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Attorney General Bill Barr testified Wednesday that he believes “spying did occur” on the Trump campaign in 2016, as he vowed to review the conduct of the FBI’s original Russia probe — and the focus of a related internal review shifted to the role of a key FBI informant.

“I think spying did occur. The question is whether it was adequately predicated. … I think it’s my obligation. Congress is usually very concerned with intelligence agencies and law enforcement agencies staying in their proper lane,” he testified before a Senate Appropriations subcommittee, while noting that “spying on a political campaign is a big deal.”

BARR VOWS MUELLER REPORT RELEASE ‘WITHIN A WEEK,’ AS DEMS RIP ‘UNACCEPTABLE’ HANDLING AT HEATED HEARING

The comments follow a new report that the Justice Department’s internal watchdog also is scrutinizing the role of an FBI informant who contacted members of the Trump campaign during the 2016 election, as part of a broader review of the early stages of the Russia investigation. The New York Times reported that Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz is looking into informant Stefan Halper’s work during the Russia probe, as well as his work with the FBI prior to the start of that probe.

BARR REVEALS HE IS REVIEWING ‘CONDUCT’ OF FBI’S ORIGINAL RUSSIA PROBE

Halper, an American professor who reportedly is deeply connected with British and American intelligence agencies, has been widely reported as a confidential source for the FBI during the bureau’s original investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 election. That official counterintelligence operation was opened by then-senior agent Peter Strzok, who has since been fired from the bureau.

During the 2016 campaign, Halper contacted several members of the Trump campaign, including former foreign policy adviser George Papadopoulos and former aide Carter Page. Page also was the subject of several Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) warrants during the campaign — which is an issue at the heart of the IG’s investigation. Republicans, including President Trump, have alleged misconduct in the bureau and Justice Department’s handling of those FISA warrants.

“It was an illegal investigation. … Everything about it was crooked,” Trump told reporters on Wednesday, describing it as an attempted “coup” and reiterating his interest in digging into the probe’s origins. “There is a hunger for that to happen.”

Professor Stefan Halper
(Voice of America, File)

The Times, in its report, noted that Halper also contacted former Trump campaign aide Sam Clovis. It is unclear whether Halper had the FBI’s permission to contact Clovis, according to the report.

Horowitz, more broadly, is probing alleged wrongdoing related to the issuance of FISA warrants to surveil Page during the election. During a prior hearing on Capitol Hill on Tuesday, Barr testified that Horowitz’s investigation is expected to be complete by May or June.

While vowing to release Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s now-completed Russia report in a matter of days, Barr also announced Tuesday that he was reviewing the origins of the Russia investigation at the FBI and the Justice Department, amid mounting calls for scrutiny of the probe’s beginnings from Trump and prominent congressional Republicans.

“More generally, I am reviewing the conduct of the investigation and trying to get my arms around all of the aspects of the counterintelligence investigation that was conducted in the summer of 2016,” Barr told the House Appropriations Committee on Tuesday.

BARR ASSEMBLES ‘TEAM’ TO LOOK INTO COUNTERINTELLIGENCE INVESTIGATION ON TRUMP CAMPAIGN IN 2016, OFFICIAL SAYS

Also on Tuesday, Fox News reported that a source said Barr had assembled a “team” to investigate the origins of the bureau’s counterintelligence investigation into the Trump campaign.

On Wednesday, Barr testified that he hasn’t technically “set up a team” but has colleagues helping him as he reviews the case.

“This is not launching an investigation of the FBI,” he stressed. “Frankly, to the extent there were issues at the FBI, I do not view it as a problem of the FBI. I think it was probably a failure of the group of leaders—the upper echelons of the FBI. I think the FBI is an outstanding organization and I am very pleased Director Chris Wray is there.”

He added, “If it becomes necessary to look over former officials, I expect to rely on Chris and work with him. I have an obligation to make sure government power is not abused and I think that’s one of the principal roles of the attorney general.”

The FBI’s 2016 counterintelligence investigation, formally opened by Strzok, began with a “paucity” of evidence, according to former FBI counsel Lisa Page, with whom Strzok was romantically involved. During a closed-door congressional interview, Page admitted that the FBI “knew so little” about whether allegations against the Trump campaign were “true or not true” at the time they opened the probe, adding that they had just “a paucity of evidence because we [were] just starting down the path” of vetting allegations.

Page also said in her interview that it was “entirely common” that the FBI would begin an investigation with just a “small amount of evidence.”

