Category: National

  • Taliban take out ‘mastermind’ of bombing that killed 13 U.S. troops in Afghanistan

    Taliban take out ‘mastermind’ of bombing that killed 13 U.S. troops in Afghanistan

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    After U.S. officials learned of the Taliban operation, the intelligence community worked with the military in recent days to independently confirm the terrorist’s death with “a high level of confidence,” the official said. The Biden administration is holding off on announcing the news until the family members of the victims of the Abbey Gate attack have been notified.

    “We are not partnering with the Taliban, but we do think the outcome is a significant one,” the senior official said.

    Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle have criticized the chaotic withdrawal after the rapid collapse of the Afghan government in August, 2021. They have also questioned whether the Biden administration has the ability to prevent another terrorist attack on the homeland without a presence on the ground in Afghanistan.

    But the senior administration official noted that the Taliban operation validates Biden’s decision to withdraw American troops from Afghanistan.

    It “reflects moreover the president’s judgment that we did not need to remain on the ground, in harm’s way, in Afghanistan in perpetuity in order to effectively address any threat that might emanate from Afghanistan,” the official said.

    Kirby said the Biden administration has “made clear to the Taliban that it is their responsibility to ensure that they give no safe haven to terrorists, whether al Qa’ida or ISIS-K.”

    The U.S. government has been hunting the Islamic State member responsible for the attack since Aug. 26, 2021, when a suicide bomber detonated an explosive device outside of the Abbey Gate at Hamid Karzai International Airport where U.S. service members were working to evacuate American citizens and at-risk Afghans. In addition to the service members killed, at least 170 Afghans also died in the attack.

    At the time, ISIS-K claimed responsibility for the bombing. After an investigation, the Pentagon concluded that it was the result of a single bomber, not the “complex” attack U.S. officials initially described.

    Since the U.S. military withdrew from Afghanistan on Aug. 31, 2021, Pentagon officials have warned that ISIS-K is becoming an increasing threat. In October of that year, Colin Kahl, the undersecretary for policy, told lawmakers that the group could be able to launch attacks on the West and its allies within six months to two years.

    Although the U.S. military no longer has a presence on the ground in Afghanistan, the U.S. still maintains an “over-the-horizon” capability to hunt terrorists there, military leaders have said. The Pentagon has conducted a number of operations in the country since August 2021, including one that resulted in the death of 9/11 architect and al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri in August of 2022.

    In January, the military took out Bilal al-Sudani, a financial facilitator for ISIS and ISIS-K, who was hiding in Somalia, Kirby said. The U.S. and its partners have also killed many ISIS leaders in Syria in recent years, he added.

    “We have made good on the president’s pledge to establish an over-the-horizon capacity to monitor potential terrorist threats, not only from in Afghanistan but elsewhere around the world where that threat has metastasized as we have done in Somalia and Syria,” Kirby said.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Nikki Haley promised to address abortion ‘directly and openly.’ Then she didn’t.

    Nikki Haley promised to address abortion ‘directly and openly.’ Then she didn’t.

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    One area in which Haley was clear, however, was her expectation that nothing far-reaching would hit her desk, should she end up in the White House. “We have to face this reality. The pro-life laws that have passed in strongly Republican states will not be approved at the federal level,” Haley said. “That’s just a fact.”

    Haley’s struggle to articulate a clear position on abortion in an address that was billed as a chance to do just that highlights how fraught the issue is for Republicans on the national campaign trail. GOP candidates have lost a number of races to Democrats who championed abortion rights in the post-Dobbs era, and, over the past few weeks, presidential aspirants have walked on eggshells when discussing the topic.

    Haley is seeking to position herself as a candidate uniquely capable of tackling the debate. On Tuesday, she spoke from her own perspective as a woman and mother — identities unmatched among a slate of male Republican opponents. Haley said her husband’s adoption out of foster care as a young child and her own struggle with infertility made her opposed to abortion — “not because the Republican Party told me to be.” She discussed her friend’s rape and subsequent fear of becoming pregnant.

    “I don’t judge someone who is pro-choice any more than I want them to judge me for being pro-life,” said Haley, who as governor of South Carolina, signed a law restricting abortion after 20 weeks of pregnancy.

    While Jeanne Mancini, president of the March for Life, attended the address and called Haley “a remarkable leader,” others in the movement were left wanting. After Haley finished, prominent anti-abortion activist Lila Rose called the speech “disappointing” and “not what pro-life voters are looking for.”

    Haley’s address Tuesday came hours before Vice President Kamala Harris was scheduled to join abortion rights groups in D.C. for a “rally for reproductive freedom,” an event celebrating a Supreme Court decision to temporarily block a lower court’s restriction of access to abortion pill mifepristone.

    In an interview Monday, Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, stressed the need for candidates to show “boldness in communicating” their positions on abortion laws. Dannenfelser has maintained that her organization will oppose Republican presidential candidates who don’t embrace, at minimum, a national 15-week limit on abortions. A week prior, the group had taken the extraordinary step of criticizing former president Donald Trump for saying that he believed abortion policy should be left to the states, essentially swearing off support for any federal legislation.

    That had left an opening for Haley. But as Dannenfelser looked on during Haley’s speech Tuesday, the former governor and United Nations ambassador didn’t articulate the extent to which she believes the federal government should go in restricting abortion access. In fact, Haley downplayed the likelihood of any highly restrictive national law being passed, noting that the Senate lacks the votes. Haley instead noted policies that she believes most Americans can agree on, including opposing “abortion up to the point of birth” or jailing women who receive abortions.

