Monday, January 20, 2020

Yahoo! News: Weight Loss News

Yahoo! News: Weight Loss News


Bloomberg pledges $70 billion to bolster black America in new plan

Posted: 19 Jan 2020 09:00 AM PST

Bloomberg pledges $70 billion to bolster black America in new planFormer New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced his presidential campaign's plan for bolstering economic opportunity for black Americans.


Virginia on edge as pro-gun activists seethe over governor’s state of emergency

Posted: 19 Jan 2020 12:05 PM PST

Virginia on edge as pro-gun activists seethe over governor's state of emergencyMoments after Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam approached the podium at the state capitol building on Wednesday to announce that he was issuing a temporary state of emergency ahead of a gun rights rally on Monday in Richmond, the angry comments started pouring in. What started in November as a fight between rural Virginia gun owners and newly elected Democratic lawmakers seeking to propose gun control legislation has since been warped and amplified by extremist groups which, for different reasons, have sought to exploit real tensions around Virginia's gun debate to advance their own agendas.


Five die in Russian hotel after boiling water floods basement

Posted: 19 Jan 2020 10:33 PM PST

Five die in Russian hotel after boiling water floods basementFive people, including one child, were killed in the Russian city of Perm on Monday when a hot water pipe exploded in the night and flooded a basement hotel room with boiling water. At least three other people were taken to hospital with burns after the incident in the Mini Hotel Caramel, which is located in the basement of a residential building, the region's investigative committee said. A doctor treating the victims, Andrei Babikov, said a 33-year-old woman had burns covering 35% of her body.


US navy to name aircraft carrier in honour of black Pearl Harbor veteran

Posted: 19 Jan 2020 03:12 AM PST

US navy to name aircraft carrier in honour of black Pearl Harbor veteranDoris Miller was working as a mess attendant on the battleship West Virginia the morning of 7 December 1941, when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. An alarm sounded, and as the ship drew heavy fire, Miller raced to assist the West Virginia's fatally wounded commanding officer. He also fired a machine gun against enemy planes.For his bravery and "distinguished devotion to duty" that day, Miller in 1942 was awarded the prestigious Navy Cross, the second-highest military decoration, making him the first African American to receive the medal.


You Should Get an Electric Fireplace

Posted: 20 Jan 2020 09:00 AM PST

You Should Get an Electric Fireplace


Ex-Carnival and Norwegian Cruise Line workers reveal the things they couldn't live without on board

Posted: 19 Jan 2020 06:35 AM PST

Ex-Carnival and Norwegian Cruise Line workers reveal the things they couldn't live without on boardWorkers for cruise lines like Carnival and Norwegian might be away from home for over six months, so they need to be thoughtful about what they pack.


Evacuation crackdown ordered as Philippine volcano 'recharges'

Posted: 20 Jan 2020 01:42 AM PST

Evacuation crackdown ordered as Philippine volcano 'recharges'Philippine authorities ordered a crackdown Monday on evacuees' daily visits to their homes in the danger zone around Taal volcano as scientists warned it could be "recharging" for a more powerful explosion. More than 110,000 people have taken refuge in evacuation centres since Taal burst to life a week ago, but many hard-hit towns have let residents back for hours each day to fetch items, feed livestock and clean up their houses. "We are directing DRRMCs (civil defence officers)... not to allow anyone to enter the danger zone," said Epimaco Densing, undersecretary for the Department of Interior.


Trump impeachment: Schumer ready to 'force votes for witnesses'