Barr’s team will also review the FISA warrants issued against Carter Page. The issuance of the FISA warrants relied, in part, on the unverified anti-Trump dossier authored by ex-British Intelligence Agent Christopher Steele, who worked on behalf of Fusion GPS—a firm paid by the Hillary Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee through law firm Perkins Coie to do opposition research against the Trump campaign. In the dossier, Steele accused Page of conspiring with Russians. Page was not charged with any wrongdoing in either the FBI’s Russia probe or Mueller’s.

Fox News exclusively obtained internal FBI text messages last month showing that just nine days before the FBI applied for the Page FISA warrant, bureau officials were battling with a senior Justice Department official who had “continued concerns” about the “possible bias” of a source pivotal to the application.

Barr’s review could also dovetail with the work U.S. Attorney John Huber has been doing. In 2017, former Attorney General Jeff Sessions appointed Huber to review not only alleged surveillance abuses by the Justice Department and the FBI but also the handling of the probe into the Clinton Foundation and other matters.

The day following Barr’s release of his summary of the Mueller report, Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said his panel also would investigate alleged FISA abuses at the start of the Russia investigation and called on Barr to appoint a new special counsel to investigate “the other side of the story.” Graham has been calling for a second special counsel since 2017 to investigate “whether or not a counterintelligence investigation was opened as a back door to spy on the Trump campaign.”

Also, House Intelligence Committee Ranking Member Devin Nunes, R-Calif., said over the weekend he was preparing to send eight criminal referrals to the Justice Department this week regarding alleged misconduct by DOJ and FBI officials during the Trump-Russia investigation. It is unclear whom Nunes will refer for investigation, and what the process at the Justice Department might be.

When asked Tuesday about Nunes’ referrals, Barr said he hasn’t seen them yet, but, “Obviously, if there is a predicate for investigation, it will be conducted.”

Fox News’ Gregg Re and Jake Gibson contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/doj-watchdog-fbi-informant-in-russia-probe

KYIV, Ukraine—Ukraine said its military had launched a counteroffensive in its capital, Kyiv, and other key cities, as President Volodymyr Zelensky urged the U.S. Congress to provide more weapons and increase economic pressure on Russia.

The thump of distant shelling echoed through the center of Kyiv overnight, while Ukrainian forces appeared to counterattack in the outlying towns of Irpin, Bucha and Hostomel, which have been severely damaged in weeks of street fighting and artillery exchanges. The city and the surrounding region were under an all-day curfew Wednesday.

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/ukraine-mounts-counteroffensive-to-drive-russians-back-from-kyiv-key-cities-11647428858

São Paulo – After a three-year period closed for its first full renovation, the Immigration Museum (Museu da Imigração, in Portuguese) will open its doors for the public again on May 31st. Restored and adapted to receive the public, the museum will now hold a permanent exhibition on the 2.5 million immigrants and migrants who have passed through it, besides documents, temporary exhibits and a space for research. 

Press release/Immigration Museum

Prospect of the new exhibition: tour will have video and audio

 The repairs in the Immigration museum cost around US$ 9 million and were intended to adapt the building to host the museum’s public and collections. Built in 1887 to function as an inn, the building will have air conditioning, flood gates and adaptations for people with special needs. The building was repaired and even the institution’s name has changed from Immigrant’s Memorial to Immigration Museum. 

According to the executive director, historian Marília Bonas, the museum which will be reopened to the public will not only touch on early 19th century immigration, but on current immigration as well. “The curatorship has striven to expand the immigrants’ speech. We want to discuss the multiple voices of those who have passed through here to share the immigrants’ experience”, Bonas told ANBA. She also said that the institution will dialog with the immigrant communities and will have a “strong aspect of partnership” with society.

The new permanent exhibition will recall the old facilities of the Immigrants’ Inn. It will have eight modules which promise to have visitors immerse themselves in the Inn’s daily life. In one of the modules, the visitor will be “taken” to the cafeteria and hear the immigrants speak in several languages. From there, they will move on to the dorms, where they will be shown the expectations and dreams of the immigrants before they actually lived in Brazil. They will also watch videos with testimonies from former guests. Other modules will show immigration nowadays.

The Immigration Museum will have an auditorium, a cafe and a space for research on the topic. Visitors who want to use the library and the reference and research center will be accompanied by a museum employee. School groups will have a space to do activities and workshops connected to the theme of immigration.

History

The Immigrants’ Inn was opened to receive immigrants who came to Brazil to work. The first guests were Europeans who left their countries invited by the government of São Paulo after slavery was abolished. They came to replace slaves in the coffee crops. These employees came to Brazil by ship, with the tickets paid by the government of São Paulo. They disembarked in the port in Santos, went up the mountain by train and were hosted at the inn before being sent to work in the countryside.

