According to federal court records, Jones had previously pleaded guilty to using a firearm during a drug trafficking crime.

Officials say Jones died from an apparent gunshot wound, but it is currently not known whether Jones died in the shootout, or if he turned the gun on himself.

Authorities say the suspected gunman and the injured woman had been in a past relationship, and the baby was their child. The infant was not hurt.

“Investigators are working to uncover what led to this terrifying act, some of it which was caught on tape by the media,” said Phoenix Police Chief Jeri Williams. “I saw the video, and it still gives me chills.”

Some injured officers were taken to the hospital

As for the officers injured, four of them are in stable condition, and one is in serious but stable condition. Those who were hit by shrapnel stayed at the scene until the barricade situation was over.

Outside Banner University Hospital, where a number of officers who were injured in the incident were receiving treatment, Ann Ender and Linda Colino with the Blue Ribbon Project were doing a task they say they have done a lot lately: putting up blue ribbons as a sign of support for police officers.

“I think all of us who believe in public safety and support our police department are heartbroken when something like this happens,” said Ender. “We’re all praying.”

Members of the Blue Ribbon Project hope their small gesture helped.

“They need to know they’re supported,” said Colino.

During a news conference that took place hours after the incident, Phoenix Mayor Kate Gallego said she visited one of the injured officers in the hospital.

“Today at the hospital, I talked to an officer just about to go into surgery. He only wanted to know about the rest of the squad and how they were doing. That is the type of incredibly selfless individual who serves the City of Phoenix,” said Mayor Gallego.

“As gunfire was breaking out, our officers went in,” said Chief Williams. “Those are the kind of officers we have in our community.”

Neighbors react

The neighborhood where the shooting took place has a lot of homes that are nestled close to each other. People who live there were worried when the situation unfolded, and subsequently escalated.

Those who live near the home where the suspect was barricaded report hearing several shots around 2:00 a.m.

“When you’re sleeping, you think you’re dreaming at first. It took me, like five minutes,” said one person. “At that point, you think it’s right there. After you hear the first one, I said that sounds like a shooting outside or something.”

It was when they were evacuated later in the morning they realized how serious the situation was.

“It’s pretty quiet for all this to be going on right next door,” said Justin Jacobs. “It’s kind of crazy, right down the street.”

At one point, Phoenix Police officials told people, via a tweet, that they were working on a critical incident, and asked people to stay away for their safety. At around 7:00 a.m., police posted an update saying the barricade situation has been resolved, and that there is no threat to the public.

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Russia has made a series of demands of the West, including scaling back the NATO military presence in Eastern Europe to 1990s levels and guaranteeing that Ukraine could never join NATO. (Mr. Putin has long been vehemently opposed to Ukraine, a former pillar of the Soviet Union, joining NATO, a position he last made forcefully clear when Russian forces reclaimed Crimea in 2014.) The United States has called those demands “non-starters’’ and instead offered a series of proposals aimed at arms control.

“What I do know about Putin is he likes uncertainty,” said Michael A. McFaul, a former U.S. ambassador to Russia. “He has leveraged that in the past for advantage. He is forcing Biden’s hand and everybody else’s.”

Next week, the German chancellor, Olaf Scholz, is scheduled to visit Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv and Moscow, fresh from a visit to Washington where he and Mr. Biden promised a “united” front on shutting down Nord Stream 2, a lucrative Germany-to-Russia gas pipeline project, should Russia invade Ukraine.

Russia’s foreign ministry dismissed American talk of war as mere propaganda.

“A coordinated information attack is being conducted against Moscow,” the ministry said in a statement, along with a list of previous Western warnings of a possible imminent invasion. That messaging, it said, is “aimed at undermining and discrediting Russia’s fair demands for security guarantees, as well as at justifying Western geopolitical aspirations and military absorption of Ukraine’s territory.”

Maria Zakharova, the ministry spokeswoman, wrote on the Telegram app: “The White House’s hysteria is as revealing as ever. The Anglo-Saxons need war. At any price.”

