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WASHINGTON, July 25 (Reuters) – Sixteen U.S. Marines were arrested on Thursday for their alleged involvement in illegal activities including human smuggling and drug-related offenses, the U.S. military said.

In a press release, the Marine Corps said that the Marines were arrested at Camp Pendleton in California based on information gained from a previous human smuggling investigation.

The statement added that in addition to the Marines arrested, eight others were questioned for unrelated alleged drug offenses.

The Marine Corps said none of those arrested or detained were serving in support of the military’s mission along the border with Mexico.

The arrest comes a day after the military said a Navy SEAL team was sent back from Iraq because of discipline issues. An official said it was because, in part, they had been drinking alcohol, something that is prohibited.

The Marine Corps band called ‘The Presidents Own’ was created in 1798. Here they are in 1893.

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

The Marines pose for a photo in Egypt in 1907.

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Marines pose with a German trench mortar in 1918.

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Marines duing WWI circa 1918. 

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Marines run a drill during combat training in Germany, 1918. 

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Grumman FF-2, circa 1930

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Pearl Harbor survivor Technical Sergeant Anglin on December 8th 1941.

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Marines patiently wait to be called for ‘chow time’ 1943.

Photo Credit: U.S. Marine Corps

Marines admire a photo of a pin-up girl in 1943 while in Japan. 

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

James Wrobel, Designer of VMF-312 Insignia, circa 1943

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Marines arrive on the Japanese island Saipan. 1944 WWII

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Marines stationed in Bougainville.

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Marines wait for letters from home to be distributed. 

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Pictured here : ‘Code Talkers’  1943 were a group a Native American Marines would used their native language to relay coded messages. 

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

 Marines fire a 155mm Howitzer Iwo Jima.

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

A Navy Corpsman administers blood plasma to a Marine. 1944

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Marines are surrounded by bullet shells at  the base of Mount Suribachi.

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Marines raise the American flag in Iwo Jima. 1945

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Marines celebrate the end of WWII. 1945

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Korean War 1950. 

Photo Credit: U.S. Marine Corps

Female Marines began training in Parris Island, South Carolina, 1949.

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Marines line up to receive items from home. Usually soda, candy and cigarettes. 

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

A welcome banner can be seen here in Vietnam welcoming the Marines in Danang in 1965. 

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

A Marine rests while he can in Vietnam. 1968. 

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Moment of Peace: Corporal Larry G. Nabb (Brush, Colorado) finds a moment of peace in front of a gaily decorated Christmas tree at Quang Tri Combat Base. Nabb is serving as a truck driver with 3d Marine Division’s Headquarters Battalion, and is one of thousands of Marines celebrating their Christmas in Vietnam 

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Private First Class Ronald Duplantis prepares a 122mm enemy field weapon for shipment.

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Marines carry supplies from a cargo plane to a nearby base. 1969.

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Marines register to vote for the 1969 presidential election.

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

David Gurfein sits next to a Christmas tree in Saudi Arabia while serving during Operation Desert Shield/Storm.

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Marines prepare to enter Saddam Husseins palace in 2003.

Photo Credit: Lance Corporal Kevin Quihuis Jr./U.S. Marine Corps

Marines can be seen fighting in Fallujah in 2004.

Photo Credit: via Wikimedia

‘Darkhorse’ Marines lost the most men in Afghanistan over any other Marine unit. They can be seen here in 2010.

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Cpl. Chris Lawler observes a  F/A-18C Hornet with Marine Fighter Attack Squadron (VMFA) 122 approach during Exercise Pitch Black 2016 on Aug. 9, 2016.

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Around 20,000 recruits are trained in Parris Island every year. 

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Sgt. Justin Glenn Burnside motivates a recruit with Echo Company, 2nd Recruit Training Battalion 

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps

Marines take their oath at the 2012 U.S. Naval Academy Class of 2012 graduation.

Photo Credit: US Marine Corps




Source Article from https://www.aol.com/article/news/2019/07/25/16-marines-arrested-for-alleged-illegal-activities/23778553/

Mr. Bourgeois, of La Place, La., was sentenced to death in 2004 after he was convicted of murdering his 2-year-old daughter.

At his trial, eight people who knew Mr. Bourgeois, including family members, said they had been threatened or assaulted by him, according to The Plainview Daily Herald in Texas. They said he had tortured and repeatedly beaten his daughter in the months before killing her in 2002.

The Daily Herald reported that Mr. Bourgeois had staged a fall in a parking lot, and that the child died hours later. Mr. Bourgeois was arrested after an autopsy found more than 300 injuries that were not consistent with a fall.

Of the five men whom the Justice Department said it wanted to execute, Mr. Bourgeois is the only one who is black, even though the federal death row is composed of a disproportionate number of black men, making it the subject of criticism. The Justice Department is seeking to execute Mr. Bourgeois on Jan. 13.

Mr. Honken, of Mason City, Iowa, killed five people in 1993 with the help of his girlfriend, who was once one of only two women on federal death row.

Described as the kingpin of a methamphetamine operation, Mr. Honken killed two men who were fellow drug dealers, Terry DeGeus and Gregory Nicholson, as well as Mr. Nicholson’s girlfriend, Lori Duncan, and her two daughters, ages 6 and 10.

The Justice Department said the two men had planned to testify against Mr. Honken.

Iowa does not have the death penalty, but Mr. Honken was found guilty of 17 federal crimes — including tampering with witnesses, conspiracy to commit murder, and multiple counts of a federal crime known as the kingpin statute — which meant he could still be executed by the federal government. His execution is scheduled for Jan. 15.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/25/us/capital-punishment-death-penalty.html

Temperatures hit record highs in Europe on Thursday, as people from the U.K. to Germany looked for ways to cool off and the mercury climbed into the 100s.

Paris logged a record-high temperature for the city of 109 degrees Fahrenheit. Germany touched 107 degrees, a national record, and the mercury in Eindhoven, Netherlands, reached 104 degrees, also a record.

The…

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/temperatures-soar-to-record-highs-in-europe-11564081191


Congress

House Intelligence Chairman Adam Schiff said Thursday that former special counsel Robert Mueller’s testimony a day earlier likely emboldened advocates of impeaching President Donald Trump, but the Democrat said he isn’t convinced that it’s worth it to put the country through such a “momentous and disruptive experience.”

On CNN’s “New Day,” Schiff swatted away concerns that Mueller’s performance, which lacked any bombshell moments, was an impediment to Democrats’ investigative efforts, emphasizing the “substance” of the former special counsel’s testimony was “just devastating.”

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“Should we put the country through an impeachment?” Schiff said. “I haven’t been convinced yet that we should, and going through that kind of momentous and disruptive experience for the country, I think, is not something we go into lightly.”

Mueller on Wednesday largely stuck to the confines of his report — which looked at Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election, whether any of Trump’s associates aided that effort and whether the president sought to obstruct the investigation — and did not produce the kind of made-for-TV moments many pro-impeachment Democrats had wanted. His testimony was punctuated by curt answers, and the former FBI director deflected many questions and stumbled over others.

“Yes, you know, the halting nature of his answers made questioning him a challenge,” the congressman said. “As a former prosecutor, it meant that, you know, you take each witness as they come, and it meant it wasn’t easy to get him to tell a narrative.”

Still, he said, “I think those ready to pull the trigger and say, ‘Let’s begin the impeachment,’ feel their hand is even stronger after this hearing.”

Schiff declined to discuss what members of the caucus said in a huddle after Wednesday’s marathon hearings. POLITICO reported that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi rebuffed House Judiciary Chairman Jerry Nadler’s suggestion that committee chiefs begin drafting articles of impeachment.

Schiff, like Pelosi, has said impeachment would be divisive for the country, so Democrats would need to make the strongest case possible. If the House were to impeach Trump, the effort would likely die in the GOP-controlled Senate and would not result in Trump’s removal from office.

The questions Democrats must consider, Schiff said, are: “‘Can we make the case to the country?’ And, ‘Does the country benefit going through an impeachment if it’s going to be unsuccessful?’ And we know in the Senate, at least, it would be unsuccessful. So, I’m not there yet, but I’m keeping an open mind, and I may get there.