Press release/Museu da Imigração

Building has the history of 2.5 million people

 As the years passed by, the inn received immigrants of over 70 nationalities, among them Syrians and Lebanese. Brazilian people who came to São Paulo were also hosted there in the 1930s. “In the case of Arabs, they came from many places and focused on urban centers and commerce. Portraying Arab culture is a challenge because it is composed of many cultures and we are interested in bringing that to the public”, says the executive director.

After the closing of the Immigration Museum, its management has also changed. The institution belongs to the State Secretariat for Culture, but is run by the Social Cultural Organization for Friends of the Coffee Museum (Organização Social de Cultura Associação dos Amigos do Museu do Café, in Portuguese), which also runs the namesake museum in Santos, on São Paulo’s shore. The managers expect the Immigration Museum to have 500,000 visitors by the end of the year.

For the opening day, immigrant community theatre presentations and dance shows are scheduled, besides a concert by songwriter and singer Arnaldo Antunes. In June and July, the entrance is free. Besides the permanent exhibition, the Immigration Museum will host temporary exhibits.

Service
Immigration Museum
Rua Visconde de Parnaíba, 1.316, Mooca, São Paulo, SP
Reopening scheduled for May 31st
Visiting hours: from Tuesday to Saturday, from 9am to 5pm. On Sundays, from 10am to 5pm. Fortnightly, on Fridays, the institution will be open until 9pm.
For further information: www.museudaimigracao.org.br (in Portuguese)

*Translated by Rodrigo Mendonça

Source Article from http://www2.anba.com.br/noticia/21863445/tourism/repairs-at-immigrants-house/

National Economic Council Director Larry Kudlow on President Trump’s comments on socialism during his State of the Union address and the Trump administration’s economic policies.

LARRY KUDLOW, DIRECTOR OF THE U.S. NATIONAL ECONOMIC COUNCIL:

I just think it was great that he dealt with that issue head-on. Many of us had suggested to him that we should say something about all these crazy anti-growth, anti-incentive, anti-business, anti-reward policies coming out of the opposition party. And we should have a generic statement at a minimum and so there you have it regarding socialism. And I want to carry that forward, you know you and I’ve talked about this a while back and I want to raise this issue. One of the great things that President Trump has done in a relatively short period of time but he started right off the bat. His policies basically ended the war on business and the prior administration was conducting a war on business. Not only in terms of over regulation and taxing, which is bad enough, but in terms of attitudes, you know, what you say about businesses and I don’t want to go deep into the partisanship here, that’s not my intent, but what I’m saying is I believe President Trump really changed the whole psychology of large and small business men and women and that that’s one of the reasons his plan has paid off and that we’re growing about three percent which is you know, virtually nobody thought would be possible.


I think the psychology here is so important and hence the statement he makes on socialism is another reassurance that we will not go down that path and that we America has always been, we have always been a nation of entrepreneurs who thrive for freedom and the incentive model of growth.

Source Article from https://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2019/02/07/larry_kudlow_trumps_policies_ended_the_war_on_business.html

D.C. Police Chief Robert Contee says that four people, including a 15-year-old male, two adult civilians and a police officer, were shot at the intersection of 14th and U Streets in Northwest. The teenager has died.

The shooting was first reported to WTOP after 8 p.m. in the area near a “Moechella” event — a downtown Juneteenth celebration not approved by D.C. officials.

A fight broke out and causing people to disperse shortly before officers shut the event down in the area. Contee said some weapons were obtained in the event area just before the shooting took place.

Mayor Muriel Bowser offered condolences to the family who lost their child in the shooting and shared concerns over crowd control issues with unapproved events and the presence of guns in heavily populated, public areas.

“We need some accountability here,” she said.

The other two adults injured in the shooting have been hospitalized and several firearms were discovered in the area. Police are currently seeking a suspect.

Police announced several street closures as a result of the shooting in Northwest. The investigation is ongoing.

A map of the approximate shooting location is shown below.

 This is a developing story.

Source Article from https://wtop.com/dc/2022/06/dc-police-reports-of-multiple-people-shot-including-officer/

With a little more than a fortnight to go before the government shuts down once more in the absence of a budget deal, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., has publicly touted bringing a debt ceiling deal into the mix of border security negotiations. This should really go without saying, but adding even more brinkmanship into Republicans’ common sense compromise is a terrible call.

For one thing, Democrats successfully called President Trump’s bluff in the shutdown. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., simply waited out the five-week political faux pas, banking on the fact that the public would blame Trump for making what essentially amounted to an eleventh hour demand. Although Trump’s actual demands were sensible enough, just one billion dollars more for border security than Democrats pushed for in the Gang of Eight bill in 2013, Pelosi successfully framed the narrative not as Democratic obstruction but Republicans holding the government hostage. And she won.