Posted: 20 Jan 2020 06:49 AM PST

Trump impeachment: Schumer ready to 'force votes for witnesses'Senate minority leader said he aims to compel the chamber as early as Tuesday to hold vote on witnesses and extra evidenceSenate Democrats were ramping up pressure for witnesses to be called in the impeachment trial of Donald Trump before the historic process gets fully under way on Capitol Hill on Tuesday – even as the president plans to be away at the elite economic and political forum in Davos, Switzerland, during opening arguments.Trump already has no plans to appear at his own Senate trial and will be represented by a legal team that includes some controversial figures. But the symbolism of his being out of the country at a very see-and-be-seen annual event that draws global leaders while he stands accused back home of abusing the power of his office and obstructing Congress during its investigation into his conduct with Ukraine is telling.He is due to give a keynote speech at the forum as the drama unfolds in Washington.The Senate minority leader, Chuck Schumer, said that he aims to compel the chamber as early as Tuesday to hold a vote on whether witnesses and extra evidence can be brought before the impeachment trial, and he turned up the pressure on moderate Republicans to side with the minority to achieve that.In a press conference in New York on Sunday evening, Schumer said he stands ready to "force votes for witnesses and documents" at the trial if the Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell – who has yet to set out the exact details of how he proposes that the trial will proceed – does not call for such a vote."We have the right to do it, we are going to do it and we are going to do it at the beginning on Tuesday if leader McConnell doesn't call for these witnesses in his proposal," Schumer said.Trump has been keen for the Senate to dismiss the charges against him without even going through the motions of a trial. McConnell intends to proceed with a trial but there has been no agreement to call any outside witnesses, such as the former national security adviser John Bolton or the acting chief of staff, Mick Mulvaney, who could shed even more light on the president's dealing with the Ukrainians and the pivotal role of Trump's lawyer Rudy Giuliani.The case hinges on a 25 July phone call between Trump and the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, in which Trump asked his counterpart to do him a "favor" and investigate both a conspiracy theory concerning election interference and ties between the former vice-president Joe Biden and his son Hunter and the eastern European country.Article 1 of the United States constitution gives the House of Representatives the sole power to initiate impeachment and the Senate the sole power to try impeachments of the president. A president can be impeached if they are judged to have committed "treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors" – although the US Constitution does not specify what "high crimes and misdemeanors" are. The formal process starts with the House of Representatives passing articles of impeachment, the equivalent of congressional charges. According to arcane Senate rules, after the House notifies the Senate that impeachment managers have been selected, the secretary of the Senate, Julie Adams, tells the House that the Senate is ready to receive the articles. Then impeachment managers appear before the Senate to "exhibit" the articles, and the Senate confirms it will consider the case.The presiding officer of the Senate notifies the supreme court chief justice, John Roberts, of the impending trial. Roberts arrives in the Senate to administer an oath to members.The presiding officer will then administer this oath to senators: "I solemnly swear that in all things appertaining to the trial of the impeachment of Donald Trump, now pending, I will do impartial justice according to the constitution and laws, so help me God."The Senate must vote on a resolution laying out ground rules for the trial including who the key players will be, how long they will get to present their cases and other matters. After the Senate is "organized", the rules decree, "a writ of summons shall issue to the person impeached, reciting said articles, and notifying him to appear before the Senate upon a day and at a place to be fixed by the Senate". A president has never appeared at his own impeachment trial. Trump will be represented by the White House counsel, Pat Cipollone, and his personal lawyer Jay Sekulow, among others.After the oath, the trial proper will begin. Senators may not speak during the proceedings but may submit written questions. The question of witnesses and other matters would be decided on the fly by majority vote. A time limit for the proceedings will be established in the initial Senate vote.The senators will then deliberate on the case. In the past this has happened behind closed doors and out of public view.The senators vote separately on the two articles of impeachment – the first charging Trump with abuse of power, the second charging him with obstruction of Congress. A two-thirds majority of present senators – 67 ayes if everyone votes – on either article would be enough to convict Trump and remove him from office. But that would require about 20 Republicans defections and is unlikely. The more likely outcome is a Trump acquittal, at which point the process is concluded.Two presidents have previously been impeached, Bill Clinton in 1998, and Andrew Johnson in 1868, though neither was removed from office as a result. Richard Nixon resigned in 1974 before there was a formal vote to impeach him.Tom McCarthy in New YorkTrump's team is entitled to file a detailed legal brief in the case before midday on Monday. An initial brief on Saturday argued fiercely against the impeachment charges."This is a brazen and unlawful attempt to overturn the results of the 2016 election and interfere with the 2020 election, now just months away," Trump's lawyers said, also claiming the charges against the president were invalid as they did not concern a crime.Schumer indicated he was determined to press for witnesses and documents that have been blocked to be brought forward either before or after opening arguments."We're allowed to amend it, and ask for them. I am allowed to amend it – and then if they say well let's wait and hear the arguments we'll want a vote after they hear the arguments as well and we will do everything we can to force votes again," he said.On Saturday, the House's selected team of impeachment managers, who prosecute the case against Trump at trial, outlined their case in a 111-page legal brief.In a joint statement, the seven managers, led by the Democratic intelligence committee chair, Adam Schiff, said their case was "simple, the facts are indisputable, and the evidence is overwhelming: President Trump abused the power of his office to solicit foreign interference in our elections for his own personal political gain, thereby jeopardising our national security, the integrity of our elections, and our democracy."And when the president got caught, he tried to cover it up by obstructing the House's investigation into his misconduct."On Sunday, the Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, once a harsh critic and now a staunch Trump ally, said the latest hope from the president is that he wants the trial and his expected acquittal at the hands of the Republican Senate majority to be out of the way by the annual presidential showcase event, the State of the Union address to Congress and the American people."His mood is, to go to the state of the union [on 4 February] with this behind him and talk about what he wants to do for the rest of 2020 and what he wants to do for the next four years," Graham told Fox News Sunday.


Africa's richest woman accused of corruption and siphoning off state assets

Posted: 19 Jan 2020 04:14 PM PST

Africa's richest woman accused of corruption and siphoning off state assetsAfrica's richest woman has been accused of corruption and exploiting her own country's natural resources, after thousands of documents detailing her business interests were leaked to the media. Isabel dos Santos, who resides in the UK and whose father was the president of Angola, faces allegations of exploiting family connections to secure deals on land, oil and diamonds. According to the documents, seen by BBC Panorama and the Guardian, she and her husband were allowed to buy up valuable state assets and siphon hundreds of millions of dollars out of Angola. Ms dos Santos, whose fortune is estimated at £2bn, says these claims are entirely false and that she is the victim of a witch-hunt led by the Angolan government. She also wrote on Twitter that the leaked documents were "fake" and based on "false information."     Ms dos Santos is already under investigation for corruption by the Angolan government, which has frozen her assets in the country. The documents were obtained by the Platform to Protect Whistle-blowers in Africa and then passed to the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists. Anti-corruption campaigners responded by claiming that Ms dos Santos has been exploiting her own country for personal gain, with normal Angolan citizens the victims of her lavish lifestyle. "Every time she appears on the cover of some glossy magazine somewhere in the world, every time that she hosts one of her glamorous parties in the south of France, she is doing so by trampling on the aspirations of the citizens of Angola," Andrew Feinstein, the head of Corruption Watch, told the BBC. In an interview with the BBC following the leak, Ms dos Santos said: "I regret that Angola has chosen this path, I think that we all stand a lot to lose. "Now, when you look at my track record and you see the work I have done and look at all the companies I have built, most certainly my companies are commercial companies.   "If you tell me, is there anything wrong for an Angolan person to have a business venture with a state company, I think there is nothing wrong." She added that she was facing "prejudice" due to being the daughter of José Eduardo dos Santos, who served as President of Angola from 1979 to 2017. Ms dos Santos was educated in the UK and is married to Sindika Dokolo, a Congolese art collector and businessman.


Police arrest organiser of Hong Kong protest after rally turns violent

Posted: 19 Jan 2020 08:00 PM PST

Police arrest organiser of Hong Kong protest after rally turns violentA prominent Hong Kong pro-democracy activist was arrested by police, his organisation said on Monday, after a protest he helped organise in the financial district a day earlier turned violent with officers firing tear gas to disperse the crowds. Ventus Lau was arrested on Sunday evening on charges of "obstruction of police administration" and violating terms set when permission was granted for the protest, the Hong Kong Civil Assembly Team said in a statement. "It was primarily rioters' violent acts which led to the suspension of the gathering," Senior Superintendent Ng Lok-chun told reporters.