“But we do need to be realistic,” he said. “The only way he’s leaving office, at least at this point, is by being voted out.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/story/2019/07/25/schiff-mueller-testimony-impeachment-1434102

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnellAddison (Mitch) Mitchell McConnellMcConnell, Paul offer bill to cement tax provision benefiting bourbon makers Forget about Mueller, Democrats — we’ve got real work to do Overnight Defense: Trump vetoes Saudi arms sale resolutions | A look at Esper’s first day as Pentagon chief | Iran, ‘forever chemicals’ mark early priorities | Budget deal set for Thursday House vote MORE (R-Ky.) blocked two election security measures on Thursday, arguing Democrats are trying to give themselves a “political benefit.”

The move comes a day after former special counsel Robert MuellerRobert (Bob) Swan MuellerGOP senator: Americans should remember Mueller from ‘his prime’ Ken Starr says Mueller has done ‘a grave disservice’ to his country Mueller Day: What to watch for MORE warned about election meddling in 2020, saying Russia was laying the groundwork to interfere in the 2020 election “as we sit here.”

Senate Minority Leader Charles SchumerCharles (Chuck) Ellis Schumer Ocasio-Cortez about as well known as top Democrats: poll On The Money: Trump, Congress reach two-year budget, debt limit deal | What we know | Deal gets pushback from conservatives | Equifax to pay up to 0M in data breach settlement | Warren warns another ‘crash’ is coming Overnight Defense: Iran’s spy claim adds to tensions with US | Trump, lawmakers get two-year budget deal | Trump claims he could win Afghan war in a week MORE (D-N.Y.) had tried to get consent Thursday to pass a House bill that requires the use of paper ballots and includes funding for the Election Assistance Commission. It passed the House 225-184 with one Republican voting for it.

But McConnell objected, saying Schumer was trying to pass “partisan legislation.” 

“Clearly this request is not a serious effort to make a law. Clearly something so partisan that it only received one single solitary Republican vote in the House is not going to travel through the Senate by unanimous consent,” McConnell said.

Under the Senate’s rules any one senator can request consent to pass a bill, but any one senator can object.

Schumer argued that if McConnell didn’t like that bill “let’s put another bill on the floor and debate it.”

Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) also asked for consent to pass legislation that would require candidates, campaign officials and their family members to notify the FBI of assistance offers from foreign governments.

McConnell also objected to that bill. 

In his testimony before Congress on Wednesday, Mueller warned about continued Russian interference in U.S. elections.

“We are expecting them to do it again during the next campaign,” Mueller said.

Schumer cited Mueller’s testimony on Thursday as a prime example that more legislation is needed from Congress. 

“It was important for all us to hear straight from Robert Mueller’s mouth that the threat from Russia and other foreign adversaries seeking to meddle in our elections is very real and still very much ongoing,” Schumer said.

“Mueller’s testimony was a clarion call for election security. Mueller’s testimony should be a wake-up call to every American, Democrat, Republican, liberal, conservative, that the integrity of our elections is at stake. … This is all about the future of this country,” he added.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/senate/454742-mcconnell-blocks-two-election-security-bills

“Never meet your heroes,” the saying goes , “they’ll only disappoint you.”

Democrats across the country learned it the hard way on Wednesday when former Special Counsel Robert Mueller testified on Capitol Hill. If you watch the other cable channels, you’re probably accustomed to thinking of Robert Mueller as a kind of progressive superhero sent here from on high to do battle with the diabolical “Mr. Orange” on behalf of the forces of light and justice.

Hollywood literally produced a comic book about Robert Mueller. That’s how convinced they were of his power and goodness. Singlehandedly, Robert Mueller was going to save America.

And then came the long, sad spectacle of Wednesday’s hearings.

Here’s the actual Robert Mueller caught without his cape and mask, squirming under the cold light of television cameras.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM TUCKER CARLSON.

Rep. Steve Chabot, R-Ohio: When discussing the June 2016 Trump Tower meeting, you reference quote, “The firm that produced Steele recording,” unquote, the name of that firm was Fusion GPS, is that correct? 

Robert Mueller, former Special Counsel: And you’re on page 103? 

Chabot: 103, that’s correct. Volume 2. 

Mueller: I’m not familiar with that — can you — 

Chabot: It’s not a trick question, it was Fusion GPS. 

Not familiar with Fusion GPS. Well, it turns out that if you’re watching this show right now, you almost certainly know more about the Russia investigation than the man who led the Russia investigation. You know that Fusion GPS is the democratic oppo firm that paid Christopher Steele to produce the Trump Dossier. Fusion GPS is the reason we’re talking about Russia right now. In fact, Fusion GPS is the reason we had a Mueller investigation in the first place. But of course, you knew that because you’re paying attention.

CLICK HERE TO VIEW THE ENTIRE EPISODE.

Somehow Robert Mueller himself did not know that. What does that say about Robert Mueller? Well, this isn’t a medical program, so we’re not going to speculate about it. What we can say for certain, though, is that Robert Mueller never should have been testifying before Congress on Wednesday. He didn’t want to come. He came because Democrats forced him. They knew his condition. They were happy to exploit him anyway, and they did.

To the left, the individual is always far less important than the mission. And the mission never changes — acquiring political power. Watch  the congenitally shameless Jerry Nadler of New York use Mueller as a kind of human backboard. Throw the question, get it back.

Rep. Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., chairman of the House Judiciary Committee: The report did not conclude that he did not commit obstruction of justice, is that correct? 

Mueller: That is correct. 

Nadler: And what about total exoneration? Did you actually totally exonerate the President? 

Mueller: No. 

Nadler: Now, in fact, your report expressly states that it does not exonerate the President. 

Mueller: It does.

Mueller did not exonerate the president. That was the headline on CNN today. Of course, it was the headline. And that was the point of asking the question in the first place — to create a headline.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP.

Unmentioned was the fact that prosecutors don’t exonerate anyone — ever. Prosecutors charge people with crimes, or they don’t. That’s the full scope of their power. Only God exonerates. The whole thing was a dishonest word game.

Moments later, in fact, Robert Mueller conceded that his was the first Justice Department investigation in history to claim that its unindicted subject was not exonerated.

Rep. John Ratcliffe, R-Texas: Can you give me an example other than Donald Trump, where the Justice Department determined that an investigated person was not exonerated because their innocence was not conclusively determined? 

Mueller: I cannot — but this as unique. 

Ratcliffe: Okay, well, you can’t — time is short. I’ve got five minutes. Let’s just leave it at you can’t find it because, I’ll tell you why, it doesn’t exist. 

That was probably the high point of the day for everyone — everyone participating, everyone watching at home. Most of the rest of the time, it was depressing to watch. Mueller seemed deeply confused — at times confused about why he was there. Repeatedly, he struggled just to hear the questions he was being asked. When he did hear them, his answer often revealed he was not familiar at all with the report that bears his name.

Robert Mueller never should have been testifying before Congress on Wednesday. He didn’t want to come. He came because Democrats forced him. They knew his condition. They were happy to exploit him anyway, and they did.

It went on like this for more than six excruciating hours. We hope you were doing something else today. We can tell you, though, that over 200 times, Mueller simply declined to answer the question at all. Repeatedly, he said that critical questions central to the Russia investigation weren’t in his purview.

Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla.: Do you have any basis as you sit here today to believe that Steele was lying? 

Mueller: As I said before, and I’ll say again, it’s not my purview. Others are investigating what you address. 

Gaetz: So, it’s not your purview to look into whether or not Steele is lying. It’s not your purview to look into whether or not anti-Trump Russians are lying to Steele. And it’s not your purview to look at whether or not Glenn Simpson was meeting with the Russians the day before and the day after you write 3,500 words about the Trump campaign meeting. 

CARLSON: So, given what we’ve already said about Mr. Mueller, we don’t want to be cruel here. But we also want to be clear about what he is indicating.

Mueller just told us that he doesn’t know if Christopher Steele is lying about the basis of the entire Russia investigation. Nope, he doesn’t know. And by the way, he doesn’t care.

Keep in mind, Robert Mueller is the very same man who, as of right now, is trying to send Roger Stone to prison for the rest of his life for telling minor and totally irrelevant lies, allegedly, that hurt no one. But he doesn’t care to know if Christopher Steele is lying about the most important question in the investigation, to which he has dedicated two and half years of his life.