The debt ceiling issue will arise on its own in March, and Congress will have to vote on authorizing the government to borrow money and pay back its debts. Our skyrocketing national debt is a ticking time bomb of its own, one now much greater than our annual gross domestic product and reaching a proportion of our economy not seen in almost a century. Social security, which Trump has foolishly promised not to touch, will become insolvent in just 15 years, and Medicare is currently spending more than three times per capita of what its recipients paid into it.

But the solution to our egregious national debt is not to default on our loans, or even to threaten to.

Any further manipulation of the debt ceiling would backfire. Republicans want a physical barrier along the southern border as well as extra funding for courts and personnel, but they’ve made clear that they’re open to issuing major concessions to the Democrats to get it. And if you support both letting the people already here stay and preventing new illegal immigrants from coming in, Trump’s compromise makes sense. Granting a sizable DACA extension — a constitutional one this time — or amnesty cannot be done so long as the border remains so permeable without incentivizing further illegal immigration. And Democrats would be dumb to give Trump his key campaign promise without demanding a permanent and legal solution to the fates of DACA recipients and temporary protected status holders.

Trump’s problem right now is one of messaging. He’s logically correct in his compromise, or at least the direction that he’s going in. He’s no longer withholding pay from 800,000 federal workers. If Pelosi refused to name her price when Trump has made his inelasticity of demand so apparent, it means one of two things: She’s an actual open borders extremist who’s made a full 180 on the importance of sovereignty and law enforcement, or she cares about “Dreamers” so little that she’d rather blow a once-in-an-administration opportunity to secure their destinies forever.

This is the story Republicans need to be telling. But to add an issue as economically threatening and politically toxic as the debt ceiling into the mix would only complicate the story, not clarify it.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/dont-bring-the-debt-ceiling-into-border-negotiations

France is reacting with anger after being left out of an agreement between the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia to give Australia nuclear-powered submarines. 

In a statement issued by French Minister Of Europe and Foreign Affairs Jean-yves Le Drian and Minister of the Armed Forces Florence Parly, the country said the decision announced on Wednesday “is contrary to the letter and spirit of the cooperation that prevailed between France and Australia, based on a relationship of political trust as well as on the development of a very high-level defence industrial and technological base in Australia.”

BIDEN CALLS NEWSOM’S VICTORY A ‘WIN’ FOR ‘STRONG VACCINE REQUIREMENTS’

“The American choice to exclude a European ally and partner such as France from a structuring partnership with Australia, at a time when we are facing unprecedented challenges in the Indo-Pacific region, whether in terms of our values or in terms of respect for multilateralism based on the rule of law, shows a lack of coherence that France can only note and regret,” the statement continued. 

The statement went on to call the announcement “regrettable.”

“The regrettable decision that has just been announced regarding the FSP program only reinforces the need to make the issue of European strategic autonomy loud and clear,” the joint statement said. “There is no other credible way to defend our interests and our values in the world, including in the Indo-Pacific.”

France added that it is the “only European nation present in the Indo-Pacific with nearly two million citizens and more than 7,000 military personnel.”

Earlier in the day, U.S. President Biden joined British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison in announcing the creation of  an enhanced trilateral security partnership, called “AUKUS”, which involves sharing highly sensitive nuclear submarine technology with Australia.

“As the first initiative under AUKUS, recognizing our common tradition as maritime democracies, we commit to a shared ambition to support Australia in acquiring nuclear-powered submarines for the Royal Australian Navy,” the White House said. “Today, we embark on a trilateral effort of 18 months to seek an optimal pathway to deliver this capability. We will leverage expertise from the United States and the United Kingdom, building on the two countries’ submarine programs to bring an Australian capability into service at the earliest achievable date.”

JUDGE PIRRO BLASTS MILLEY AFTER REPORT ON HIS CALLS TO CHINA: ‘GET HIM THE HELL OUT OF THE PENTAGON’

During the announcement, Biden referred to France as having a “substantial Indo-Pacific presence” and a “key partner and ally in strengthening the security and prosperity of the region.”

 “The United States looks forward to working closely with France and other key countries as we go forward,” Biden said. 

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The announcement of the partnership is widely perceived as a challenge to China’s authority in the region and the Chinese embassy quickly responded to the news.

“Exchanges and cooperation between countries should help expand mutual understanding and trust,” the Chinese Embassy in the U.S. said in a statement. “Countries should do more things that are conducive to solidarity and cooperation among countries and regional peace and stability. Meanwhile they should not build exclusionary blocs targeting or harming the interests of third parties. In particular, they should shake off their Cold-War mentality and ideological prejudice.”