2 more bodies found at Tijuana home where US couple buried

Posted: 19 Jan 2020 11:44 AM PST

2 more bodies found at Tijuana home where US couple buriedMexican authorities say they have discovered two more bodies at a house in Tijuana where a couple with dual U.S.-Mexico citizenship were found buried, allegedly by their son-in-law. The attorney general's office for the state of Baja California, just south of San Diego, California, said late Saturday the second set of bodies —one male and the other female— are in a state of advanced decomposition. The suspect was deported from the U.S. in 2012 and had been living at a property in Tijuana owned by his in-laws.


Report Warned of Threat to U.S. Troops in Germany: Newsweek

Posted: 19 Jan 2020 01:00 PM PST

Report Warned of Threat to U.S. Troops in Germany: Newsweek(Bloomberg) -- The U.S. received intelligence about a potentially imminent attack being planned against military personnel stationed in Germany, Newsweek reported, citing a memo it saw.The 66th Military Intelligence Brigade received third party information stating that a possible attack could occur against soldiers at either Tower Barracks in Grafenwohr or Tower Barracks, Dulmen; the exact location, date and time of possible attack was unknown Information was marked unclassified and from a senior U.S. intelligence official "The source of information stated the attack would be carried out by an unknown Jordanian extremist currently located in Germany near an unknown military base," the report saidU.S. Army Europe confirmed to Newsweek that a potential threat was identified and investigated last night "German and US officials were consulted and no imminent threat was found to exit"To view the source of this information click hereTo contact the reporter on this story: Nathan Crooks in Miami at ncrooks@bloomberg.netTo contact the editor responsible for this story: Sebastian Tong at stong41@bloomberg.netFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.comSubscribe now to stay ahead with the most trusted business news source.©2020 Bloomberg L.P.


Trump's Russia adviser 'escorted from White House' amid investigation

Posted: 19 Jan 2020 01:06 PM PST

Trump's Russia adviser 'escorted from White House' amid investigationPresident Trump's latest Russia expert has reportedly been escorted from the White House amid claims of a security-related investigation.


The US Air Force recently acquired a new $64 million Gulfstream private jet for VIP government officials — see inside

Posted: 20 Jan 2020 05:53 AM PST

The US Air Force recently acquired a new $64 million Gulfstream private jet for VIP government officials — see insideThe US president isn't the only government official that flies in a VIP plane operated by the US Air Force.


U.S. checks travelers as China confirms virus spreads between people

Posted: 19 Jan 2020 08:01 PM PST

U.S. checks travelers as China confirms virus spreads between peoplePassengers arriving in the U.S. from the city at the center of the coronavirus outbreak are now being screened, as officials confirm "limited" human-to-human transmission.


Virginia gun rally: anti-fascist activists will not mount counter-protest

Posted: 19 Jan 2020 02:30 PM PST

Virginia gun rally: anti-fascist activists will not mount counter-protest* Local leftist groups cite serious safety concerns * Far-right groups expected to attend Richmond eventAnti-fascist activists will not mount a counter-protest at a gun rights rally at Virginia's state capitol on Monday that is expected to attract thousands, including white supremacists and anti-government militia groups.Anti-fascists from Richmond and Charlottesville publicly advised supporters to avoid the rally altogether, citing serious safety concerns. Molly Conger, a journalist and activist, told the Guardian activists in Charlottesville had agreed to encourage supporters to stay away."There is no counter-demonstration planned for the 20 January convergence of armed militias on Virginia's capitol," Conger wrote on Twitter on Saturday. "Conditions [on] Monday will not be safe. This is not an outcome we can affect."Anti-fascist groups cited several reasons for their decision, including serious threats of violence, their own opposition to some gun control measures proposed by the Virginia government and concern for ordinary gun owners planning to attend the rally.A number of arrests have highlighted the risk of white supremacist violence at the event. Among those arrested are alleged members of a neo-Nazi group, including men who reportedly discussed opening fire at the Richmond rally, and men who were charged with plotting to murder an antifascist couple in Georgia.As white supremacists, militia groups and conspiracy theorists like Alex Jones announced plans to attend, the event has drawn comparisons to the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville in August 2017, which produced extensive violence and the murder of counter-protester Heather Heyer.Some local activists who monitor the far right, however, said there were clear differences this time."The Charlottesville event was, from the beginning, an event by neo-Nazis and for neo-Nazis," a Twitter account run anonymously by a longtime Richmond anti-fascist activist said on Saturday."There were no other players. Everyone going into that event knew exactly who would be participating and there wasn't the risk of 5,000 unknowing subjects caught in the middle."In contrast, Monday is Lobby Day, an annual event organized by a gun rights group, the Virginia Citizens Defense League, that attracts a range of local residents."I expect a lot of the participants to be older, working class Virginians that are not far-right and do not fit into the category of any hate group," the anonymous anti-fascist activist who runs the Richmond Twitter account told the Guardian. "Part of the concern is their safety."The activist said many locals showing up to the rally will likely have had no experience with volatile protest environments.As conspiracy theories about what "antifa" activists might do at Lobby Day continue to circulate on the right, one Richmond-based anti-fascist group has publicly pushed back against such rumors."Hey! Antifascists are NOT bussing [people] in," Antifa Seven Hills wrote on Twitter. "In fact we are encouraging folks to stay away from the capitol and downtown [Richmond] because of far-right escalations like this."In a direct message, the group told the Guardian: "We are against the [gun control] legislation and the racists attempting to take advantage of this typically calm and multi-issue lobby day."Skepticism about government gun control is a point of agreement between rightwing activists and some US leftists, who argue that marginalized Americans should have the right to defend themselves with firearms.Philip Van Cleave, president of the Virginia Citizens Defense League, said last week his supporters had been told antifa "is actually on our side of the fence, because they don't like these gun laws either"."If they show, it's not going to be to protest us," Van Cleave told the Guardian on Wednesday.