Mr. Sullivan disagreed with the idea that informing Americans of Russia’s military capabilities was the same as calling for a war. “We are trying to stop a war. Prevent war. To avert a war,” he told reporters.

American officials have warned of a grim toll if Mr. Putin proceeds with a military invasion of Ukraine, including the potential deaths of 25,000 to 50,000 civilians, 5,000 to 25,000 members of the Ukrainian military and 3,000 to 10,000 members of the Russian military. Mr. Sullivan said on Friday that officials believed that an attack would likely start with missile and aerial attacks, and continue with a ground invasion.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/11/world/europe/ukraine-russia-diplomacy.html

“To those who have attempted to disrupt our way of life by targeting our lifeline for food, fuel and goods across our borders, to those trying to force a political agenda through disruption, intimidation and chaos, my message to you is this,” Mr Ford said.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-60352980

“I can’t think of a worse betrayal of the people of Afghanistan than to freeze their assets and give it to 9/11 families,” Mr. Amundson said. “While 9/11 families are seeking justice for their loss through these suits, I fear that the end result of seizing this money will be to cause further harm to innocent Afghans who have already suffered greatly.”

The administration’s move will further cripple Afghanistan’s already paralyzed central bank; draining most of the bank’s capital — it also has about $2 billion scattered across Germany, Switzerland, the United Arab Emirates and Britain — makes it even less likely that the bank will be able to resume its efforts to stabilize the value of Afghan currency and prices in that country, including by regularly auctioning millions of U.S. dollars for Afghan cash.

In recent weeks, a longtime member of the bank’s board, Dr. Shah Mohammad Mehrabi, had argued that the U.S. government should instead let Da Afghanistan Bank try to restart some of that work and carefully watch to make sure the funds did not reach the Taliban.

In an interview, Dr. Mehrabi — who is also an economics professor at Montgomery College in Maryland — contended that the central bank should be seen as independent of the now Taliban-led Afghan government. He said that many civil servants there knew how to run the bank, and that depriving the bank of the funds it needed to maintain price stability would lead to runs on commercial banks, mass defaulting on loans and ultimately broader disaster.

“You’re talking about moving toward a total collapse of the banking system,” he said. “I think it’s a shortsighted view.”

But an administration official familiar with the government deliberations argued that the “sad reality” was that even if the central bank regained access to the assets in New York and moved them all into Afghanistan for one last injection of capital, it would not solve the deeper structural problems that have sent the country’s economy spiraling into ruin.

For two decades, Afghanistan’s economy was drastically and artificially bolstered by enormous influxes of foreign aid and security assistance from the West, as the United States and its NATO allies pumped money into a nation-building effort.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/11/us/politics/taliban-afghanistan-911-families-frozen-funds.html

An hours-long barricade situation and shooting left nine police officers hurt, one woman critically injured and the suspected gunman dead at a home near 51st Avenue and Broadway early Friday morning.

The incident began after a woman had reportedly been shot in a home near 54th Avenue and Elwood just after 2 a.m. on Feb. 11. When an officer approached the house, a male suspect reportedly invited him inside before shooting him multiple times in an ambush.

The wounded officer was able to escape, and backup came to surround the home with the suspect barricaded inside.

At some point during the standoff, a man inside the home walked out and placed a baby on the ground before being detained. He was seen on video walking outside dropping the child off, then walking toward police with his hands up.

Four more officers were shot when they tried to bring the baby to safety, and Williams says police fired back towards the suspected gunman.  At least four other officers were hurt by bullet shrapnel, police said.

Windows were shot out during the standoff.

After several hours, police were able to get inside the home and found the suspect dead inside, along with a woman who had critical injuries.

Four of the officers are in stable condition, and one is in serious but stable condition. Those who were hit by shrapnel stayed at the scene until the barricade situation was over.

Authorities say the suspected gunman and the injured woman had been in a past relationship, and the baby was their child.

The infant was not hurt.

No names have been released in this case.

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MOSCOW, Feb 11 (Reuters) – Russia is massing more troops near Ukraine and an invasion could come at any time, including during this month’s Winter Olympics, Washington said on Friday as Moscow further stiffened its response to Western diplomacy.