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/france-issues-angry-response-to-nuclear-submarine-deal-between-u-s-france-and-australia

Derechos de autor de la imagen
Twitter

Image caption

“Esto no es un golpe, sino una acción civil militar,” dice el líder del grupo en el video.

Las autoridades de Venezuela denunciaron este domingo un ataque contra una base del Ejército en la ciudad de Valencia, en el norte del país.

El almirante Remigio Ceballos, jefe del Estado Mayor conjunto del Comando Estratégico Operacional, informó que hubo siete detenidos por lo que dijo que fue “un ataque terrorista delictivo paramilitar” que dejó también un asaltante muerto en el enfrentamiento.

“Nuestra FANB (Fuerza Armada Nacional Bolivariana) repelió con éxito el ataque terrorista delictivo paramilitar, los 7 capturados están aportando datos”, escribió Ceballos en Twitter.

En un video desde el Fuerte Paramacay, el mayor general Jesús Suárez Chourio, comandante general del Ejército, informó que uno de los asaltantes “fue dado de baja y otro fue gravemente herido”.

Derechos de autor de la imagen
Twitter

Image caption

Tuit del ministro de Información de Venezuela.

En un comunicado posterior de la FANB se informó que la acción “fue ejecutada por un grupo de delincuentes civiles portando prendas militares y un primer teniente en situación de deserción“.

Un video que circuló en las redes sociales a la misma hora mostró a un grupo de hombres vestidos con uniformes militares que afirmaban haber lanzado un levantamiento “para restaurar la democracia” en Venezuela.

Pese a las detenciones, “parte del grupo logró sustraer algunas armas y está bajo intensa búsqueda”, informó la FANB en el comunicado.

El ministro de Defensa, Vladimir Padrino, también celebró la actuación de la Fuerza Armada.

“No pudieron con la FANB, con su moral ni con su conciencia constitucional. Ahora pretenden agredirla con ataques terroristas. No podrán!!!”, escribió.

Derechos de autor de la imagen
AFP

Image caption

El hecho ocurre un día después de que la nueva Asamblea Constituyente retiró de su cargo a la fiscal Luisa Ortega.

A su vez, Diosdado Cabello, alto cargo del oficialismo en Venezuela, indicó que se desplegaron soldados para “garantizar la seguridad interna” y que fuerzas del Ejército se hicieron con el control de la base.

En el video del supuesto grupo alzado quien habla se identifica como capitán Juan Caguaripano, y dice ser el comandante de la Brigada 41 en Valencia, Carabobo.

Afirma declararse en “legítima rebeldía (…) para desconocer la tiranía asesina de Nicolás Maduro”.

“Aclaramos que esto no es un golpe de Estado, es una acción cívica y militar para restablecer el orden constitucional, pero más aún para salvar al país de la destrucción total”.

En 2014, Caguaripano ya hizo un video en el que llamaba a los uniformados a “salvar el país”.

La FANB dijo en el comunicado que el “oficial subalterno” implicado en el ataque fue separado del cargo hace tres años “por traición a la patria y rebelión”, por lo que huyó y recibió protección en Miami.

Derechos de autor de la imagen
AFP

Image caption

Venezuela ha estado sumida en una ola de protestas y violencia en los últimos 4 meses.

Según el comunicado, los detenidos confesaron haber sido contratados “por activistas de la extrema derecha venezolana en conexión con gobiernos extranjeros”.

El gobierno acusa a la oposición de estar conspirando para que se produzca una intervención extranjera en un país que está bajo una grave crisis económica y política.

En el comunicado de la Fuerza Armada se califica el ataque de este domingo como un “show propagandístico, una entelequia, un paso desesperado que forma parte de los planes desestabilizadores”.

Desde las 4:00 de la madrugada

El ataque que denunciaron las autoridades llega un día después de la primera sesión de la Asamblea Nacional Constituyente, el cuerpo con poderes absolutos controlado por el oficialismo y que la oposición y varios países extranjeros no reconocen, y tras más de cuatro meses de protestas antigubernamentales que han dejado más de 120 muertes.

La periodista Tibisay Romero, presente cerca del fuerte Paramacay, contó a BBC Mundo cómo estaba la situación a las afueras del complejo militar horas después del ataque.

“Una tanqueta de la Guardia Nacional y detrás de ella un pelotón de guardias llegaron y dispararon gases lacrimógenos para dispersar a la gente que estaba concentrada y que gritaba ‘libertad'”, afirmó sobre un grupo de simpatizantes que se acercó al fuerte.

“Dese las 4:00 de la mañana están tirando tiros”, dijo a Romero una vecina del lugar que pidió no ser identificada. La señora afirmó que por su casa pasaron “muchas ambulancias” hacia el cercano complejo militar.