MS-13 inmates sent to restricted unit after prison stabbing

Posted: 18 Jan 2020 01:59 PM PST

MS-13 inmates sent to restricted unit after prison stabbingThe federal Bureau of Prisons is moving some MS-13 gang members in its custody into more restricted housing at certain high-security facilities across the U.S. after a gang stabbing in a Virginia prison, two people familiar with the matter told The Associated Press on Saturday. A brawl broke out Wednesday at the prison known as USP Lee between the MS-13 leader and a fellow inmate associated with the Mexican Mafia, and the gang member was stabbed, the people said. The Bureau of Prisons said in a statement that the inmate was injured but survived the attack.


U.S. Agencies Stonewalling to Avoid Trump’s Ire, Democrat Says

Posted: 19 Jan 2020 07:26 AM PST

U.S. Agencies Stonewalling to Avoid Trump's Ire, Democrat Says(Bloomberg) -- Congress is being stonewalled by intelligence agency officials who refuse to testify in public for fear of drawing President Donald Trump's ire, the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee said."Part of their job is to speak truth to power," Representative Adam Schiff, a California Democrat, said Sunday on "This Week" on ABC. "The intelligence community is reluctant to have an open hearing," Schiff said, "because they're worried about angering the president."Schiff's committee has in the past held annual public hearings to discuss global security threats, with leaders at the Central Intelligence Agency and the National Security Agency among those testifying. A hearing hasn't been set for this year.Document disclosure is another problem area, he said."The intelligence community is beginning to withhold documents from Congress on the issue of Ukraine. They appear to be succumbing to pressure from the administration," he said. The Senate Intelligence Committee a year ago heard from the heads of key agencies, including the CIA and NSA, who said North Korea and Islamic State remained critical security threats. In response, Trump called the agency heads "extremely passive and naive" in a tweet to his millions of followers. Schiff said the NSA is refusing to provide "potentially relevant documents" on Ukraine, and also withholding documents that may be relevant for senators in Trump's upcoming impeachment trial. "That is deeply concerning," he said.The lawmaker said the CIA may be on the same course, but didn't elaborate."We are counting on the intelligence community not only to speak truth to power, but to resist pressure from the administration to withhold information from Congress because the administration fears that they incriminate them," he said.To contact the reporter on this story: Steve Geimann in Washington at sgeimann@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Matthew G. Miller at mmiller144@bloomberg.net, Ros KrasnyFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.comSubscribe now to stay ahead with the most trusted business news source.©2020 Bloomberg L.P.


Three die in Spain's Storm Gloria

Posted: 20 Jan 2020 06:19 AM PST

Three die in Spain's Storm GloriaThree people have died in strong winds, heavy snowfall and low temperatures from Storm Gloria's sweep across Spain on Sunday and Monday, officials said. With more than 30 provinces on bad weather alert, Valencia on the Mediterranean coast and the Balearic Islands were bearing the brunt of the storm on Monday. In the central province of Avila, a 63-year-old man died at home after being hit by roof tiles lifted by a gust of wind, said David Segovia, mayor of the town of Pedro Bernardo.


Meghan and Harry will need taxpayer funded security 'for years to come'

Posted: 18 Jan 2020 11:30 AM PST

Meghan and Harry will need taxpayer funded security 'for years to come'The Duke and Duchess of Sussex will need to be protected at taxpayers' expense against the threat of terror attacks and kidnap for years to come, security experts have said. Police and former security chiefs fear the couple will continue to be at risk from organised terror groups, political fanatics and lone obsessives long after they separate from the Royal family. Talks are understood to be taking place at senior levels over the best way of providing protection for Meghan and Prince Harry as they divide their time between Britain and their new life in North America. But there are fears among some experts that palace and government officials may be underestimating both the potential threat and what is required to protect the couple against it. Dai Davies, who was Head of Royal Protection from 1994 to 1998 and former Chief Superintendent (Divisional Commander) Metropolitan Police Service, said: "We have to learn the lessons of history and act on them. Anyone in charge of security has to think the impossible and then think it again and I fear there is not enough of that going on by the experts currently in charge. "One thing you can be sure of is that terrorists and others who pose a threat are thinking about it all the time." Mr Davies said the three main threats come from jihadist terrorists targeting Prince Harry, who also served in Afghanistan; lone 'fixateds' and royal obsessives; and right wing extremists with an hatred of Meghan as a woman of colour marrying into the royal family. Minister and senior police officers are thought to be determined to avoid the mistakes made over Diana, Princess of Wales, who in 1993 turned down publicly funded police protection except when she was with her sons William and Harry or staying at Kensington Palace. That left her relying on private security at other times, leading to her being in the hands of the Ritz Hotel's head of security Herni Paul on the night she died when their car crashed in the Pont de l'Alma underpass as he tried to evade photographers following Diana. Her bodyguard, Trevor Rees-Jones was badly injured in the crash, on 31 August 1997. Ken Wharfe, who served as Diana's royal protection officer for six years, resigned from the position in 1993, has since said that if he and his team were working with the Princess in 1997, they may have been able to prevent her death.  Mr Davies, who said there have been far more plots against the Royals than publicly acknowledged, added: "We don't want the situation where Harry and Meghan are being followed, without protection, by paparazzi or people with a fixation and we need to be sure that protection is of the highest level." But he added that the high cost of providing security may cause resentment among British taxpayers if the Sussexes begin to earn large sums of private income outside of any Royal duties they continue to carry out. "The question is whether the British public will wear the cost of security, even if it is miniscule in real terms, over a long period," said Mr Davies, who was in charge of protection for the Queen and the Royal family throughout the UK and worldwide. Lord West of Spithead, who was a security minister from 2007 to 2010, said that Harry and Meghan would be expected to make a contribution towards the cost of their security should they start earning a large amount of private income. But he said there was no question that high levels of police protection would have to be provided by the British government into the future. "We have got an obligation to provide security for one of the Queen's sons and his family and that's a long term obligation," he said. "It would be nice to work out an arrangement with the Canadians, but we can't not provide that protection ourselves, regardless. Mike Penning MP, who was police minister from 2014 to 2016 and went on to serve as justice and Armed Forces minister, said: "It doesn't matter who they are, if they are at risk we have a duty to protect them, it's as simple as that. That requirement should be based on any risk assessment made by our intelligence services and by the Canadians."