Commercial satellite images from a private U.S. company showed new Russian military deployments at several sites near Ukraine and, in his starkest warning yet to U.S. citizens, President Joe Biden said he would not send troops to rescue any who remained there in the event of a Russian assault.

“Things could go crazy quickly,” Biden told NBC News.

Biden held a phone call on the crisis with the leaders of Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Poland and Romania, as well as the heads of NATO and the EU.

Following that meeting and with alarm spreading, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson joined a handful of other nations in urging its citizens to leave Ukraine.

He told the meeting that he feared for the security of Europe and stressed the need for “a heavy package of economic sanctions ready to go, should Russia make the devastating and destructive decision to invade Ukraine,” his office said.

Moscow, meanwhile, said answers sent this week by the EU and NATO to its security demands showed “disrespect”.

Biden met his national security advisers overnight, a source familiar with the meeting said. U.S. officials believed the crisis could be reaching a critical point, with rhetoric from Moscow hardening, six Russian warships reaching the Black Sea, and more Russian military equipment arriving in Belarus, the source said.

“We’re in a window when an invasion could begin at any time, and to be clear, that includes during the Olympics,” said Secretary of State Antony Blinken. The Beijing Games end on Feb. 20.

“Simply put, we continue to see very troubling signs of Russian escalation, including new forces arriving at the Ukrainian border,” Blinken added.

Japan, Latvia, Norway and the Netherlands also told their citizens to leave Ukraine immediately, while Israel said it was evacuating relatives of embassy staff.

Russia has already massed more than 100,000 troops near Ukraine, and this week launched joint military exercises in neighbouring Belarus and naval drills in the Black Sea.

Russia’s Chief of General Staff Valery Gerasimov and his U.S. counterpart General Mark Milley discussed international security in a phone call on Friday, the Interfax news agency said.

Ukraine’s sea port authority said Russia had withdrawn previously-announced restrictions linked to the naval drills for ships in the Sea of Azov, which links to the Black Sea.

‘IMPOLITENESS AND DISRESPECT’

Moscow denies planning to invade Ukraine, but says it could take unspecified “military-technical” action unless a series of demands are met, including promises from NATO never to admit Ukraine and to withdraw forces from Eastern Europe.

The West has said those main demands are non-starters. The EU and NATO alliance delivered responses this week on behalf of their member states.

Russia’s Foreign Ministry said it wanted individual answers from each country, and called the collective response “a sign of diplomatic impoliteness and disrespect”.

Several Western countries launched diplomatic pushes this week to persuade Russia to back down, but Moscow brushed them off, yielding no concessions to French President Emmanuel Macron, who visited on Monday, and openly mocking British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss when she came on Thursday.

Four-way talks in Berlin between Russia, Ukraine, Germany and France on Thursday also yielded no progress.

Paris and Kyiv said the Russian delegation had demanded Ukraine negotiate directly with the separatists, a “red line” Ukraine has rejected.

CONFLICTING VIEWS

U.S.-based Maxar Technologies, which has been tracking the build-up of Russian forces, said images taken on Wednesday and Thursday showed large new deployments of troops, vehicles and warplanes in western Russia, Belarus and Crimea, which Russia annexed from Ukraine in 2014. The images could not be independently verified by Reuters.

Russia says it has the right to move forces on its territory as it sees fit, and they pose no external threat.

Western countries have mostly stood together in threatening economic sanctions against Russia if it invades, but have given conflicting views on the threat’s immediacy.

Washington and London have said invasion could come within days. Macron, by contrast, said he thinks Russia does not have designs on Ukraine and called the existing Franco-German-led peace process for Ukraine’s separatist conflict a way out.

Moscow has responded dismissively to Western pressure. Pictures of Macron seated far from Putin at the opposite end of a huge table in the Kremlin went viral on the internet.