No es el primer ataque de este tipo en Venezuela. El 28 de junio, Oscar Pérez, agente del Cuerpo de Investigaciones Científicas, Penales y Criminalísticas (CICPC), robó un helicóptero y realizó un ataque contra las sedes del Ministerio del Interior y del Tribunal Supremo de Justicia (TSJ) y desde entonces está en paradero desconocido.

Derechos de autor de la imagen
AFP

Image caption

El agente de policía Óscar Pérez aún sigue huido tras su ataque con un helicóptero en el centro de Caracas el 28 de junio.

Source Article from http://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias-america-latina-40844011

Chat with us in Facebook Messenger. Find out what’s happening in the world as it unfolds.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/08/30/business/united-airlines-flight-cancellations-737-max/index.html

“We expect that classrooms, and sometimes schools, will be transitioned to remote learning, as we identify and manage the positive cases among staff and students. But we are confident that we can manage those decisions in an agile and responsive way,” CPS said in its statement.

Source Article from https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/breaking/ct-chicago-public-schools-covid-test-kits-20211229-vafnqsv3w5gnneg632bhwbx32q-story.html

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(CNN)President Donald Trump is traveling 12 time zones across the world for a second high-stakes summit with the North Korean despot Kim Jong Un. During the day in Vietnam and while Americans are sleeping, Trump will try to breathe new energy into de-nuclearization talks with North Korea. At night in Vietnam and during the daytime in DC, his former lawyer and fixer will be testifying in open and closed hearings on Capitol Hill.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/02/25/politics/donald-trump-kim-north-korea-michael-cohen/index.html


Había llegado serena y de buen humor, la candidata a diputada Elisa “Lilita” Carrió al estudio de Los Leuco en TN, el martes a la noche. Propensa a que le pregunten de todo sobre el caso de la desaparición de Santiago Maldonado y lo que, hasta ahí sin confirmación, podía ser la aparición del cuerpo del joven artesano desaparecido. Incluso en el aire se mostró muy interesada en las explicaciones del periodista especialista en criminología, Ignacio González Prieto. Se convirtió en su entrevistadora por largos minutos.

Su participación contrastaba con la mesura de Horacio Rodríguez Larreta. Una “Lilita” auténtica que, fiel a su estilo, consiguió hacer varios picos por encima de los seis puntos, superando desde el canal de cable a muchas de las señales de aire.

Pero no todo iba a ser armonía: una vez terminada la entrevista, Carrió y los suyos salieron al pasillo de TN y, cuando esperaban el ascensor, “Lilita” enfureció.

Uno de sus colaboradores le dijo que en la red social Twitter, mucha gente estaba hablando de su furcio, cuando Diego Leuco explicaba que la baja temperatura del agua del Río Chubut, favorecía la conservación del cuerpo. Y la candidata acotaba: “Como Walt Disney”.

En el pasillo de TN, Carrió empezó a tomar temperatura. “Yo no le hablo a los periodistas que escriben por Twitter. Le hablo a la gente”, le levantó la voz. Y el volumen fue en aumento: “Vos no me vas a decir lo que yo tengo o no tengo que decir. Hay un pibe muerto. Y yo hablo con el corazón”, argumentaba.

Sus colaboradores intentaban que se serenara, le palmeaban la espalda y le pedían calma. No los escuchaba: “Mirá si no voy a decir nada. A mi me dijeron de todo: me dijeron loca, inútil. Hasta me dijeron puta”, gritaba, incontenible, Carrió.

La furia de “Lilita” tuvo un puñado de espectadores de lujo, a los que ella nunca llegó a divisar. A pocos metros había algunos asesores de campaña de Sergio Massa, que la candidata de Cambiemos no conoce. Pero más cerca aún, detrás del ascensor que Carrió esperaba, como testigo involuntario, estaba el mismísimo candidato del Frente Renovador.

Desde la oscuridad de un pasillo y sin que Carrió pudiese verlo, Massa escuchó entretenido los tres minutos de ira de Carrió. Sólo cuando “Lilita” tomó el ascensor, salió de su lugar. “¿Qué le pasa?”, le preguntó sorprendido a los suyos mientras ingresaba al estudio de Los Leuco.

“Fue sólo una discusión doméstica”, explicaron desde su entorno. Una forma de descargar tensión luego de más de una hora de aire hablando de uno de los temas más sensibles para el Gobierno al que, en honor a la verdad, Carrió fue una de las pocas que le puso el pecho de arranque, mientras la mayoría hacía silencio.