US envoy say it's his mustache; South Koreans say otherwise

Posted: 20 Jan 2020 01:24 AM PST

US envoy say it's his mustache; South Koreans say otherwiseThe U.S. ambassador to South Korea has some unusual explanations for the harsh criticism he's faced in his host country. Or a Japanese ancestry that raises unpleasant reminders of Japan's former colonial domination of Korea? Many South Koreans, however, have a more straight-forward explanation for Harry Harris' struggle to win hearts and minds in Seoul, and it's got more to do with an outspoken manner that they see as undiplomatic and rude.


Photos surface showing convicted Nazi guard Demjanjuk at Sobibor

Posted: 20 Jan 2020 03:36 AM PST

Photos surface showing convicted Nazi guard Demjanjuk at SobiborNew photos have emerged which for the first time show convicted Nazi guard John Demjanjuk at the Sobibor death camp, a Berlin archive confirmed Monday, although he always denied ever being there. Ukrainian-American Demjanjuk was convicted of being an accessory to the murder of nearly 30,000 Jews at Sobibor by a German court in 2011. According to the Berlin-based Topography of Terror archive, photos of Demjanjuk are among a newly discovered collection of more than 350 snaps which give "detailed insight" into the camp in German-occupied Poland.


China is fighting to stop the spread of a mysterious, deadly virus as millions prepare to travel for Chinese New Year

Posted: 20 Jan 2020 02:36 AM PST

China is fighting to stop the spread of a mysterious, deadly virus as millions prepare to travel for Chinese New YearThe 2019-nCoV respiratory virus has caused at least three deaths since it broke out in Wuhan, China, but not much is known about it.


SpaceX rocket explodes after liftoff as planned; Crew Dragon capsule escapes fireball

Posted: 20 Jan 2020 09:10 AM PST

SpaceX rocket explodes after liftoff as planned; Crew Dragon capsule escapes fireballA SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifted off from Kennedy Space Center on Sunday, ultimately sacrificing itself for a test.


Cult slayed pregnant woman and five of her children in Panama

Posted: 19 Jan 2020 11:14 AM PST

Cult slayed pregnant woman and five of her children in PanamaA religious sect whose members believed to be "anointed by God" forced a pregnant woman and five of her children to walk through fire as part of a cult ritual, according to local residents.


‘OK, Now What?’: Inside Team Trump’s Scramble to Sell the Soleimani Hit to America