It’s enough to shake your faith actually. By the end of the day, even partisan Democrats had to admit that Mueller’s testimony had been a complete debacle.

At the very least, we now know the truth about Robert Mueller, a mysterious prosecutor with unchecked power revealed, at last, to be a daft old man blinking in the sunlight once his curtain was torn away. It was a sad coda to the long and ridiculous Russia saga — an absurd story for certain, but not a harmless story. Hardly.

This year’s long charade deeply hurt this country. It corrupted our most important institutions and divided our people. But worst of all, it distracted all of us from our real problems, which are legion.

Get in the car and drive five hours in any direction in this country. Stop frequently. Look around. How is America doing, do you think? Now, remember that all the sadness you just saw on your drive — the drug zombies and the homeless people, the payday loan places, the boarded-up buildings, all the slow-motion disasters unfolding unmistakably all around us. All of that has been completely ignored for years in favor of some stupid invented story about Russian spies that never even made sense and didn’t even happen.

The ruling class did that. They did that to you as a distraction. They do not deserve to rule, that much is clear.

Adapted from Tucker Carlson’s monologue from “Tucker Carlson Tonight” on July 24, 2019.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/tucker-carlson-the-real-robert-mueller-has-been-exposed-and-hes-not-the-superhero-dems-portrayed

Attorney General Bill Barr said Thursday the federal government will resume capital punishment and will move forward with plans to execute five inmates on death row for the first time in more than 15 years.

The Justice Department said Barr has directed the Federal Bureau of Prisons to adopt a proposed addendum to the Federal Execution Protocol that will clear the way for the executions. Barr has also directed the bureau of prisons to schedule the executions of five death-row inmates.

“Congress has expressly authorized the death penalty through legislation adopted by the people’s representatives in both houses of Congress and signed by the President,” Barr said in a statement.

ARKANSAS JUDGE ASKS COURT TO ALLOW HIM TO HEAR DEATH PENALTY-RELATED CASES AGAIN

He added: “Under administrations of both parties, the Department of Justice has sought the death penalty against the worst criminals, including these five murderers, each of whom was convicted by a jury of his peers after a full and fair proceeding.  The Justice Department upholds the rule of law—and we owe it to the victims and their families to carry forward the sentence imposed by our justice system.”

The five inmates who have been sentenced to death are scheduled to be executed starting in December:

Daniel Lewis Lee is scheduled to be executed on Dec. 9. Lee, a white supremacist, was convicted in May 1999 of murdering a family of three, including an eight-year-old girl. “After robbing and shooting the victims with a stun gun, Lee covered their heads with plastic bags, sealed the bags with duct tape, weighed down each victim with rocks, and threw the family of three into the Illinois bayou,” the DOJ said in a statement.

Then murder suspect Danny Lee waits for his arraignment hearing in the Pope County Detention Center in Russellville, Ark., on Friday, Oct. 31, 1997. (AP Photo/The Courier, Dan Pierce, File)

Lezmond Mitchell is scheduled to be executed Dec. 11. Mitchell was convicted in 2003 of stabbing to death a 63-year-old grandmother and, according to the DOJ, forcing “her nine-year-old granddaughter to sit beside her lifeless body for a 30 to 40-mile drive.” “Mitchell then slit the girl’s throat twice, crushed her head with 20-pound rocks, and severed and buried both victims’ heads and hands,” the Justice Department said.

Wesley Ira Purkey is scheduled to be executed on Dec. 13. Purkey was convicted in 2003 of raping and murdering a 16-year-old girl before dismembering, burning and dumping the girl’s body in a septic pond. “He also was convicted in state court for using a claw hammer to bludgeon to death an 80-year-old woman who suffered from polio and walked with a cane,” DOJ said.

Wesley Ira Purkey is scheduled to be executed Dec. 13. (Handout)

Alfred Bourgeois is scheduled to be executed Jan. 13. He was convicted in 2004 of torturing, sexually molesting and beating to death his two-and-a-half-year-old daughter.

Dustin Lee Honken is scheduled to be executed on Jan. 15. He was convicted in 2004 of shooting and killing five people: two men who planned to testify against him, as well as a single mother and her two daughters.

<strong>Dustin Lee Honken</strong> was convicted in 2004 of shooting and killing five people: two men who planned to testify against him, as well as a single mother and her two daughters. (Associated Press)

The Justice Department said each of the inmates have exhausted appeal efforts and will be executed at the U.S. Penitentiary Terre Haute, Indiana.

DOJ said additional executions of federal prisoners will be scheduled at a later date.

The executions will be the first in the federal prison system since 2003. In 2014, then-President Barack Obama directed the department to conduct a review of capital punishment and issues surrounding lethal injection drugs. That review resulted in what effectively was a freeze on executions.

The department says the Bureau of Prisons has completed the review and the executions can continue.

Executions on the federal level have been rare. The government has put to death only three defendants since restoring the federal death penalty in 1988, the most recent of which occurred in 2003, when Louis Jones was executed for the 1995 kidnapping, rape and murder of a young female soldier.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/federal-government-to-resume-capital-punishment-schedule-executions-for-5-inmates

Media captionWhy is it so hot and is climate change to blame?

Paris saw a record high temperature of 42.6C (108.7F) on Thursday, amid a heatwave that broke records across Western Europe.

A red alert was issued in north France. Germany also set a new national temperature record of 41.5C – bypassing the figure set just a day before.

The UK recorded a record temperature for July of 38.1C, with trains told to run more slowly to stop rail buckling.

The Netherlands also recorded its highest ever temperature at 40.7C.

“Climate change has increased the likelihood and severity of heatwave episodes across Europe,” the UK’s national weather service said.

Image copyright
EPA

Image caption

A woman cools down near the Eiffel Tower in Pairs

What temperatures was Europe expecting?

French authorities launched a red alert – the highest state of alert – in the Paris region and 19 other districts and said temperatures were expected to reach 42C-43C in parts of the country.

French media said Wednesday night was “probably” the hottest ever recorded in France.

Belgium’s Royal Meteorological Institute issued “code red” warnings across most of the country – urging people to take extra precautions during “extremely high temperatures”.

Media captionMore weather records were expected to be broken. BBC Weather’s Simon King reports

What has been the impact?

In France, officials warned people to avoid travelling to work from home if possible. Some nurseries have been closed.

The chief architect responsible for restoring Notre-Dame warned that the extreme heat could lead to the cathedral’s roof collapsing if the joints and masonry holding up the roof dried out.

French reports suggested five deaths may have resulted from the high temperatures.

Comparisons were drawn to a heatwave in August 2003 which contributed to almost 15,000 deaths in the country.

In parts of north Germany, rivers and lakes have dried up – with warnings that fish and mussels could be “severely threatened”.

In the Netherlands, hundreds of pigs died earlier this week after a ventilator at a farm failed.

On Wednesday, a Eurostar train from Belgium to London broke down, trapping passengers.

Media captionEurostar passengers felt the heat in Belgium on Wednesday

Hasn’t the summer already been hot?

Yes, an intense heatwave swept through areas of Europe last month, making it the hottest June on record.

France set an all-time high-temperature record of 46C, according to the WMO, and new June highs were set in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Austria, Andorra, Luxembourg, Poland and Germany.

Is climate change to blame?

While extreme weather events like heatwaves occur naturally, “research shows that with climate change they are likely to become more common, perhaps occurring as regularly as every other year”, the UK’s Met Office says.

Dr Peter Stott from the Met Office told BBC 5Live the latest heatwave is the result of both “weather and climate acting in concert.

“What we have at the moment is this very warm stream of air, coming up from northern Africa, bringing with it unusually warm weather,” he said. “But without climate change we wouldn’t have hit the peaks that we’re hitting right now.”

Media captionBBC colleagues from hot countries give their tips for staying cool

The Met Office conducted a study last year that found that the UK was now 30 times more likely to experience heatwaves compared to the year 1750, because of “the higher concentration of carbon dioxide (a greenhouse gas) in the atmosphere”.

Records going back to the late 19th Century show that the average temperature of the Earth’s surface has increased by about one degree since industrialisation.