Source Article from http://noticias.perfil.com/2017/10/18/caso-maldonado-el-estallido-furioso-de-carrio-tras-la-entrevista-en-tn/

With the release of the Mueller report, 2020 Democrats have come to a fork in the road on the question of whether or not the House should initiate impeachment proceedings against President Trump. In light of this, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., became the first presidential candidate to call for his removal.

During a campaign event in New Hampshire over the weekend, Warren told a crowd of supporters: “We cannot be an America that says it is OK for a president of the United States to try and block an investigation into a foreign attack on our country or an investigation into that president’s own misbehavior — so I have called on the House to initiate impeachment proceedings.”

Warren argues that impeaching the president is not a political decision. But not only is the impeachment process entirely political, it’s also self-serving.

With the 2020 presidential election a year and a half away, Democrats actually see a window in which they can oust Trump from office without congressional intervention. Warren, on the other hand, is hovering in single digits in the polls in a crowded presidential primary field. With the move, she’s grabbing headlines and hauling in campaign donations like her political life depends on it.

It might be smart politics for Warren, but is it smart politically for the Democratic Party?

According to a CNN poll, support for impeachment dropped seven percentage points from December 2018 to March 2019, where 43% favored it compared to 36%. In December, 80% of self-identified Democrats said they supported impeaching Trump, but that number dropped to 68% in March.

Most Democratic presidential candidates are taking House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s words of wisdom when she said, “he’s just not worth it,” opting to talk about kitchen table issues that get voters enthusiastic about their campaign. But for some, the elephant in the room is almost too big to ignore.

Democratic responses have been tenuous at best.

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., who has been cautious about impeachment talk, said that “Congress must continue its investigation into Trump’s conduct and any foreign attempts to influence our election.”

Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., said she believes “there’s room for that [impeachment] conversation.”

Meanwhile, South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg told NBC News that there’s “evidence that this president deserves to be impeached” but deferred to Congress in making that call. Former Rep. Beto O’Rourke, D-Texas, said he “wouldn’t blame any member of the House for voting for this.”

Others like Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, D-Hawaii, told Fox News, “I don’t think that we should defeat Donald Trump through impeachment.”

The main reason you’re not seeing as many Democrats call for impeachment is because it is a losing strategy that only helps Trump. The more Trump can argue that he’s the target of a political witch hunt, it becomes more difficult for his base to turn against him. Democrats want to be viewed as uniters, not dividers, and there’s a strong case to be made that impeachment will only divide the country further.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/heres-why-impeachment-talk-is-dangerous-for-democrats

The State Department said on Sunday it does not have the “reliable means” to confirm a claim made earlier by a Republican lawmaker that flights out of Afghanistan carrying some U.S. citizens were being prevented from taking off by the Taliban because it has no information on the ground about charter flights following the U.S. military withdrawal from the country.

Rep. Michael McCaulMichael Thomas McCaulSunday shows preview: States deal with fallout of Ida; Texas abortion law takes effect Biden faces unfinished mission of evacuating Americans Biden hands GOP rare unity moment in post-Trump era MORE (R-Texas), the top Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said on Sunday that six airplanes have been sitting at Mazar-i-Sharif International Airport in northern Afghanistan “for the last couple of days” but have been unable to leave because the Taliban is preventing them from doing so.

McCaul said the Taliban is “holding them hostage for demands right now” without going into detail about what the Taliban was seeking. The Texas Republican said the flights had been cleared by the State Department.

When reached for comment and any other information on McCaul’s claims, a State Department spokesperson told The Hill that because it does not have personnel on the ground, air assets in the country or have any control of the airspace over Afghanistan or elsewhere in the region, they do not have “reliable means” to confirm details of any charter flights.

“Given these constraints, we also do not have a reliable means to confirm the basic details of charter flights, including who may be organizing them, the number of U.S. citizens and other priority groups on-board, the accuracy of the rest of the manifest, and where they plan to land, among many other issues,” the spokesperson told The Hill.

“We understand the concern that many people are feeling as they try to facilitate further charter and other passage out of Afghanistan,” the spokesperson added.

The spokesperson said the department would still “hold the Taliban to its pledge to let people freely depart Afghanistan.”

“As with all Taliban commitments, we are focused on deeds not words, but we remind the Taliban that the entire international community is focused on whether they live up to their commitments,” the spokesperson added.

The U.S. completed its troop withdrawal from Afghanistan on Tuesday, ending America’s longest war after 20 years of military involvement.

A number of U.S. citizens, however, still remain in the country.