The Kremlin said on Friday the arrangement had been necessary because Macron had refused a COVID-19 test by Russian doctors. French officials said Macron’s travel schedule left no time to wait for test results; sources also said Macron’s office had been worried Moscow would sample his DNA.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/us-says-russia-masses-more-troops-near-ukraine-invasion-could-come-any-time-2022-02-11/

Washington — Former President Donald Trump’s alleged improper handling of White House records while he was in office and after he decamped to Florida has prompted fresh scrutiny over whether he flouted federal law and, if he did, whether he can be held accountable for doing so.

The law governing the records-keeping responsibilities of presidents is the Presidential Records Act, which was enacted in 1978 and requires any memos, letters, emails and other documents related to the president’s duties be preserved and given to the National Archives and Records Administration at the end of an administration.

But the Archives has recently revealed that Trump tore up documents while in office, some of which were pieced back together by White House records management officials, and brought with him more than a dozen boxes of items and letters to Mar-a-Lago, his Palm Beach, Florida, residence, after leaving office last year. The boxes were retrieved by the Archives last month, the agency said.

Anne Weismann, a lawyer who represented watchdog groups that have sued Trump over violations of the Presidential Records Act, told CBS News that the former president “clearly violated” the Presidential Records Act in “multiple ways,” including by ripping up records.

But “the real problem is there’s absolutely no enforcement mechanism in the Presidential Record Act and there’s no administrative enforcement provision,” she said. 

Weismann, though, identified two criminal laws that Trump may have violated by destroying White House records. The first law states anyone who “willfully injures or commits any depredation against any property of the United States” faces a fine or up to one year imprisonment if convicted. The second states anyone who “willfully and unlawfully conceals, removes, mutilates, obliterates or destroys … any record, proceeding, map, book, paper, document, or other thing, filed or deposited … in any public office” is subject to a fine or up to three years in prison if convicted.

President Donald Trump reads from a handwritten note while speaking to members of the media before boarding Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House on Wednesday, November 20, 2019.

Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images


“You can’t plead stupidity,” Kel McClanahan, executive director of National Security Counselors, told CBS News on whether Trump willfully violated the law. “Ignoring the law is no excuse where in this particular case, that would be a very hard argument to make when we have the evidence that his chiefs of staff, his [White House] counsel were telling him, ‘Stop doing this stuff. Stop tearing up these records.'”

McClanahan was referring to a Washington Post report stating two of Trump’s former chiefs of staff, Reince Priebus and John Kelly, and former White House counsel Don McGahn warned him about the Presidential Records Act. 

“Would a reasonable president know that two chiefs of staff and one general counsel are probably right about the statute? This would be a pretty cut and dry case,” he said.

If Trump is not held accountable for violating federal laws governing the safe-keeping of records, Weismann warned other presidents may be less inclined to comply.

“It’s definitely sending a message that these presidential record-keeping responsibilities are not very important and you can ignore them with impunity,” she said. “If you allow such flagrant violations to go unaddressed, that would be a huge problem.”

Addressing the historical value of maintaining presidential documents, Weismann pointed to notes and doodles by former President John F. Kennedy at the height of the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962. The scribbles were collected by his secretary, preserved and featured in a 2012 exhibition at the National Archives building to help mark the period when the world “teetered on the edge of thermonuclear war.”

“The whole point of the Presidential Records Act was to say, this is our history, this belongs to the American public and you, the president, are a caretaker of your records while you’re in office,” she said. “You’re supposed to create them, preserve them, and when you leave office, they go to the people. We’re losing part of our history.”

The National Archives confirmed last week that some of the documents it received from the Trump White House at the end of the administration had been torn up by the former president and were pieced back together by records management officials, while “a number” of ripped records it received had not been reconstructed by the White House. 

The agency also acknowledged Monday that it retrieved 15 boxes containing presidential records from Mar-a-Lago. The Washington Post reported that among the documents and items in the boxes were letters between Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and a letter former President Barack Obama left for his successor.

President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump greet Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and wife Akie Abe as they arrive for dinner at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida on April 17, 2018.

MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images


The Archives said staff for Trump are “continuing to search for additional presidential records that belong to” the agency.

Archives officials have asked the Justice Department to investigate Trump’s handling of White House records, CBS News confirmed Wednesday, though the referral does not mean there will be a criminal investigation or prosecution.