Posted: 19 Jan 2020 02:04 AM PST

'OK, Now What?': Inside Team Trump's Scramble to Sell the Soleimani Hit to AmericaIn the hours after the killing of Iranian General Qassem Soleimani on Jan. 3, U.S. officials in the White House, Pentagon, and State Department worked overtime on assembling a plan to handle the fallout, only to watch senior administration officials and the president himself scuttle their effort in real time on national television. The ensuing days became a mad dash to reconcile the intense intra-administration tensions over what the intelligence actually said about Iranian plots, and how best to sell their case to the American public. At the very top was a president who stewed and complained to staff about how the killing he'd just ordered might negatively affect his re-election prospects and ensnare him in a quagmire in the Middle East of his own creation.The plan to take out Soleimani had been approved months earlier by President Donald Trump after Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and then-National Security Adviser John Bolton pushed for more to be done to manage Iran's aggression in the Middle East. But the president for years tried to avoid a direct military confrontation with Tehran, and hitting Soleimani was a move that could edge the two countries closer to war.When an American contractor was killed in Iraq in late December, President Trump's national security team presented him with a slew of options on how to respond, and killing Soleimani was on the list. National security advisers reminded the president that he had publicly drawn a line in the sand, saying that if the regime killed Americans there would be severe consequences. Still, the strike was a departure from the regular Trump playbook and officials knew it would take a robust effort to explain not only the reasoning behind the attack but also the administration's goal on Iran."There was this sudden nature about it all. Yeah, it had been in the works for some time. But it didn't feel like we were all thinking the same on how to move forward," said one U.S. official, referring to the strike on Soleimani. "It was like, 'OK, now what?'" For more than a week, Trump, Pompeo, Vice President Mike Pence and officials from the national security community, including at the Pentagon, held twice-daily meetings and conference calls to make sure all government agencies were on the same page regarding messaging, according to two individuals familiar with those conversations.Despite that effort, what resulted appeared to be an uncoordinated effort to justify an action by national security officials who were varied in their answers about the pre-strike intelligence and who struggled to define the administration's strategy on Iran post strike.That internal confusion on how to re-frame the administration's approach to dealing with Iran led to weeks of what appeared to be frequent mixed messaging, critiques about the administration's apparent lack of strategy, calls from Congress for more robust intelligence briefings—and allegations that Trump and his lieutenants were actively misleading a nation into a sharp military escalation.This article is based on interviews with 10 U.S. government officials and several former administration officials. The State Department and White House House did not comment on the record for this story.Worry over the "counterpunch"For several days following Soleimani's assassination, Pentagon officials warned Trump and his national security advisers that Iran had a variety of responses it could carry out to make the Americans pay. Among them, sources said, were Iranian attacks on senior U.S. military officers overseas, or violence targeting American outposts in countries like Iraq. Their bottom line was that Iran would hit back, and hit back hard. The president worried aloud to his team about how the strike could impact the way voters viewed him in the upcoming election. After all, avoiding costly foreign wars in the Middle East had been one of the key promises— and points of contrast—he made as a candidate in 2016. One official told The Daily Beast that in meetings at the White House Trump was "preoccupied" with ensuring that his public statements on Iran—notably that he would not drag the U.S. into a war with the country—would hold following the assassination. Once Soleimani was gone, Trump was adamant that the administration "get things back to normal" with Iran, one official told The Daily Beast. According to another U.S. official, senior administration officials, including President Trump, were framing the strike as a de-escalatory measure even before the attack was ordered. The idea was that if the U.S. didn't hit Soleimani, more people would die because Iran would continue to carry out attacks in the region.Trump's insistence on returning to "normal" with Iran directly after he ordered the death of the Islamic republic's top military leader underscores this president's wild vacillations between diplomatic overtures and teasing violent retribution, where a call for peace one moment could be followed by a threat to destroy Iranian cultural sites—a tactic that is considered a war crime under international law.The president inquired about this not long before greenlighting, then abruptly calling off, military strikes on Iran that he approved knowing the body count was estimated to be high.And even as he publicly celebrated this massive escalation with Iran and aggressively campaigned on, and fundraised off of, his decision, Trump continued to lament privately to close allies that it would be "crazy" to plunge America into another invasion or full-blown war in the Middle East, according to two people who spoke to Trump in the days following the Soleimani hit.He then pledged he would not "let it happen" on his "watch." Of course, none of the president's stated reservations about starting a new war, or his stated desire to bring soldiers home, kept him and his administration from deploying thousands more American troops to the region as the U.S. and Iran walked up to the brink of all-out warfare early this month.The Soleimani strike, though, forced the president to pause, even just briefly, to consider whether what he had ordered would have lasting, irreversible consequences—repercussions he'd never meant to bump up against."You know, he's sincerely grappling with this, which is good. I mean, war should be hard and we should grapple with it. I just don't want any one person to say, okay, I've grappled with it we should do it," Sen. Tim Kaine told The Daily Beast in an interview about the escalating tension in Iran. Since the Soleimani strike, the Virginia Democrat has led a bipartisan push in the Senate to rein in Trump's authority to wage war in Iran without congressional approval. "If I were president I shouldn't have the ability to just on my own say, let's do this," Kaine added. "It should be deliberative, because that's what the troops and their families deserve."President Trump's concerns were fed, in part, by comments from lawmakers and other analysts that the strike on Soleimani could lead quickly to a major, sustained conflict."We need to get ready for a major pushback. Our people in Iraq and the Middle East are going to be targeted. We need to be ready to defend our people in the Middle East," said Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) in an interview with The Daily Beast the night of the strike. "I think we need to be ready for a big counterpunch.""Overselling the intel"In the first week after the Jan. 3 strike, officials appeared on television and radio shows in an attempt to frame the Soleimani strike as an act of de-escalation. Just hours after the strike, Brian Hook, the special representative for Iran, went on BBC World Service radio saying that killing Soleimani was designed to "advance the cause of peace."Officials at the State Department, in coordination with the White House, drafted talking points advising those who would appear in the media to underscore Soleimani's "malign activities" and his role in killing American troops over the years, according to two U.S. officials. But the White House wanted to advance a different argument—one that wasn't about what Iran had already done, but what U.S. officials claimed Iran was about to do. They said the U.S. killed Soleimani because he was planning "imminent" attacks that would harm American interests. That talking point in particular was emailed out to officials across the Pentagon, White House, and State Department, and even to several GOP lawmakers' offices repeatedly the week of the strike, according to several officials who spoke to The Daily Beast. It became, for a time, the central rationale the administration offered for the assassination. On the night of the hit, the Pentagon said only that Soleimani was "actively developing plans" for an unspecified attack. By Sunday Jan. 5, Pompeo said on several morning talk shows that there were actually "constant threats" from Iran, rather than a specific one the strike preempted. And officials told a varying story about how many Americans could be killed. That next week, in briefings to Congress, the administration struggled to explain what exactly the alleged "imminent" attack was. Senators left a closed-door briefing Wednesday, Jan. 8, unconvinced, angry, and warning that the intelligence put forward did not match how senior officials described it. And when the dissatisfied lawmakers pressed for a clearer picture, Graham ended the briefing even though several members had yet to ask their questions."It was right when things were really starting to get heated and Graham just said something like, 'Hey don't you all have to get back to the White House?'," the source said.For Kaine, the problem wasn't the intel, it was some of the messengers. "I think the intel has been strong. But I think some of the political people have been overselling the intel," said Kaine. "What I heard of the political folks doing seems to me to be significantly beyond what the intel says."Rep. Mike Quigley (D-IL), a member of the House intelligence committee who received a separate classified briefing on the Soleimani strike, said he "saw nothing related to imminence.""To exaggerate your view of what intelligence means is dangerous," he told The Daily Beast. "This was either a misrepresentation or a degree of incompetence in analyzing the intelligence."Senators were also displeased with how the administration's briefers, including Pompeo, answered questions about Iraq and its parliament vote to oust American troops from the country after the Soleimani assassination. According to two people in the room, the briefers dismissed questions about the Baghdad vote, telling lawmakers "don't worry about it," according to an individual who was in the room. "One of them said 'that's just how the Iraqis talk. We will take care of it.'""When you take strikes… in Iraq over their objections, there's going to be consequences to that. And that's the kind of thing where you got to be thinking down the board. If they object to us using Iraq as a field of battle… but we're saying yeah, we're doing it anyway. Well, what do you think is going to happen?" Kaine told The Daily Beast in reference to the briefing. "I certainly didn't get much sense that they had thought through, like, oh, they are probably going to kick us out of the country."Trump on Jan. 9 told reporters that the intelligence actually showed that Iran was "looking to blow up our embassy." The next day, he went bigger in a Fox News interview, saying that there "probably would've been four embassies." But two days after that, on Jan. 12, Trump's claim was put into question by his own defense secretary. In an interview on CNN's State of the Union, Mark Esper conceded that he had not in fact seen a piece of intelligence "with regard to four embassies." But, in an apparent attempt to cover for Trump, Esper said the president "believed that it probably and could have been attacks against additional embassies."According to two officials who spoke to The Daily Beast, Trump was outwardly frustrated by critiques of his embassy claim, telling his close confidants that he was furious with Esper's performance on CNN.Lawmakers on Capitol Hill called on the Trump administration to explain the president's remarks, demanding briefings with Pompeo and other administration officials—which were scheduled this week and then canceled without explanation. According to two senior U.S. officials, Trump and Pompeo spoke about the need to avoid answering more questions about the embassy threats."This whole episode has been one of mixed messages. Mixed messages is a function of no real strategy," said Rep. Jim Himes (D-CT), a member of the House Intelligence Committee. "When you don't have a strategy, you get all sorts of confusing events on top of each other.""Aggressive opinions"Officials who spoke to The Daily Beast said part of that confusion on messaging came as a result of abundant input by GOP lawmakers with "aggressive opinions on how to handle Iran," as one official put it. In the days after the assassination, Trump spoke with Republican leaders in the Senate and the House, picking their brains on how to redefine the administration's years-long policy of maximum pressure—a campaign to wage economic warfare on Tehran. Some of those same senators had publicly and behind closed doors denounced the administration's maximum pressure campaign. They argued that the campaign wasn't doing enough to change Iran's behavior. In the days leading up to the strike, Graham spoke with President Trump. "I won't get into the details," Graham told The Daily Beast. "But he told me Soleimani was a target and that they had caught him red-handed." Graham said he had advocated for the president to take a tougher military stance against Iran following the attacks on the Saudi oil refineries in September."I didn't have any specific targets in mind," Graham said. "I just thought we needed to be doing more."Several national security officials who spoke to The Daily Beast said there was a push by GOP lawmakers, including Graham, in the days after the strike to fundamentally re-vamp the administration's maximum pressure campaign by adding a military component."If there are any more threats against Americans or our interests then we should hit refineries and oil infrastructure inside Iran," Graham said. "The military option should be on the table." The campaign was not initially designed to include military power as a form of maximum pressure, according to two former Obama administration officials. Instead, its architects envisioned it as a means of economic strangulation, whereby Iran would be put under such crippling sanctions that it would opt to transform its foreign policy and take an unspecified grand bargain that the administration began offering after abandoning the nuclear deal in 2018. Graham told The Daily Beast that he is working on an alternative to the Obama administration's 2015 nuclear deal with Iran. "I'm not surprised the President has close relationships with these folks," Kaine told The Daily Beast, referring to GOP lawmakers. "But it makes me nervous. Rather than senators pressuring the president, hey, go after Iran, let them make the case on the floor of the Senate."After two weeks of shifting talking points on Iran, re-defining the administration's policy, Pompeo seemed to edge the closest to articulating a clear response on the administration's policy when he appeared for a speech at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University on Jan. 13."President Trump and those of us on his national security team are re-establishing deterrence… against Iran. The goal is twofold. First we want to deprive the regime of resources. And second we just want Iran to act like a normal nation," he said, sighing. "Just be like Norway."Read more at The Daily Beast.Get our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more.