A climatology institute in Potsdam, Germany, said Europe’s five hottest summers since 1500 were all recorded in the 21st Century.

Scientists have expressed concern that rapid warming linked to use of fossil fuels has serious implications for the stability of the planet’s climate.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-49108847

FULL HONORS, PRESIDENTIAL WELCOME: Ceremonial units drilled on the Pentagon’s parade field yesterday, cables were laid across the River Entrance parking lot, a stage erected, and portable toilets trucked in — all for today’s full honors arrival ceremony to mark the beginning of Mark Esper’s tenure as President Trump’s second defense secretary.

Trump, Esper, and Vice President Mike Pence are all scheduled to make remarks at the ceremony, the first time all the ceremonial stops have been pulled out for a new defense secretary in recent memory. Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Joseph Dunford will not be in attendance because he is traveling. The Pentagon will stream the festivities live at www.defense.gov/Watch/Live-Events.

ESPER MAKES A MARK: Esper hit the ground running on his first full day following his Senate confirmation Tuesday afternoon. Just three hours into the day, he made a point of meeting with the Pentagon press corps in its warren of cubicles on the 2nd floor C ring, just a short walk from his 3rd floor E ring office.

Esper said one of the first things he did was order “updated guidance” to leaders in the field to encourage their engagement and underscore what he called “the very important role of the media, the press in our society, and in terms of communicating what we are doing and then answering your questions.”

ARMY SAYS GOODBYE: On his Twitter feed, Esper noted he “Started the day talking to media, closed it talking to Congress,” and he posted photos from his farewell ceremony in the Pentagon’s subterranean auditorium, where he marked the end of his service as Army secretary. In the pictures, Army Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Milley, who’s in line to be the next joint chiefs chairman, can be seen sporting the Army’s new retro-inspired “pinks and greens” uniform. The World War II-style brown jacket is worn over lighter pinkish brown pants.

Milley is expected to get a vote on the floor of the Senate today to confirm his nomination to replace current chairman Dunford at the end of September.

IT’S ALL ABOUT THE TROOPS: Esper said his top priority is the welfare of the men and women in the military and the Department of Defense, and to underscore that, his first action memo directs the Pentagon to establish a task force on PFAS, per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, a group of chemicals used for decades in products such as firefighting foam, nonstick cookware, and fast-food wrappers.

The link between exposure to PFAS and various health issues including liver problems, low birth weights, and testicular and kidney cancer is still being established, but use of the chemicals is being phased out. Military installations that use PFAS-laden firefighting foam and businesses that work with PFAS are two big sources of water contamination.

“The Department is committed to taking a strong and proactive stance to address the effects arising out of any releases of these substances from all defense activities including the National Guard and Reserves,” Esper wrote his memo.

Asked about the thousands of people who believe their cancers are a result of PFAS exposure, Esper said, “We just need to understand the problem and make sure we have our hands fully around it, follow the science, and then obviously if there’s a relationship, we need to do our due diligence.”

ENOUGH WITH THE ACTING ALREADY: Esper also repeated what he told Congress during his confirmation hearing: that he plans to act quickly to fill all the vacancies in senior positions currently filled by acting secretaries or deputies.

Esper said of the 59 jobs that require Senate confirmation, 15 are filled by “actings,” including 4 of the top 6, now that he’s been confirmed.

“My key is to get those positions filled as quickly as possible, keep pushing folks through this system,” Esper said, noting he’s discussed the problem with Jim Inhofe and Jack Reed on the Senate Armed Services Committee. “So we’ve got to get stable leadership in to make sure that you have that civilian control of the military, the right people in place leading this organization.”

NORQUIST NEXT: After yesterday’s cordial confirmation hearing, Pentagon comptroller and chief financial officer David Norquist seems also headed for quick approval from the Senate.

One indication was the comments Chairman Inhofe made at the outset of the session. “I’m probably the wrong one to be chairing this hearing, because I’ve already decided and I have strong feelings about you,” Inhofe said in his opening remarks. “In fact, I remember telling the president a long time ago, it doesn’t matter who ends up being secretary of defense, as long as you have Norquist.”

Good Thursday morning and welcome to Jamie McIntyre’s Daily on Defense, written and compiled by Washington Examiner National Security Senior Writer Jamie McIntyre (@jamiejmcintyre) and edited by Kelly Jane Torrance (@kjtorrance). Email us here for tips, suggestions, calendar items, and anything else. If a friend sent this to you and you’d like to sign up, click here. If signing up doesn’t work, shoot us an email and we’ll add you to our list. And be sure to follow us on Twitter: @dailyondefense.

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HAPPENING TODAY: The House is set to vote today on the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2019, followed by the Senate next week. The two-year spending deal, hammered out by the White House and Democratic and Republican leaders in Congress, busts spending caps by $320 billion over the next two fiscal years and allows the Treasury to borrow money without limits until July 31, 2021.

The nearly $1.4 trillion package, which includes $738 billion for the Pentagon, has sparked sharp rebuke from fiscal conservatives and is likely to be rejected by many Republicans.

But enough GOP lawmakers, including House Republican leadership, will side with most House Democrats to pass the measure, writes Susan Ferrechio in the Washington Examiner, in part because they want to avoid another politically disastrous government shutdown and because the proposal has the backing of President Trump.

“I think we will have the votes,” Democratic Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said yesterday.

$738 BILLION ‘A GOOD NUMBER’: The Trump administration’s request for $750 billion in defense spending for the next fiscal year fell victim to the negotiations to end mandatory spending caps and suspend the debt ceiling, but Esper said yesterday that it was worth it to get budget certainty.

“Seven thirty-eight’s a good number. We also have two years. We expect to see two years’ worth of numbers,” said Esper. “And I think to the degree we have predictability, to the degree that we can avoid CRs, those things allow us to plan and make more efficient use of our dollars. So I’m good with those dollars. No complaints.”

LOTS OF COMPLAINTS: Fiscal conservatives have been howling since the deal was announced earlier this week. “If enacted into law, this Mnuchin-Pelosi budget deal would be the most fiscally egregious deal in recent years and would create annual deficits on par with President Obama’s,” said Heritage Action, the lobby arm of the Heritage Foundation.

“In 2018, President Trump nearly vetoed a $1.3 trillion omnibus spending bill, famously promising the American people that he ‘will never sign another bill like this again.’ The deal under consideration this week will increase the ten-year spending baseline by $1.7 trillion to $2 trillion, increase debt to 97 percent of GDP by 2029, and pave the way for another trillion dollar plus omnibus spending deal this fall.”

THE MISSILES ARE THE MESSAGE: North Korea fired two “projectiles” into the East Sea today, according to South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff. The projectiles appear to be short-range ballistic missiles based on the fact they reached a height of 30 miles and one traveled about 270 miles the other 430 miles before landing harmlessly in the sea.

The launch — the first in more than two months — is seen as a sign of Kim Jong Un’s frustration with the lack of progress since President Trump made history last month by crossing the DMZ into North Korea and shaking hands with Kim.

The gesture was expected to reinvigorate stalled talks, but since then nothing has been put on the calendar.

NO SURPRISE: “We should not be shocked by this move and, in fact, we should have seen it coming,” said Harry Kazianis, a Korea expert at the Center for the National Interest.

“North Korea is clearly upset that the U.S. and South Korea are conducting joint military exercises. Because of this, Pyongyang has refused to set a date for working-level talks with Washington, won’t accept food aid from Seoul and is now once again testing weapons systems that will surely increase tensions,” he said.

“Now Trump is stuck in a dilemma of accepting the North Korean missile test, which will likely embolden future provocations, or reacting to it in a way that risks diplomacy collapsing altogether,” said Eric Gomez, an analyst at the Cato Institute.

“This missile test highlights the problem with Donald Trump’s style over substance diplomacy with North Korea,” he said. “Style does matter, but it can only take the United States so far. Without a more substantive agreement on confidence building measures, a formalization of Kim’s missile testing moratorium, or an agreed understanding on U.S.-South Korea military drills, it is difficult to lock in the potential benefits of the summits and more flashy aspects of U.S. engagement.”

DUNFORD CHECKS AFGHAN PROGRESS: The Afghan capital of Kabul was rocked by three back-to-back explosions that reportedly killed 12 people, just one day after Joint Chiefs Chairman Dunford was in the city consulting with Gen. Scott Miller, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan.