Beyond criminal prosecution for violating federal law, the Justice Department could also pursue civil lawsuits against Trump to obtain presidential records he may have taken with him after leaving the White House, McClanahan said.

“It is tunnel vision to only focus on the criminal aspect when there are so many other alternatives that could serve good public policy that DOJ should have no compunction about doing,” he said. “If the people at DOJ are conscientious, I don’t believe this is going to go away. I believe something will happen.”

Trump, he said, may be counting on the Justice Department and Attorney General Merrick Garland to stay on the sidelines of political fights and is “calling DOJ’s bluff.” 

But “the question is going to be a purely governmental interest and a crime purely against the government and the public, and do you prosecute a former president for committing that crime?” McClanahan said. 

The House Oversight and Reform Committee also launched an investigation into Trump’s record-keeping practices and requested information from David Ferriero, archivist of the United States, about the 15 boxes recovered from Mar-a-Lago.

“Former President Trump and his senior advisors must also be held accountable for any violations of the law,” Oversight Committee Chairwoman Carolyn Maloney, a Democrat from New York, told Ferriero in a letter, adding the panel needs the information to “examine the extent and impact” of Trump’s purported violations of the Presidential Records Act.

The New York Times reported the Archives found apparent classified information in the documents Trump improperly took with him from the White House at the end of his first and only term. The discovery led the Archives to contact the Justice Department for guidance, and the department told the Archives to have its inspector general look into the matter, according to the Times.

Trump has denied any wrongdoing and, in a statement Thursday, said the Archives “openly and willingly arranged” the transport of boxes containing letters, records, newspapers, magazines and articles, which he said will be displayed in the future Donald J. Trump Presidential Library.

“The papers were given easily and without conflict and on a very friendly basis, which is different from the accounts being drawn up by the Fake News Media,” Trump said. “In fact, it was viewed as routine and ‘no big deal.’ In actuality, I have been told I was under no obligation to give this material based on various legal rulings that have been made over the years.”

It’s unclear which decisions the former president is referencing, but federal courts that have heard disputes over possible violations of the Presidential Records Act while Trump was in office have said there is no role for the courts to play in overseeing day-to-day compliance with that law. 

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-presidential-records-act-consequences-archives/

PHOENIX — Phoenix police say five officers and another woman are hurt after a shooting in south Phoenix early Friday morning.

The incident occurred when officers responded to a shooting call around 54th Avenue and Elwood Street, just north of Broadway Road.

As an officer went to a home to help, a suspect opened fire, striking one officer multiple times.

A baby was placed outside by someone in the home at some point during the incident, and as officers went to the door to move the baby to safety, the suspect opened fire again, hitting four other officers.

Phoenix Police Chief Jeri Williams said four of the injured officers are recovering from their injuries and the fifth injured officer was seriously hurt but is also recovering.

The baby is said to be OK.

Police say another woman was also shot during the ordeal and is in critical condition.

According to police, officers returned fire during the incident. It’s not clear whether any injuries were reported when officers fired their weapons.

The suspect was barricaded in the home and officials urged people to stay away or stay inside. However, the barricade situation was “resolved” around 7 a.m., police said. There is no threat to the public.

Police have not provided any information on the suspect or confirmed whether anyone was taken into custody.

“If I seem upset, I am… It’s senseless and it continues to happen over and over again,” Chief Williams said in a media briefing Friday morning, noting that just months ago, another Phoenix officer was shot in the line of duty.

Arizona Governor Doug Ducey tweeted: “Please continue to pray for the five officers injured this morning. Our men and women in blue work day and night—no matter the circumstances—to protect our state from danger. Their unwavering courage & sacrifice helps to keep us safe. Arizona is deeply grateful.”

This is the ninth media-reported shooting involving police in the Valley in 2022. A tribal officer was also shot north of the Valley earlier this week and law enforcement continues to look for a person of interest in that case.