McCaul on Sunday said “hundreds of American citizens” are still in Afghanistan, but Secretary of State Antony BlinkenAntony BlinkenOvernight Defense & National Security — Out of Afghanistan, but stuck in limbo Blinken: Taliban must uphold commitments to international community Has Biden’s Afghanistan debacle sown the seeds of another 9/11? MORE last week said that “under 200 and likely closer to 100” U.S. citizens remain in the country.

When asked on Sunday how many U.S. citizens are still in Afghanistan, White House chief of staff Ron KlainRon KlainSunday shows preview: States deal with fallout of Ida; Texas abortion law takes effect Changing Joe Biden’s mind is no easy task Top Pakistani security official calls for engagement with Taliban MORE said the administration believes “it’s around 100.”

“We’re in touch with all of them who we have identified on a regular basis,” he added.

The Hill reached out to McCaul’s office for additional information.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/570930-state-department-says-it-has-no-reliable-means-to-confirm-claim-that

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UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The United States and Russia are squaring off at the U.N. Security Council over Ukraine, with Washington calling Moscow’s actions a threat to international peace and security, while a Kremlin envoy ridiculed Monday’s meeting as a “PR stunt.”

Diplomatic talks between the U.S. and Russia have so far failed to ease tensions in the crisis, in which Russia has massed an estimated 100,000 troops near Ukraine’s borders, stoking fears in the West of an invasion.

Russia denies it intends to launch an attack but demanded that NATO promise never to allow Ukraine to join the alliance, halt the deployment of NATO weapons near Russian borders, and roll back its forces from Eastern Europe. NATO and the U.S. call those demands impossible.

U.S. President Joe Biden warned Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in a phone call Thursday that there is a “distinct possibility” Russia could begin an incursion in February, but the Ukrainian leader sought to play down the war fears, saying Western alarm over an imminent invasion has prompted many investors in the country’s financial markets to cash out.

Zelenskyy said Friday that “we aren’t seeing any escalation bigger than before,” and charged that the Russian buildup could be an attempt by Moscow to exert “psychological pressure” and sow panic.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson will visit Ukraine on Tuesday for talks with Zelenskyy, and will speak with Russian President Vladimir Putin later Monday, to urge him to “step back,” Johnson’s office said. Johnson says he is considering sending hundreds of British troops to NATO countries in the Baltic region as a show of strength.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Monday that “hysteria promoted by Washington triggers hysteria in Ukraine, where people are almost starting to pack their bags for the front line.”

While Russia could try to block the Security Council meeting if it gets the support of nine of the 15 members, the U.S. was confident it had “more than sufficient support” to hold it, according to a senior official in the Biden administration who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk publicly.

Any formal action by the Security Council is extremely unlikely, given Russia’s veto power and its ties with others on the council, including China.

U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield said Russia’s actions pose “a clear threat to international peace and security and the U.N. Charter.”

Speaking Sunday on ABC’s “This Week,” Thomas-Greenfield said: ”We’re going into the room prepared to listen to them, but we’re not going to be distracted by their propaganda.”

She said last week that council members “must squarely examine the facts and consider what is at stake for Ukraine, for Russia, for Europe, and for the core obligations and principles of the international order should Russia further invade Ukraine.”

Russia’s deputy U.N. ambassador Dmitry Polyansky tweeted that he hoped other Security Council members “will not support this clear PR stunt.”

Assuming the meeting goes ahead, the council will first hear a briefing by a senior U.N. official followed by statements from its 15 members including Russia, the United States and European members France, Ireland, United Kingdom and Albania. Under council rules, Ukraine will also speak.

China’s U.N. Ambassador Zhang Jun indicated Beijing supports Moscow in opposing a council meeting.

“Both sides have shown willingness to continue their negotiations,” he told several reporters on Friday. “Let them settle the differences through dialogue, through negotiations.”

“Russia has said clearly they have no intention to have a war” and the Security Council should “help to deescalate the situation instead of adding fuel to the fire,” Zhang said.

Geraldine Byrne Nason, the U.N. ambassador to Ireland, which is serving a two-year term on the council, said her country wants to see calm prevail.

“We want to see de-escalation, diplomacy and dialogue,” she added.

On Sunday, the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Sen. Bob Menendez, said that in the event of an attack, lawmakers want Russia to face “the mother of all sanctions.” That includes actions against Russian banks that could severely undermine the Russian economy and increased lethal aid to Ukraine’s military.

The sanctions under consideration would apparently be significantly stronger than those imposed after Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine in 2014. Those penalties have been seen as ineffective.

Menendez also raised the prospect of imposing some punishments preemptively, before any invasion.

___

Vladimir Isachenkov in Moscow and Jill Lawless in London contributed.

Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/russia-ukraine-russia-united-states-europe-linda-thomas-greenfield-fc3d700af4518e643ce520ba066a4885