U.S. envoy Zalmay Khalilzad is also in Kabul, trying to broker inter-Afghan talks between the Taliban and the government.

Dunford told reporters traveling with him that he wanted to take the pulse of operations in the country in advance of the national elections in September, according to the Pentagon. “That is clearly a big priority for them, [and they are] making sure they have everything in place,” Dunford said.

THE TALIBAN’S INSULTED: The Taliban took strong exception to President Trump’s statement this week that he could win the war in Afghanistan in a week, 10 days tops, if he were willing to kill 10 million people, which he quickly added he was not.

“His claim that he can wipe out Afghanistan, kill 10 million Afghans, and win this war through such a method is irresponsible and we condemn it in the strongest terms,” said the Taliban in a statement reported by the Middle East Media Research Institute, a monitoring group.

“This dream was taken to the grave by Genghis, the British, and the former Soviet leaders. On the contrary, their Empires were wiped off the face of this earth, but the Afghan nation proudly endured and will continue to endure, live, and remain proud, Allah willing,” the statement said. “The 18 years of force proved that the policy of aggression and tyranny is fruitless and demonstrates ignorance regarding why Afghanistan is called the Graveyard of Empires.”

TURKEY’S NEXT MOVE: “Turkey is once again issuing a credible threat of military intervention in Northern Syria to extract concessions from the U.S. and NATO,” writes Institute for the Study of War in its latest analysis of growing strain in the U.S.-Turkey relationship after Ankara’s air defense deal with Russia.

The key takeaway: “The Turkish Armed Forces began deploying large numbers of troops and armored vehicles along the Syrian-Turkish Border on July 8. These deployments threaten the contested town of Manbij as well as two additional border towns that Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan threatened to seize on July 14. Erdogan likely intends to compel the U.S. to grant him concessions in the ongoing negotiations over a possible ‘safe zone’ along the Syrian-Turkish Border but he may also attempt to use this threat to deter the Trump Administration from imposing sanctions on Turkey in response to its purchase of the S-400 Surface-to-Air Missile System from Russia.”

ACCESS TO INCIRLIK: Turkey’s foreign minister, Mevlut Cavusoglu, dropped a no-so-veiled hint this week that U.S. access to Turkish bases, in particular the strategically located Incirlik Air Base, could be cut off over the dispute. “If America has very negative steps toward us, if there are sanctions or further steps, we will have answers to America,” he said in an interview with a Turkish TV channel.

In his meeting with reporters yesterday, Secretary Esper said it was the first he’s heard of the threat. “I haven’t seen that report, so you’re providing me news,” he said in response to a question. “Turkey’s been a longstanding NATO ally. We want to preserve that relationship, that alliance. And Incirlik is important to us.”

REVIEW OF THE JEDI: Esper also said he’d be looking into the Pentagon’s $10 billion cloud contract, which President Trump said last week was the subject of much industry complaint because it looks like Amazon has a lock on the deal.

“I’m getting tremendous complaints about the contract with the Pentagon and with Amazon,” Trump said last Thursday, referring to Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure, or JEDI, the intended cloud computing infrastructure for the Pentagon and the military. “They’re saying it wasn’t competitively bid.”

“I’ve heard from everybody about the JEDI contract and that’s one of the things I want to take a hard look at,” Esper said.

SCHWARTZ FROM BENS TO IDA: Retired Air Force Gen. Norton Schwartz will be the next president and chief executive officer of the Institute for Defense Analyses, succeeding David Chu as the company’s top executive, the group announced yesterday. He had been in the same roles at Business Executives for National Security since 2013.

Schwartz retired as Air Force Chief of Staff in 2012 and joined the board of IDA in 2013.

The Rundown

Navy Times: Internal report exposes cocaine abuse, lax testing, inside SEAL Team 10

CNN: U.S. Navy SEAL Team Ordered Home From ISIS Fight Due To Alleged Misbehavior

Washington Examiner: New Pentagon chief Mark Esper says US will protect American commercial ships in the Persian Gulf

Reuters: U.S. warship sails through Taiwan Strait, stirs tensions with China

Wall Street Journal: China Vows Closer Ties to Russia

The Diplomat: Russia Kicks Off Delivery Of China’s Second S-400 Air Defense Regiment

Stars and Stripes: USS Boxer Pulls Into Bahrain A Week After Iranian Drone Incident

New York Times: Suggesting A Tanker Swap, Iran Hints At A Compromise

Bloomberg: Navy Should Probe Sexual-Harassment Claims Against Auditor, Lawmaker Says

CNBC: New Defense Secretary: ‘We Need To Be Very Concerned About Chinese Technology Getting Into Our Systems’

Air Force Magazine: B-21 to Fly in December 2021; More B-52s to Come Out of Boneyard

USNI News: General Dynamics Confident Flat Federal Spending Won’t Slow Down Columbia Class

Washington Post: The United States won’t feed 30,000 starving Syrians living under its protection

Calendar

THURSDAY | JULY 25

8:30 a.m. 300 First Street S.E. Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies forum on “Nuclear and Missile Proliferation: Iran and North Korea,” with Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio. www.mitchellaerospacepower.org/events

FRIDAY | JULY 26

4 a.m EDT/10 a.m CET. Patch Barracks, Stuttgart, Germany. U.S. Africa Command change of command ceremony where Army Gen. Stephen Townsend assumes command from retiring Marine Gen. Thomas Waldhauser. The defense secretary is scheduled to preside over the ceremony.

8:15 a.m. American Enterprise Institute discussion on “The value of our veterans” about reforming the Veterans Affairs Department. Speakers: Rep. Mike Levin, D-Calif.; Rep. Brad Wenstrup, R-Ohio; Leo Shane, Capitol Hill and White House bureau chief at Military Times; Cynthia Gilman, senior vice president for strategic initiatives at the Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine; Mike Hutchings, chief development officer at Combined Arms; Rory Riley-Topping, founder of Riley-Topping Consulting; and Rebecca Burgess, director of the AEI Program on American Citizenship. www.aei.org/events

8:30 a.m. 2101 Wilson Blvd. National Defense Industrial Association discussion on “DevOps in the Defense Intelligence Information Enterprise,” with Lt. Cmdr. Gregory Contreras, program manager for defense intelligence information enterprise framework at the Naval Information Warfare Center Atlantic.

TUESDAY | JULY 30

9:30 a.m. SD-G50. Dirksen Senate Armed Services Committee confirmation hearing on Vice Adm. Michael Gilday to be chief of naval operations. www.armed-services.senate.gov/hearings

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“I never once got piss-tested on deployment or on the road, where I was using most often.”

An unnamed Navy SEAL, quoted by the Navy Times in its report about members of SEAL Team 10, who are accused in an internal investigation of snorting cocaine and dismissing military drug tests as “a joke.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/policy/defense-national-security/trump-to-celebrate-pentagon-pick-with-pomp-and-parade-as-esper-shows-his-take-charge-style-on-day-one

Washington (CNN)Democrats wanted a star witness. Republicans wanted a villain.

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    With crisis enveloping his administration, the governor found himself increasingly isolated, having lost support from the public, the leaders of his political party and many of his own aides, who tendered their resignations and left Mr. Rosselló, 40, almost completely alone.

    “You had an isolated governor, whose cabinet is resigning, with the mayors of his party asking him to resign, and with the people on the street asking him to resign,” said Antonio Sagardía, Puerto Rico’s former justice secretary. “It was impossible to govern like that.”

    [‘We just changed history’: Celebrations in San Juan.]

    Mr. Sagardía said he spoke to Mr. Rosselló on Tuesday and told him that he had no choice but to step down as governor after Puerto Rico’s Justice Department issued search warrants for cellphones belonging to Mr. Rosselló and 11 of his current and former aides as part of a criminal investigation into the private group chat.

    The leaked messages, in addition to being rude and profane, suggested the administration was inappropriately favoring its politically connected friends, just days after federal authorities had arrested two former top officials and four other people in a corruption investigation.

    For people who thought they knew Mr. Rosselló, reading his crude comments introduced them to a side of him that he appeared to have shown only to his male buddies.