Source Article from https://www.abc15.com/news/region-phoenix-metro/south-phoenix/phoenix-police-working-critical-incident-near-54th-avenue-and-broadway

MOSCOW/ADELAIDE, Feb 11 (Reuters) – Russia is massing yet more troops near Ukraine and an invasion could come at any time, perhaps before the end of this month’s Winter Olympics, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Friday.

Moscow, for its part, ramped up its truculent response towards a Western diplomatic push to defuse the crisis, dismissing answers sent this week by the EU and NATO to its security demands as an insult.

Commercial satellite images published by a private U.S. company showed new Russian military deployments at several locations near Ukraine.

In his starkest warning yet to Americans in Ukraine to get out now, President Joe Biden said he would not send troops to rescue U.S. citizens in the event of a Russian assault.

“Things could go crazy quickly,” Biden told NBC News.

Blinken, visiting Australia, told a news conference: “We’re in a window when an invasion could begin at any time, and to be clear, that includes during the Olympics.”

The Beijing games end on Feb. 20.

“Simply put, we continue to see very troubling signs of Russian escalation, including new forces arriving at the Ukrainian border,” Blinken said.

Russia has already massed more than 100,000 troops near Ukraine, and this week it launched joint military exercises in neighbouring Belarus and naval drills in the Black Sea.

Moscow denies plans to invade Ukraine, but says it could take unspecified “military-technical” action unless a series of demands are met, including promises from NATO never to admit Ukraine and to withdraw forces from Eastern Europe.

The West has said those main demands are non-starters. The EU and NATO alliance delivered joint responses this week, saying their member states had agreed to speak as one. Russia’s Foreign Ministry said on Friday it had demanded an individual answer from each country, and called the collective response insulting.

“Such a step cannot be seen as anything other than a sign of diplomatic impoliteness and disrespect for our request,” the ministry said.

Several Western countries launched diplomatic pushes this week to persuade Russia to back down, but Moscow brushed them off, yielding no concessions to French President Emmanuel Macron who visited on Monday and openly mocking British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss who came on Thursday.

Four-way talks in Berlin between Russia, Ukraine, Germany and France, part of a longstanding peace process in a conflict between Ukraine and Russian-backed separatists, also yielded no progress on Thursday.

Paris and Kyiv said the Russian delegation had demanded Ukraine negotiate directly with the separatists, a “red line” Ukraine has rejected since the conflict began in 2014.

“If Ukraine agrees to this, then the status of Russia will change from being a party to the conflict to the status of being a mediator in the conflict. That is why we do not go for it,” Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said.

THE MUTE TALKING TO THE DEAF

U.S.-based Maxar Technologies, which has been tracking the buildup of Russian forces, said images taken on Wednesday and Thursday showed new deployments in western Russia, Belarus and Crimea, which Russia annexed in 2014.

The images could not be independently verified by Reuters.

Maxar identified 550 new troop tents and hundreds of vehicles at a Crimea airfield; extra troops, military vehicles and helicopters at an airfield in Belarus less than 25 km (15 miles) from the Ukraine border; and a large new deployment in western Russia around 110 km from the frontier.

Russia says it has the right to move forces around on its territory as it sees fit, and they pose no external threat.

Western countries have mostly stood together in threatening economic sanctions against Russia if it invades Ukraine, but have given conflicting views on the threat’s immediacy.

Washington and London have warned an invasion could come within days. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson called the coming days the most dangerous moment in Europe’s biggest security crisis for decades.

France’s Macron, by contrast, has said he thinks Russia does not have designs on Ukraine but wants changes to European security arrangements, and the existing Franco-German-led peace process for Ukraine’s separatist conflict provides a way out.

Whatever its intentions, Moscow has responded dismissively to Western pressure. Pictures of Macron seated far from Putin at the opposite end of a huge table in the Kremlin went viral on the internet this week, widely mocked.

The Kremlin said on Friday the distant seating was necessary because Macron had refused a COVID-19 test administered by Russian doctors. French officials said Macron’s travel schedule did not leave time to wait for test results; French sources also said Macron’s office was worried Moscow would sample his DNA.

Britain’s Truss was treated to a public upbraiding at a joint Moscow news conference by Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, who described their talks as a “conversation between a mute person and a deaf person”.

