Minggu, 22 Desember 2019

Trump wanted Ukraine-aid details weeks before Zelensky call: documents - New York Post

President Trump prodded staffers for details about US military aid to Ukraine five weeks before his July 25 phone call with President Volodymyr Zelensky, a heavily redacted batch of internal administration documents reveal.

Emails sent between officials at the Pentagon and the Office of Management and Budget show that the hold on the aid was placed just hours after the two leaders spoke.

Michael Duffey of the OMB told the Pentagon to freeze the payments “in light of the Administration’s plan to review assistance to Ukraine.”

Democrats said the documents, posted online by the Center for Public Integrity late Friday, proved Trump’s “direct involvement” in the Ukraine matter.

“Frankly it’s just the 77th piece of evidence confirming the same thing,” Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) tweeted Saturday.

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2019-12-22 01:11:00Z
CAIiEKvjJ4FTncWBdTHkn0EqYp8qGAgEKg8IACoHCAowhK-LAjD4ySww69W0BQ

Sabtu, 21 Desember 2019

'Catastrophic' Wildfires Continue To Rage Across Australia - NPR

Rural Fire Service officers protect property from the Green Wattle Creek Fire along the Old Hume Highway near the town of Tahmoor in New South Wales. Dean Lewins/AP hide caption

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Dean Lewins/AP

A large portion of Australia is on fire after weeks of extreme heat, strong winds and drought that have created ideal conditions for hundreds of bushfires to thrive across the country. Several fires have been burning since November, particularly in the eastern state of New South Wales.

The fires threaten many of Australia's largest population centers, including Sydney, a city of more than 5 million, which has been cloaked in smoke. Blazes have destroyed hundreds of homes and almost 3 million acres of bushland, threatening the habitat of countless wildlife, including already endangered koalas. One fire in the state of Victoria has reportedly become large enough to generate its own weather.

The fires come after years of drought in parts of the country and record-breaking heat. Earlier this week, Australia had its hottest day on record — only to break that record the following day. And fire season has just begun, leaving many bracing for worse.

Thick smoke from wildfires shroud the Sydney Opera House earlier this month. Rick Rycroft/AP hide caption

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Rick Rycroft/AP

Thousands of firefighters, many of whom are volunteers, are currently deployed. Several have been injured, and two died earlier this week when a fallen tree limb overturned their vehicle. Their deaths prompted Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison to return early from a family vacation to Hawaii — a vacation that was largely criticized as tone-deaf by much of the public.

"I deeply regret any offence caused to any of the many Australians affected by the terrible bushfires by my taking leave with family at this time," Morrison said in a statement released Friday. Morrison was scrutinized for his unwillingness to link Australia's greenhouse gas emissions to extreme fire conditions last month.

The prime minister's return coincides with a new state of emergency issued for New South Wales, the country's most populous state, as "catastrophic" fire conditions were listed for the region, the highest fire danger rating possible in the country. Andrea Peace, a meteorologist for Australia's Bureau of Meteorology, said that Saturday could be the worst day for the area, as a front moves in from the south.

"What it's going to do is bring quite a strong, gusty southerly wind ... (which) creates a really dangerous period for the fire grounds because it rapidly changes the directions of the fires there," Peace said.

She said there could be gusts of up to 100 kilometers per hour, or about 62 miles per hour.

Julia Holman, a reporter for Australian Broadcasting Corporation in Sydney, told NPR's David Greene earlier this week that the fires are already overwhelming the area.

"New South Wales is an enormous state. It's bigger than the size of Texas. And the fires literally go from the top of the state right down to the bottom," Holman said.

She said fires are very common in Australia, but not like this.

"The problem is that it's so dry that we cannot put out these fires. And that's what's different this time around," she said.

"These fires are also in very dense bushland. They cannot be put out by human effort," Holman continued. "We're waiting for rain. But we're in the midst of the worst drought on record here in New South Wales. So there is no possible way that these fires can be put out no matter the enormous human effort that is going into it."