Philippine military says 5 Indonesians kidnapped by Abu Sayyaf militants

Posted: 19 Jan 2020 03:16 AM PST

Philippine military says 5 Indonesians kidnapped by Abu Sayyaf militantsEight Indonesians were abducted in Sabah on Thursday. Three were released, while the remaining five were probably brought by their captors to the southern Philippine province of Sulu, said Lieutenant General Cirilito Sobejana, chief of the military's Western Mindanao Command.


Just as Australia's deadly fires begin to subside, it's being hit with more apocalyptic weather. Videos show enormous dust storms and golf-ball-sized hail battering cars and buildings

Posted: 20 Jan 2020 04:15 AM PST

Just as Australia's deadly fires begin to subside, it's being hit with more apocalyptic weather. Videos show enormous dust storms and golf-ball-sized hail battering cars and buildingsRainfall helped to relieve some parts of the country affected by the bushfires, but caused damage in other ways


How U.S. Navy Aircraft Carriers Are Going All in on Drones

Posted: 19 Jan 2020 02:20 AM PST

How U.S. Navy Aircraft Carriers Are Going All in on DronesThe Navy is building a special new command and control mini "drone-headquarters" space on its aircraft carriers to operate deck-launched drones as part of a strategy aimed at massively increasing the scope of carrier-launched drone missions in coming years.


Yemen missile attack kills at least 70 soldiers: sources

Posted: 18 Jan 2020 11:08 PM PST

Yemen missile attack kills at least 70 soldiers: sourcesAt least 70 Yemeni soldiers have been killed in a missile attack launched by Huthi rebels on a mosque in the central province of Marib, medical and military sources said Sunday. The Huthis attacked a mosque in a military camp in Marib -- about 170 kilometres (105 miles) east of Sanaa -- during evening prayers on Saturday, military sources told AFP.


Dan Bongino responds to video of mob attacking Baltimore officer: I blame the political leaders

Posted: 20 Jan 2020 04:12 AM PST

Dan Bongino responds to video of mob attacking Baltimore officer: I blame the political leadersA video posted on social media shows a Baltimore police sergeant repeatedly kicked by bystanders while trying to make an arrest; reaction from Fox News contributor Dan Bongino, former NYPD officer.