On Friday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov cited an apparent gaffe by Truss – who was corrected by her ambassador after Lavrov referred to two Russian provinces that she took for parts of Ukraine – as evidence that Western governments were clueless.

A British official said Truss had simply misheard Lavrov. Peskov’s characterisation of the exchange was “total rubbish and classic Russian propaganda”, the official said.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/us-says-russia-masses-more-troops-near-ukraine-invasion-could-come-any-time-2022-02-11/

NEW YORK — Several conservative media figures in the U.S. have taken up the cause of Canadian truckers who have occupied parts of Ottawa and blocked border crossings to protest COVID-19 restrictions and vaccine mandates.

Fox News Channel’s Sean Hannity cheered the truckers on while showing three live reports from Ottawa this week, while Tucker Carlson’s online store is selling “I (heart) Tucker” t-shirts edited to say “I (heart) Truckers.”

“Please tell these truckers that the American working people, people in this country, stand in solidarity with what they are doing and for the freedom movement that they’re leading,” Hannity told reporter Sara Carter on his show Wednesday. She delivered his message to protesters in Ottawa.

In a bulletin to local and state law enforcement officers, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security warned that it has received reports of similar protests being planned in the United States.

The agency said the protest could begin in Southern California as early as this weekend and potentially spread to Washington around the State of the Union address in March.

COVID-19 vaccines, usually administered in two doses and supplemented with a booster shot, are considered highly effective in preventing serious illness and death. Some people can still get the coronavirus, particularly the Omicron variant, while vaccinated, but most cases are mild. The vast majority of people who get serious cases of the disease are unvaccinated.

Between Jan. 18 through Wednesday, Fox News Channel has devoted 8 hours, 43 minutes of airtime to the story, according to the liberal watchdog Media Matters for America, which frequently criticizes the network.

But it’s not just Fox.

Ben Shapiro of The Daily Wire said on his show, sitting in front of a headline that said Canadians were “fed up” with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, that mandates had to stop. The protesters are particularly upset about a requirement that all truck drivers entering the country be fully vaccinated against the coronavirus. An estimated 90 percent of Canadian truckers already are.

“Nobody wants giant bridges shut down,” Shapiro said. “Obstructing traffic is bad no matter what you are protesting for. However, the cause of this protest happens to be righteous.”

The lead story on the Red State website for a time Thursday was headlined, “East Bound and Down: US Truck Convoy is Being Planned, Could Be Headed to DC.” Reporter Sarah Lee mocked a “very silly” piece in Politico that quoted an analyst, who works for a think tank that tracks extremism, that she sees worrying parallels to the buildup before the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol insurrection.

Hannity’s support for what Ontario Prime Minister Doug Ford has called an occupation comes after months where he decried violence and destruction of property at some Black Lives Matter protests in the United States.

The difference, he said, is the Canadian “Freedom Convoy” is peaceful. On Monday, Hannity interviewed a reporter from the conservative website Rebel News, who described the Ottawa protest site as a “family environment” and “like a Canada Day festival every day.”

The protests have been largely peaceful, although some residents have complained of harassment and there is an arson investigation tied to one incident. Shapiro said critics of the truckers are guilty of “nutpacking,” or focusing on a crazed person and linking them to the entire protest movement.

It’s a familiar tactic in politics: pointing to a more extreme position held by a member of an opposition party and saying it represents everyone.

Lara Trump, the former U.S. president’s daughter-in-law and a Fox News contributor, offered her support for the truckers on Hannity’s show Tuesday.

“Right here in America, people are cheering them on, because this is about freedom,” she said.

In a lengthy monologue on his show this week, Carlson suggested that it was inconsistent for the “intellectual elite” to largely support protest movements started by workers yet oppose this one. He said that many time trends start in the United States and move to Canada, but this time the opposite could happen.

“The trucker convoy in Canada is pretty cool,” he said. “People getting together to promote human rights. Who’s against that?”

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/Business/wireStory/us-conservative-figures-cheer-canadian-trucker-protest-82819966

President Biden on Thursday said that Democratic governors ending COVID-19 indoor mask mandates are “probably premature” — before hedging and adding “it’s a tough call.”