    “He was very respectful, always very kind, very much a gentleman,” said Representative Jenniffer González-Colón, Puerto Rico’s nonvoting resident commissioner in Congress, who publicly demanded Mr. Rosselló’s resignation last Friday. “It was two completely different personalities.”

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/25/us/puerto-rico-rossello-profile.html

    SEOUL, July 25 (Reuters) – North Korea test-fired two new short-range missiles on Thursday, South Korean officials said, the first such launch since leader North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and U.S. President Donald Trump agreed to revive stalled denuclearisation talks last month.

    South Korea’s Defence Ministry urged the North to stop acts that are unhelpful to easing tension, saying the tests posed a military threat.

    It was not immediately clear if the missiles used ballistic technology which would be a breach of U.N. Security Council resolutions targeting North Korea’s missile and nuclear weapons programs.

    At least one of the two missiles North Korea test fired on Thursday was a newly developed design and flew some 690 km (428 miles), an official at South Korea’s defense ministry told Reuters, adding that a detailed analysis was being done to verify if the two missiles were the same model. 

    North Korea launched the missiles from the east coast city of Wonsan with one flying about 430 km (267 miles) and the other 690 km (428 miles) over the sea. They both reached an altitude of 50 km (30 miles), an official at South Korea’s Defence Ministry said.

    Some analysts said the North appears to have retested missiles it fired in May, but two South Korean military officials said the missiles appeared to be a new design.

    The launch casts new doubt on efforts to restart denuclearisation talks after Trump and Kim met at the demilitarized zone (DMZ) between the two Koreas at the end of June.

    U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and North Korean Foreign Minister Ri Yong Ho had been expected to meet on the sidelines of a Southeast Asian security forum in Bangkok next week.

    But a diplomatic source told Reuters on Thursday that Ri had canceled his trip.

    The White House, Pentagon and U.S. State Department did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    South Korea had detected signs prior to the launch and was conducting detailed analysis with the United States, the presidential Blue House said in a statement.

    Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said the test had no immediate impact on Japan’s security, according to Kyodo News.

    U.S. National Security Adviser John Bolton, who has taken a hard line towards North Korea, made no mention of the launches in a tweet on Thursday after a visit to South Korea. He said he had “productive meetings” on regional security.

    South Korea’s nuclear envoy, Lee Do-hoon, had phone calls with his U.S. counterpart, Stephen Biegun, and his Japanese counterpart, Kenji Kanasugi, to share their assessment, South Korea’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

    Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told a briefing that Beijing had noted the launch, calling for North Korea and the United States to reopen negotiations “as early as possible.”




    ‘CLEAR MESSAGE’

    After Trump and Kim met last month, the United States and North Korea vowed to hold a new round of working-level talks soon, but Pyongyang has since sharply criticized upcoming joint military drills by U.S. and South Korean troops.

    North Korea’s Foreign Ministry accused Washington this month of breaking a promise by holding military exercises with South Korea. On Tuesday, Kim inspected a large, newly built submarine from which ballistic missiles could be launched.

    “By firing missiles, taking issue with military drills and showing a new submarine, the North is sending one clear message: there might be no working-level talks if the United States doesn’t present a more flexible stance,” said Kim Hong-kyun, a former South Korean nuclear envoy.

    Kim Dong-yup, a former navy officer who now teaches at Kyungnam University in Seoul, said the weapons tested on Thursday appeared to be the same as the ones tested in May, which were less of a challenge than long-range missiles but “enough to subtly pressure” Washington.

    But the South Korean military believes they may be new, because they traveled further. In May, the projectiles flew only 420 km (260 miles) and 270 km (168 miles) though they reached the same altitude of about 50 km (30 miles).

    “We’re very cautious because it’s difficult to extend the range within such a short time,” said one military official, who asked not to be named due to the sensitivity of the issue.

    Nuclear talks between North Korea and the United States stalled after a second summit between Trump and Kim in Vietnam in February broke down.

    Trump has repeatedly lauded the North’s freeze in weapons testing as he is keen for a big foreign policy win as he campaigns for re-election in 2020.

    (Reporting by Joyce Lee, Josh Smith and Hyonhee Shin; Additional reporting by David Brunnstrom and Idrees Ali in WASHINGTON, and Huizhong Wu in BEIJING Editing by Nick Macfie)

    Source Article from https://www.aol.com/article/news/2019/07/25/nuclear-talks-in-doubt-as-nkorea-tests-missiles-envoy-cancels-trip/23778018/

    CLOSE

    Following Robert Mueller’s testimony, President Donald Trump called out Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other ranking Democrats for “phony cloud.”
    USA TODAY

    WASHINGTON – Speaking on Tuesday at a student activist conference hosted by the conservative advocacy organization Turning Point USA, President Donald Trump walked onstage in front of a presidential seal that, upon closer examination, appears to have been altered to include symbols representing Russia and golf. 

    The Washington Post first reported on the altered seal. As Trump walked onstage to a cheering audience, two presidential seals flashed on screen. The seal directly behind Trump was the authentic presidential seal. One of the seals, however, was not like the others. 

    Upon closer examination, the seal on Trump’s right includes a double-headed eagle, unlike the single head of the traditional presidential seal, and seems to resemble the Russian coat of arms. The seal has a complex history, notes the Victoria and Albert Museum, but one of the more common interpretations is that the two heads represent east and west, “an allegory sometimes for unity, and sometimes for absolute monarchy.” It could be a reference to Trump’s sometimes-controversial relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin. 

    More: Donald Trump, congressional Democrats reach two-year budget deal, avoid crisis on debt ceiling

    More: President Trump vetoes bills that would have blocked Saudi weapons deal

    More: ‘It is not a witch hunt.’ Robert Mueller testifies on Trump and Russian election meddling in 2016

    The eagle also appears to be holding several golf clubs instead of arrows in its claws, perhaps a reference to Trump’s affinity for golf

    Additionally, instead of “e pluribus unum,” the scroll above the eagle appears to say “45 es un titere,” which appears to translate from Spanish to mean “45 is a puppet.”

    It is not clear where the image originated, though, or who was responsible for the mixup. 

    “It was a last-minute A/V mistake — and I can’t figure out where the breakdown was — but it was a last minute throw-up, and that’s all it was,” a Turning Point USA spokesman told the Washington Post, adding that he didn’t know who was to blame or where the image was from.

    Turning Point USA and the White House have not yet responded to requests for comment from USA TODAY. 

    On Wednesday, Trump tweeted a video of his appearance at the event that included a shot of the seal. 

    Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2019/07/25/trump-appears-altered-presidential-seal-turning-point-usa-event/1824386001/

    Walking back through the village after the Sunday church service, Carolyn Byrne is feeling settled for the first time in months.

    Byrne had been a member of the Cloud Appreciation Society for a few years before the invitation to Lundy landed in her inbox. The solitude of an island lost in time appealed to her, and she booked the ticket without thinking.

    As soon as she arrived on the island, the tiny bars of signal on her iPhone disappeared. Byrne, a divorce lawyer in Manhattan, felt as if she hadn’t been out of cell range since 1999, when every junior associate at her old New York corporate law firm was issued a Blackberry.

    “There’s a point when everyone’s just checking off all the boxes, like ‘Oh, I have to go to Target to pick up more paper towels’ or, you know, ‘Little Johnny has to go to swim class and Suzy has to go to gymnastics,’” she says. “And you wonder, when was the last time I was able to just do this, look at clouds and play music? And that was in the fourth grade.”

    The 45-year-old, who lives with her husband and their three young children and also has three adult stepchildren, had forgotten what it felt like to sit still and look up at the world above her. In her Manhattan neighborhood, she can see only slivers of the sky sandwiched between high-rises. On Lundy, the sky, and with it the world, has doubled in view.

    “I’m so far away from home, but it feels less like discovering and more like remembering, if that makes sense,” she says as she navigates a field of sheep droppings on an uphill walk to her cottage.

    “I remember growing up in Long Island lying on my back in the front yard, looking up at the sky and picking out shapes.”

    Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/climate-change-britain-clouds/

    CLOSE

    Former special counsel Robert Mueller said the “report is my testimony” as he read his opening statement to Congress.
    USA TODAY

    Now what? 