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2019-12-21 16:42:00Z
CAIiEJ4xB1RXtmxwDpEAjUfPdosqFggEKg4IACoGCAow9vBNMK3UCDCvpUk

Russia vows to push ahead with natural gas pipeline to Europe despite Trump sanctions - NBC News

Russia vowed Saturday to press ahead with building a controversial natural gas pipeline to Europe in spite of new sanctions imposed by President Donald Trump.

"Russia has implemented and will continue to implement its economic projects regardless of anyone's sanctions," the country's foreign ministry said in a statement.

Trump enacted legislation Friday that will sanction companies and individuals involved in laying the Nord Stream 2 pipeline through the Baltic Sea from Russia to Germany.

Dec. 21, 201903:30

The U.S. has long opposed the 750-mile pipeline, arguing it will leave Europe overly dependent on Russia for energy supply and extend President Vladimir Putin's influence over the continent.

Trump said last year that "Germany is a captive of Russia," in an apparent reference to the pipeline. The comments caused a stir at the start of a tense NATO summit.

Friday's legislation threatening U.S. sanctions had an immediate impact, with a company that operates ships laying sections of the undersea pipeline saying Saturday it had suspended activities relating to the project “in anticipation of the enactment of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA)."

Switzerland-based Allseas said it will seek “guidance comprising of the necessary regulatory, technical and environmental clarifications from the relevant U.S. authority.”

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The participation of privately-held Allseas, a specialist in subsea construction and laying underwater pipeline, is integral to the completion of Nord Stream 2.Bernd W?stneck / AFP - Getty Images

However those behind the project insisted it would go ahead in spite of the U.S. efforts.

Construction of the pipeline is already well advanced, and it wasn't immediately clear what the impact will be.

"Completing the project is essential for European supply security," said Nord Stream 2 spokesman Jens Mueller in a statement.

"We together with the companies supporting the project will work on finishing the pipeline as soon as possible."

Russia provides about 37 percent of Europe's natural gas, and currently, the bulk of it moves through Ukraine's pipelines.

The Nord Stream 2 project would double the amount of gas Russia can send directly to Germany and allow it to bypass Eastern European nations like Poland and Ukraine.

But Russia doesn't have the capability to install undersea pipelines and is relying on the technological expertise of European companies.

Germany has been vehemently opposed to the sanctions but was unsuccessful lobbying against them.

“The German government rejects such extraterritorial sanctions,” spokeswoman Ulrike Demmer said in a statement.

“They affect German and European companies and constitute an interference in our domestic affairs.”

While the sanctions pose problems for some, Ukraine hoped it could be a game changer by giving Kyiv more leverage in negotiations with Moscow over the future use of its pipelines.

In an interview with NBC News last week, the CEO of Ukraine's state-owned energy company Naftogaz, Andriy Kobolyev, said the sanctions would have a major impact on the stalled negotiations between Russia and Ukraine over the transport of natural gas to Europe.

"I believe the European gas market will benefit significantly, and Ukraine will benefit," he said.

On Saturday, the two countries' gas operators reached a new five-year deal in Vienna that would see Moscow pay $2.9 billion to Kyiv to maintain access to their pipelines. In exchange, Ukraine would drop outstanding legal claims against Russia by Dec. 29.

The transmission tariff for Russian gas will increase, however, Ukraine's energy minister said.

Dan De Luce, Associated Press and Reuters contributed.

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2019-12-21 13:22:00Z
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US officials bracing for imminent North Korea test of intercontinental ballistic missile: report | TheHill - The Hill

U.S. military and intelligence officials are reportedly bracing for an imminent test by North Korea of an intercontinental missile as negotiations between Washington and Pyongyang continue to stall.

North Korea has threatened to give the U.S. a “Christmas gift” if no progress is made on lifting sanctions, but officials appear to accept the fact that President TrumpDonald John TrumpMaxine Waters warns if Senate doesn't remove Trump, he'll 'invite Putin to the White House' Trump signs .4 T spending package, averting shutdown Twenty-five Jewish lawmakers ask Trump to fire Stephen Miller over 'white nationalist' comments MORE has no options to prevent a test, The New York Times reported Saturday.