Biden sided with the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention after a half dozen states led by Democrats said this week they’re going to end indoor mask requirements as new coronavirus cases drop.

“I committed that I would follow the science as put forward by the CDC and the federal people and I think it’s probably premature, but it’s, you know, it’s a tough call,” Biden told NBC journalist Lester Holt in his first TV interview of 2022.

Biden said that schools will have less reason to require masks with increasing eligibility for vaccines among young children — but he seemed unfamiliar with the details.

Biden said that children younger than 7 years old soon will be eligible for vaccines, even though the CDC approved all people ages five and up, or virtually all elementary school-aged children, for vaccination in November.

Teenager receives a dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine for COVID-19 in New York, U.S., May 13, 2021.
REUTERS
Barricades stand outside the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S, on Saturday, March 14, 2020.
Bloomberg via Getty Images

“What’s happening is every day that goes by children are more protected,” Biden told Holt. “We’re now on the verge of being able to have shots for children under the age of seven and young children and and so the more protection they have, probably you’re going to see less and less requirement to have the mask.”

According to CDC data, more than 80 percent of US citizens ages five and up have had at least one coronavirus shot. For adults, 87.4 percent got at least one shot.

New York is among the states scrapping mask mandates as the Omicron variant of COVID-19 subsides.

The statewide New York “mask or vax” rule for customers of private businesses ended Thursday and is now optional for counties, cities and businesses. People still need to wear masks in schools and on mass transit.

Gov. Kathy Hochul (D-NY) said Wednesday that “given the declining cases, given the declining hospitalizations, that is why we feel comfortable to lift this in effect tomorrow.”

Although the statewide New York mask mandate rule for businesses ended, students still have to wear a mask in school.
AP
Gov. Kathy Hochul is expected to announce her decision about school mask mandates after winter break.
John Lamparski/Sipa USA
Dr. Rochelle Walensky serves as the Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Shawn Thew/CNP/startraksphoto.co

The Democratic governors of California, Connecticut, Delaware, New Jersey and Oregon announced similar mask rollbacks this week.

But CDC Director Rochelle Walkensky dug in during a Wednesday virtual press briefing by the White House coronavirus task force — citing the fact that coronavirus deaths remain high, with a daily average of more than 2,300 US deaths.

“Our hospitalizations are still high, our death rates are still high,” Walensky said. “So, as we work toward that and as we are encouraged by the current trends, we are not there yet.”

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2022/02/10/biden-says-democratic-governors-scrapping-covid-mask-rules-are-probably-premature/

The State Department said on Thursday that “military action may commence at any time and without warning,” as it reissued an advisory urging Americans not to travel to Ukraine with its starkest language yet. A military incursion would also “severely impact” the U.S. Embassy’s ability to help Americans leave Ukraine, the department said. In October, Ned Price, a State Department spokesman, estimated that about 6,600 U.S. citizens were living in Ukraine.

Mr. Biden had previously made clear that he had no intention of sending American troops to defend Ukraine, stating pointedly in early December that the military option was “not on the table,” and this week, he warned Americans that “it would be wise” to leave the country. But Jen Psaki, the White House press secretary, avoided directly answering a question Wednesday on whether the United States would assist Americans “stranded” after an invasion.

“The United States does not typically do mass evacuations,” Ms. Psaki said in a briefing. “There are a range of means that individuals and Americans can depart from Ukraine, and we’ve been encouraging them to do exactly that.”

Satellite images from Wednesday and Thursday showed new Russian forces and equipment still arriving on three sides of Ukraine. Senior Biden administration officials told lawmakers this month that President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia had assembled everything he would need to undertake an invasion that could take an enormous human toll, including the potential deaths of 25,000 to 50,000 civilians.

Among the most aggressive actions Mr. Putin could take if he invades is to quickly surround and capture Kyiv, the capital. But officials have stressed that U.S. intelligence analysts still do not think Mr. Putin has yet decided whether to invade.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/10/us/biden-ukraine.html