    The long-awaited testimony by Robert Mueller before two congressional committees Wednesday didn’t drop bombshells or spark the fireworks many Democrats had hoped for, but it will have repercussions.

    From impeachment to indictment, the former special counsel’s appearance could have an impact on Republicans and Democrats, on congressional decisions in the next few weeks and the presidential election next year. 

    Here are five ways that his seven hours in the witness chair could reverberate down the road: 

    1) Impeaching the president 

    It just got less likely. 

    Of 235 House Democrats, at least 92 have endorsed launching an impeachment inquiry of President Trump – importantly, not including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Before the hearings, those who support impeachment saw Mueller’s testimony as the most likely way to ignite outrage and, perhaps, meet Pelosi’s demand that there be broad public sentiment and the possibility of winning a conviction in the Republican-controlled Senate before moving ahead. 

    While Mueller outlined an assault on democracy by Russians and a response by President Trump and his campaign that was “problematic” and worse, his testimony left Democrats frustrated. As he had warned beforehand, he declined to expand on the contents of his 448-page report, two years in the making.

    He refused to be cinematic, to deliver a sound bite or create a viral moment.

    “I refer you to the report,” he repeated again and again.

    When committee members asked him to read aloud passages from the report, he told them he’d prefer that they read them instead.

    He didn’t sketch the narrative arc that might persuade skeptics to endorse impeachment. In the opening moments, Judiciary Chairman Jerry Nadler prompted Mueller to state that he hadn’t cleared Trump of allegations of obstructing justice, noting that Justice Department guidelines prohibit indicting a sitting president.

    “Did you actually totally exonerate the president?” Nadler asked.

    “No,” Mueller replied.

    CLOSE

    Rep. Nadler asked Robert Mueller to expound upon his “no” answer on whether report offer “total exoneration” of President Donald Trump.
    USA TODAY

    But over the hours that followed, he declined to opine on whether impeachment was warranted.

    Some additional House Democrats may now support impeachment, but Mueller’s testimony didn’t seem to provide the clear tipping point that some Democrats wanted – enough to, say, get the additional 26 members on board that would create a majority of the Democratic caucus behind the inquiry.

    The clock is ticking. Congress now heads into the August recess, and the time is fast approaching when Democrats are likely to conclude that defeating Trump in the 2020 election takes precedence, and is more feasible, than impeaching him before then.

    2) Indicting the president

    It could happen, Mueller made clear, once Trump has moved out of the White House.

    Indeed, in what seemed for at time to be a blockbuster exchange, Mueller confirmed that he would have indicted Trump for obstruction of justice if not for Justice Department guidance that prohibits charging a sitting president.

    Democratic Rep. Ted Lieu of California had ticked through Trump actions that, he said, met the “three elements” behind the crime of obstruction. Then he said, “The reason, again, that you did not indict Donald Trump is because of the O.L.C. opinion?” (That is a reference to DOJ’s Office of Legal Counsel.)

    “That is correct,” Mueller said.

    CLOSE

    Rep. Ken Buck asked Robert Mueller if you could charge the president with obstruction after he leaves office. Mueller replied, “Yes.”
    USA TODAY

    But after the lunch break, Mueller clarified that wasn’t what he meant. “What I wanted to clarify is the fact that we did not make any determination with regard to culpability in any way,” he said. He didn’t decide whether to indict Trump because that wasn’t a possibility. 

    That said, he confirmed several times that a president could be indicted for obstruction of justice or other crimes after he left office.

    Democratic Rep. Mike Quigley of Illinois asked if Trump might be able to wait out an indictment by winning a second term. “What if a president serves beyond the statute of limitations?” he asked. 

    Mueller said he didn’t really have an answer. The statute of limitations on federal obstruction charges, Quigley said, was five years.

    3) Shaping public opinion

    Mueller’s testimony may have hardened public views, but it’s hard to believe it reshaped them.

    Before the hearing, most Americans opposed impeaching Trump. In an ABC News/Washington Post Poll this month, nearly six in 10 said the House shouldn’t launch impeachment proceedings. That’s true even though a majority have also called Mueller credible and said that the special counsel’s report didn’t exonerate Trump.

    On this, there has predictably been a partisan divide. Most Democrats supported impeachment; most Republicans said Trump had been cleared.

    ‘Not a witch hunt’:Mueller testifies on Trump and Russian election meddling in 2016

    The hearing isn’t likely to have bridged that division. The Republicans and Democrats questioning Mueller seemed to have wandered into different hearings. What was the issue? Democrats argued that Trump was guilty of obstruction of justice, even if he couldn’t be charged with the crime. Republicans attacked the origins of the inquiry as tainted – un-American, one declared – and said it had been pursued for partisan reasons.

    4) Nominating a Democrat

    Mueller sometimes stumbled in his responses, often asked that questions be repeated and, understandably, looked exhausted by the time he testified before the House Intelligence Committee in the afternoon. When Democratic Rep. Greg Stanton of Arizona lobbed what was intended to be a softball, Mueller was unable to remember which president appointed him as U.S. Attorney in Massachusetts. (He said George H.W. Bush; it was Ronald Reagan.) 

    He was less facile, less nimble than he had been in dozens of previous hearings before Congress during his time as FBI director.

    “This is delicate to say, but Mueller, whom I deeply respect, has not publicly testified before Congress in at least six years,” David Axelrod, the top strategist in Barack Obama’s campaigns, wrote on Twitter. “And he does not appear as sharp as he was then.”

    That lesson might not be lost on Democrats who have expressed concerns about the prospect of nominating a presidential candidate in his 70s to challenge the 73-year-old Trump next year – fairly or not, and at the risk of being accused of ageism.

    Mueller will turn 75 next month. Former vice president Joe Biden is 76. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders is 77.

    Alex Castellanos, a veteran Republican strategist who has worked on several presidential campaigns, drew that line. “Note to sleepy @Joe_Biden:,” he tweeted. “In next debate, do not say, ‘Could you repeat that question?”

    5) And Trump’s takeaway

    Judging from the temperature of his tweets, Trump moved from early-morning anger about the hearings to afternoon delight.

    “NO COLLUSION, NO OBSTRUCTION!” he declared in one tweet as the hearing was about to begin. In another, he denounced the Mueller investigation as “The Greatest Witch Hunt in U.S. History, by far!”

    By the time the hearings were drawing to a close, the president seemed increasingly relieved, then even jubilant in a string of more than two dozen tweets and retweets that ridiculed Mueller and claimed vindication for himself.

    “I would like to thank the Democrats for holding this morning’s hearings,” he wrote in one, calling them “a disaster for Robert Mueller & the Democrats.” And this: “TRUTH IS A FORCE OF NATURE!”

    Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2019/07/25/mueller-testimony-democrats-republicans-trump-what-next/1821272001/

    Image copyright
    Reuters

    Image caption

    Ricardo Rosselló announced his resignation in a televised statement

    Puerto Rico’s Governor Ricardo Rosselló has announced his resignation after days of mass street protests in the US territory.

    Mr Rosselló, who had only on Sunday insisted he would stay on, said he would continue working until 2 August to allow an orderly transition.

    He has been at the centre of a group text message scandal that has already led two top officials to resign.

    The leaked messages revealed sexist, profane and homophobic comments.

    Image copyright
    Reuters

    Image caption

    Crowds celebrated the announced resignation on the streets of the capital San Juan

    The chat, which contained 880 pages of exchanges between the governor and 11 male allies, was leaked on 13 July and led to days of protests outside the governor’s mansion in San Juan.

    What did Governor Rosselló say?

    He recorded a video statement that was broadcast on Wednesday evening.

    “I announce that I will be resigning from the governor’s post effective Friday, 2 August at 5pm,” Mr Rosselló said.

    “I feel that to continue in this position would make it difficult for the success that I have achieved to endure,” he added.

    Mr Rosselló’s announcement triggered celebrations on the streets of the capital San Juan.

    On Monday, hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets, demanding Mr Rosselló’s immediate resignation.

    The 40-year-old governor is leader of the New Progressive Party, a Puerto Rican political party which advocates US statehood.

    Mr Rosselló will be replaced by the US Caribbean island territory’s Justice Secretary Wanda Vazquez.