Mysterious Sars-like virus spreading across China amid sharp rise in new cases and a third death

Posted: 19 Jan 2020 11:21 PM PST

Mysterious Sars-like virus spreading across China amid sharp rise in new cases and a third deathChina says a mysterious Sars-like virus has spread across the country, including to Beijing, raising concerns as millions begin trips for the Lunar New Year. A day after state authorities said the virus was "controllable", officials said a third person was confirmed to have died and there were nearly 140 new cases.  The new coronavirus strain has caused alarm because of its connection to Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, which killed nearly 650 people across mainland China and Hong Kong in 2002-2003. In Wuhan, the central city where the coronavirus was first discovered, 136 new cases were found over the weekend, the local health commission said, without giving details about the person who died. Health authorities in Beijing's Daxing district said two people who had travelled to Wuhan were treated for pneumonia linked to the virus and are in stable condition. In Guangdong, a 66-year-old Shenzhen man was quarantined on January 11 after contracting a fever and showing other symptoms following a trip to visit relatives in Wuhan, the provincial health commission said in a statement. A total of 201 people have now been diagnosed with the virus in China. In Wuhan, 170 people are still being treated at hospital, including nine in critical condition, the city health commission said. Read more: Just how worried should we be about this virus - and what do we know?  Wuhan is a city of 11 million inhabitants that serves as a major transport hub, including during the annual Lunar New Year holiday when hundreds of millions of Chinese people travel across the country to visit family. In its first statement since the virus was detected, China's National Health Commission said on Sunday the disease's source was unknown but vowed to "step up monitoring" of any mutations during Chinese New Year period. Chinese authorities said they had begun "optimised" testing of cases across the city to identify those infected, and said they would begin "detection work ... towards suspected cases in the city" as a next step, as well as carrying out "sampling tests". How the coronavirus spreads Scientists from the MRC Centre for Global Infectious Disease Analysis at Imperial College in London have warned that the number of cases in Wuhan is likely to be closer to 1,700, much higher than the number officially identified. China is yet to confirm whether the virus can be spread from one person to another, but Wuhan's health commission has previously said the possibility "cannot be excluded". China's centre for disease control sought to quash speculation about the coronavirus at the weekend, publishing a flyer that dismissed "five big rumours". One of them included claims about the coronavirus spreading, which China's disease control authority had dismissed at the time by saying all cases were being treated in Wuhan. Global outbreaks of coronaviruses Although there has been no official announcement of screening measures on the mainland, Chen Xiexin, Wuhan deputy mayor, said infrared thermometers had been installed at airports, railway stations and coach stations across the city. Mr Chen said passengers with fevers were being registered, given masks and taken to medical institutions. Nearly 300,000 body temperature tests had been carried out, according to state broadcasters. Authorities in Hong Kong have also stepped up detection measures, including temperature checkpoints for travellers arriving from the Chinese mainland. The United States has said it will begin screening direct flights arriving from Wuhan at San Francisco airport and New York's JFK, as well as Los Angeles, where many flights connect.


After Jeffrey Epstein suicide, Bureau of Prisons tells guards: Stop surfing the web and watch inmates

Posted: 20 Jan 2020 10:37 AM PST

After Jeffrey Epstein suicide, Bureau of Prisons tells guards: Stop surfing the web and watch inmatesTwo corrections officers face criminal charges for claiming they checked on Jeffrey Epstein and other inmates. Feds say they slept and browsed online.


'I stayed alive to tell' - Auschwitz's dwindling survivors recount horrors of Nazi death camp

Posted: 20 Jan 2020 05:14 AM PST

'I stayed alive to tell' - Auschwitz's dwindling survivors recount horrors of Nazi death campA strip of skin tattooed with the Auschwitz death camp number 99288 sits in a silver frame on a shelf in Avraham Harshalom's living room. As the 75th anniversary of the camp's liberation on Jan 27, 1945, nears, Harshalom, 95, is very clear about why he kept it. Harshalom is one of some 200,000 Holocaust survivors living in Israel today.


Hail, floods, dust hit Australia amid raging wildfires

Posted: 20 Jan 2020 01:19 AM PST

Hail, floods, dust hit Australia amid raging wildfiresDust storms, hail and flash floods have battered beleaguered Australian cities in recent days, extreme weather that has diminished the threat from scores of wildfires that continue to blaze across the country's southeast. A hail storm in the national capital Canberra on Monday damaged public buildings, businesses, homes and cars, cut power to some suburbs, brought down trees, caused flash flooding and injured two people, emergency services officials said.


Why the U.S.-China Cold War Will Be Different

Posted: 19 Jan 2020 11:27 AM PST

Why the U.S.-China Cold War Will Be DifferentThis second cold war, conducted on a teeming planet whose anxiety is intensified by the passions and rages of social media, is only in its beginning stages. The aim, like in the first Cold War, is negative victory: not defeating the Chinese, but waiting them out, just as we waited the Soviets out.


Indian Christians protest against 'anti-Muslim' law

Posted: 20 Jan 2020 06:52 AM PST

Indian Christians protest against 'anti-Muslim' lawMore than 8,000 people from the Christian community took to the streets in eastern India Monday to protest against a citizenship law that critics say discriminates against Muslims. Hindu-majority India has been gripped by widespread street demonstrations that have sometimes turned deadly, with the march in West Bengal state's capital Kolkata believed to be one of the biggest rallies by Christians. Carrying banners calling for the citizenship law and proposed nationwide "register of citizens" to be ditched, the demonstrators marched for several kilometres (miles) from a church to a life-sized statue of Indian independence hero Mahatma Gandhi.


Women rarely regret decision to get abortion

Posted: 20 Jan 2020 08:44 AM PST

Women rarely regret decision to get abortionFive years after an abortion, most women still say it was the right decision even if they struggled with their choice at the time, a U.S. study suggests. "We found no evidence of emergent negative emotions about the abortion over the five years," said study leader Corinne Rocca of the University of California, San Francisco. Opponents of abortion have argued against legal access to these procedures in part because of concerns that abortion harms women by causing negative emotions and regret, researchers note in Social Science and Medicine.


China Has Been Watching America, And Now Has Special Forces Of Its Own

Posted: 18 Jan 2020 06:00 PM PST

China Has Been Watching America, And Now Has Special Forces Of Its OwnAmerica heavily relies on its elite special forces.


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