The North testing a ballistic missile capable of reaching the U.S. would mark a major setback for Trump's efforts to rein in Pyongyang's nuclear and missile ambitions, something he has touted as a top foreign policy initiative. It would also come as the president faces major political fallout domestically after the House voted to impeach him this week.

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While the president often cites a lull in such testing by North Korea as evidence of his diplomatic prowess, officials told the Times that should North Korean leader Kim Jong UnKim Jong UnImpeachment just confirms Trump's leadership Meet Kim Jong Un, 'King of Korea' — antithesis of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark Air Force general: North Korea 'Christmas gift' could be long-range missile test MORE resume testing, it would mark a sign that the White House is jammed in its options and will be less inclined to lift sanctions.

Military officials told the Times that there are no plans in the works to destroy a missile on the launchpad or intercept it in the atmosphere. The administration is likely to pressure the United Nations Security Council for tightened sanctions in the event of a test, a strategy that for two decades has ultimately failed to blunt Pyongyang’s aggressive rhetoric and progress on its nuclear and missile programs.

In its most recent threat, North Korea said the U.S. could “pay dearly” after it sponsored a U.N. resolution condemning Pyongyang’s “long-standing and ongoing” violations of human rights. 

Trump and Kim have held two official nuclear summits that have thus far yielded little progress. The last one, which took place in Vietnam in February, ended early without an agreement. North Korea has blamed the stalled negotiations on Washington’s “political and military provocations.”

Trump and Kim met for a third time briefly in June at the border between North and South Korea, though a subsequent meeting in October between aides broke down without any progress.

Kim suspended nuclear and intercontinental ballistic missile tests last year during a diplomacy campaign with Washington and Seoul but has threatened Pyongyang could embark on a “new path” if the U.S. maintains sanctions on North Korea, conducting a series of other missile tests this year.

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2019-12-21 12:43:37Z
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Indian protesters defy ban on public gatherings - Al Jazeera English

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2019-12-21 05:32:48Z
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UK: MPs approve first stage of PM Johnson's Brexit legislation - Al Jazeera English

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2019-12-21 04:35:40Z
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North Korea: US could 'pay dearly' for human rights criticism - Al Jazeera English

North Korea has criticised the United States for taking issue with its human rights record, warning that Washington's "verbal abuse" would only aggravate the already tense situation on the Korean Peninsula, state news agency KCNA reported.

The KCNA statement on Saturday, attributed to a foreign ministry spokesperson, warned that if the US tried to take issue with the North's system of government by citing human rights problems, it would "pay dearly".

More:

The United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) on Wednesday condemned North Korea's "long-standing and ongoing" violations of human rights in an annual resolution sponsored by dozens of countries including the US, that Pyongyang's UN envoy rejected.

The North Korean Ministry of Foreign Affairs statement is its first since US special envoy for North Korea, Stephen Biegun, publicly urged Pyongyang on Monday to return to talks. There has been no direct response from North Korea to Biegun's entreaty.

Tensions have been building between North Korea and the US in recent weeks, prompting China to call for restraint and compromise. Beijing is Pyongyang closest ally.

North KoreaNorth Korean soldiers visit the Mansu Hill to lay flowers to the bronze statues of their late leaders Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il in Pyongyang on Tuesday, the eighth death anniversary of Kim Jong Il [File: Jon Chol Jin/AP]

In recent weeks, North Korea has been taking provocative actions against the US, calling President Donald Trump and "erratic old man" while launching a series of missile tests.

The rhetoric and tests have stoked fears the two countries could return to the collision course they had been on before diplomatic initiatives got under way last year.

Pyongyang has also recently promised an ominous "Christmas gift" if the US does not come up with concessions by the end of the year.

North Korea has been demanding the US make concessions to break the deadlock in their nuclear negotiations.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has held three meetings with Trump since June 2018 but little progress has been made in efforts towards denuclearisation since then.

Washington has opposed any removal of sanctions against Pyongyang until it agrees to denuclearise.

The US has veto power in the 15-member Security Council. It is unclear when or if the draft resolution will be put to a vote.

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2019-12-21 04:20:00Z
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