    Image copyright
    Getty Images

    Image caption

    Protesters had been calling for Mr Rosselló to step down over the leaked chats as well as allegations of government corruption

    On Sunday, in an attempt to appease protesters, he said he would not seek re-election next year.

    “I hear you,” Mr Rosselló said in a Facebook video. “I have made mistakes and I have apologised.”

    “I know that apologising is not enough,” he added.

    What are the secret messages?

    Several of the texts mock victims of Hurricane Maria, which devastated the island in 2017 and may have led to more than 4,000 deaths.

    In one instance, Mr Rosselló criticised the former speaker of the New York City Council, Melissa Mark-Viverito, saying people should “beat up that whore”.

    When the island’s chief fiscal office wrote that he was “salivating to shoot” the mayor of San Juan, Mr Rosselló replied: “You’d be doing me a grand favour.”

    Media captionRicky Martin gave his support to Puerto Rican protesters

    What has been the reaction to the scandal?

    Local newspaper El Nuevo Día called on the governor to resign in its Monday editorial.

    “Puerto Rico has spoken up, not only as a strong, broad and united voice, but as the right voice,” the editorial said. “With a gesture of nobility and humility, Governor, it is time to listen to the people. You have to resign.”

    San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulin Cruz said in a Twitter message on Monday: “They can’t deny it: The power is in the street.”

    Singer Ricky Martin, who was targeted in the secret messages, was among those calling for the governor to resign, as well as Hamilton creator Lin-Manuel Miranda and reggaeton star Bad Bunny.

    “They mocked our dead, they mocked women, they mocked the LGBT community, they made fun of people with physical and mental disabilities, they made fun of obesity. It’s enough. This cannot be,” Martin said in a video on Twitter.

    Image copyright
    Getty Images

    Image caption

    Protesters gathered to march on one of the island’s busiest highways

    The island’s political crisis also made headlines throughout mainland US. Many echoed the New York Times editorial board, which wrote that the “callousness and partisan self-dealing” exposed by the messages serve as exorbitant strain for the long-suffering island, effectively “rubbing salt into a long-festering wound”.

    “The Puerto Rican people have no use for petty political feuding,” the New York Times wrote. “Their territory is struggling under the weight of government corruption, incompetence and indifference. Having been failed by their leaders at every level, they are out of patience. They deserve better.”

    US President Donald Trump has also called on the governor to resign.

    Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-49102274

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

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/07/24/investing/asian-market-latest-kospi/index.html

    Jeffrey Epstein, the millionaire financier who is being held on federal sex trafficking charges, was found injured and in a fetal position in his cell at a New York City jail, sources close to the investigation told NBC News on Wednesday night.

    Epstein, 66, was found semi-conscious with marks on his neck in his cell at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan some time in the last two days, the sources said. Epstein is on suicide watch, two sources said.

    Two sources told NBC News that Epstein may have tried to hang himself, while a third source cautioned that the injuries weren’t serious, questioning whether Epstein might have staged an attack or a suicide attempt to get a transfer to another facility.

    Another source said that an assault hadn’t been ruled out and that another inmate, identified by sources as Nicholas Tartaglione, had been questioned.

    Tartaglione, 49, is a former police officer in Briarcliff Manor, New York, who was arrested in December 2016 and accused of killing four men in an alleged cocaine distribution conspiracy, then burying their bodies in his yard in Otisville, according to court records. He was charged with drug conspiracy and four counts of murder and is awaiting trial.

    Download the NBC News app for breaking news and politics

    Sources said Tartaglione claimed not to have seen anything and not to have touched Epstein.

    An attorney for Tartaglione denied that his client attacked Epstein, saying that Tartaglione and Epstein got along well and that Epstein appeared to be fine on Wednesday.

    Attorneys for Epstein didn’t immediately return calls for comment. A spokesperson for the Bureau of Prisons didn’t return calls, and spokesmen for the U.S. Marshals and U.S. attorney’s office declined to comment.

    Epstein was arrested July 6 in Teterboro, New Jersey, as he returned from Paris on a private jet. He has pleaded not guilty, and a federal judge denied bail last week.

    Epstein, whom President Donald Trump called a “terrific guy” in a 2002 interview with New York magazine, is registered as a sex offender in Florida. Former President Bill Clinton has flown on one of Epstein’s planes on several occasions, according to flight records reviewed by NBC News.

    Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/investigations/jeffrey-epstein-found-injured-marks-his-neck-new-york-jail-n1034301

    “I invite you to watch me talk about systemic racism not only when I’m talking to mostly black audiences, but when I’m talking to mostly white audiences,” Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Ind., told the crowd. Mr. Buttigieg is seeking to shed his reputation as a candidate for white elites, and pointed to his recently released “Douglass Plan” to address racial inequality as evidence of his campaign’s growth.

    Mr. Booker said his identity as a black man living in Newark gave him a unique perspective on the nation’s racial disparities that no president has had before. Ms. Harris noted that she sponsored a marijuana decriminalization bill this week, aimed at reversing the racial disparities in sentencing for drug-related crimes.

    Former Representative Beto O’Rourke of Texas, who is seeking to jolt his flagging campaign, drew chuckles from the crowd for sidestepping pointed yes or no questions in favor of longer, impassioned answers. “The biggest misconception about me is that our chances have narrowed and diminished in this race,” he said.

    And Mr. Biden promoted his criminal justice plan, which is designed to reduce the mass incarceration that disproportionately harms black people and rolls back some of the tough-on-crime measures he helped put into law in the 1980s and ’90s. Mr. Biden will also speak at the National Urban League conference this week in Indianapolis, in a sign of how crucial black voters are to his campaign’s chances.

    “I love you,” Mr. Biden said on Wednesday. “Look me over. I need your help!”

    In a preview of the coming scrutiny that Mr. Biden will face, several people at the N.A.A.C.P. convention seized on his criminal justice plan to question the former vice president’s record.

    Jesse Jackson, the civil rights leader who opposed several of Mr. Biden’s crime bills in the 1980s and ’90s and ran against him for the 1988 Democratic presidential nomination, said Mr. Biden “has some responsibility for the criminal justice system as it exists now.”

    Mr. Booker took a more direct shot at Mr. Biden’s plan: “For a guy who was an architect of mass incarceration, this is an inadequate solution.”

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/24/us/politics/naacp-trump-democrats-2020.html

    On Wednesday, former Special Counsel Robert Mueller testified before Congress, confirming that Trump “was not exculpated” by his report. Trump has repeatedly falsely claimed that the report found no evidence of collusion or obstruction. In fact, Mueller acknowledged multiple instances of obstruction. Yet, he also noted that a sitting president can’t be indicted.

    MSNBC analyst Nicolle Wallace broke down the significance of the testimony–set to continue this afternoon.

    “Look I think there are a couple of very important moments for the Democrats and for the country,” Wallace said. “Robert Mueller confirmed here in a line of questioning from Ted Lieu that the president’s conduct did meet the legal definition of obstruction,” she said. “If you’re anyone else but Donald Trump that means you’re guilty of the crime of obstructing justice,” she observed.

    “Now, he wouldn’t play along when Swalwell tried to get him to say whether he would have signed off on what 800-plus former federal prosectors–Democrat and Republican–former prosecutors — who said that if it was anyone other than the president he would have been charged with a crime.”

    When the report came out, analysts wondered if Mueller’s strategy was to preserve evidence for potential future prosecutions.

    “Famously, Nancy Pelosi has said of one of her arguments against proceeding against impeachment is she’d like to see the president serve time for alleged criminal conduct. I think like everything, associated with this investigation, it can be parsed is sliced by each partisan side.

    But Wallace saw a major difference in how the Democrats and Republican lawmakers conducted themselves during questioning.

    “Let’s not ‘both sides’ the Democrats,” Wallace said. “The Democrats considered this a fact-finding mission. The Republicans were all auditioning for the next weeknight show on Fox News.”

    She singled out Reps. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) and Jim Jordan (R-OH) in particular.

    “Matt Gaetz sounded like a lunatic auditioning to fill in for Sean Hannity,” she joked.

    “None of them appeared to be looking for facts.”

    Source Article from https://www.salon.com/2019/07/24/nicolle-wallace-republicans-at-mueller-hearing-auditioned-for-the-next-weeknight-show-on-fox-news_partner/