    Afterward, a spokesperson for Haley clarified that she has not called for a 15-week national restriction, even as SBA released a statement applauding Haley’s pledge to do so. An SBA spokesperson told POLITICO that Haley “has assured us that she will commit to 15 weeks.”

    Later, a person familiar with the conversation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said Haley privately told SBA officials “exactly what she said in her speech today,” and did not commit to a 15-week law, but rather only to “find a consensus to ban late-term abortion.”

    “I think that potential Republican voters are getting to know each of the candidates, and they deserve to know exactly where they stand on this issue, which is at its peak of importance given the overturning of Roe v. Wade,” Dannenfelser said in the interview.

    Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.), who hasn’t yet officially declared his candidacy but has launched an exploratory committee, spent days earlier this month publicly working through his answer to the abortion question, initially declining to provide any specifics before agreeing he would sign a national law limiting the procedure to 20 weeks, a measure he has supported in the Senate. Later, Scott said he would sign “the most conservative pro-life legislation” Congress would pass.

    Former Vice President Mike Pence has been perhaps the clearest on his intentions to restrict the procedure if elected president, saying last month he would support a six-week federal limit. More recently, Pence has floated a 15-week restriction as something that should be “part and parcel of debate.”

    Vivek Ramaswamy, another Republican seeking the nomination, in an interview Monday said he has been “unapologetically pro-life” since high school, as well as an “unapologetic defender of the Constitution.” And he said he believes abortion is a “form of murder,” but shouldn’t be regulated federally.

    “Federal law does not govern murder. State laws do,” Ramaswamy said.

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, an as-of-yet-undeclared presidential hopeful, drew national headlines this month for signing into law an abortion prohibition after six weeks, though he has shied away from commenting on what kind of national abortion law he would support as president. DeSantis failed to tout his state’s new wide-reaching abortion restriction when he spoke the following day at Liberty University, the nation’s leading evangelical Christian college.

    Former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, another candidate, has said he would support a national ban on the procedure after 15 weeks of pregnancy.

    Jim McLaughlin, a Republican pollster whose clients include Trump, suggested there’s wisdom to Trump walking a fine line between touting his past accomplishments for anti-abortion activists, while leaving the door open to appeal to abortion-rights supporters going forward.

    “I think President Trump, you know, he could take credit with the pro-life movement because it was his judges that have changed the laws, and they’ve been making progress,” McLaughlin said. “But I also think … pro-choice voters do not feel threatened with Donald Trump’s position on abortion. So I think he’s got the best of both worlds there.”

    Adam Wren contributed to this story.



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • South Africa’s president and ANC sow confusion over leaving ICC

    South Africa’s president and ANC sow confusion over leaving ICC

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    South Africa’s president, Cyril Ramaphosa, sowed confusion about the country’s relationship with the international criminal court (ICC) on Tuesday by announcing its withdrawal, only for his office to retract the statement within a few hours.

    Debate within Ramaphosa’s African National Congress (ANC) over membership of the court has heated up since the ICC issued an arrest warrant for Vladimir Putin in March for his role in the Russian abduction of Ukrainian children. But Putin has been invited to a summit in South Africa of the Brics group (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) in August and the Kremlin has said the Russian leader will take a decision nearer the time on whether he would attend.

    Ramaphosa told reporters on Tuesday: “The governing party, the ANC, has taken the decision that it is prudent that South Africa should pull out of the ICC largely because of the manner in which the ICC has been seen to be dealing with these types of problems.”

    Within hours however, his office issued a statement saying “The presidency wishes to clarify that South Africa remains a signatory (to the ICC).”

    The statement said the “clarification follows an error in a comment made during a media briefing held by the governing African National Congress.”

    South Africa is a signatory to the ICC’s founding document, the Rome statute, and would be obliged to obey the arrest warrant, but the government has long complained of what it deems to be the court’s double standards.

    South Africa began proceedings to leave the ICC in 2016 after a dispute over whether to arrest the former Sudanese president, Omar al-Bashir, who visited for an African summit while under ICC indictment for genocide and crimes against humanity.

    However, the government recently suspended those proceedings in the face of legal obstacles, and on Tuesday the ANC’s national executive committee put out a statement noting the decision at the party conference this year that “the ANC and the South African government must rescind the withdrawal from the ICC court”. At the same time it urged ratification of a protocol to lay the ground for an African court of justice and human rights.

    “So the president appears to have messed up the message – ANC has decided to rescind notice of withdrawal from the ICC and NOT attempt to withdraw from ICC again,” Kaajal Ramjathan-Keogh, a South African lawyer and director of the Africa programme of the International Commission of Jurists, said on Twitter.

    “Someone in the ANC has erroneously briefed the president when in fact the ANC has taken a decision to rescind the withdrawal from the ICC not to commence withdrawal anew. Is there any quality control happening?”

    Even if South Africa took the decision to leave the ICC, it would still be bound by its membership obligations, including executing arrest warrants, for 12 months following its notification of withdrawal.



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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Arteta urges Arsenal to relish ‘beautiful experience’ of Manchester City clash

    Arteta urges Arsenal to relish ‘beautiful experience’ of Manchester City clash

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    Mikel Arteta wants Arsenal to savour the “beautiful experience” of a potential title decider against Manchester City at the Etihad but accepts his players will have to delve into previously untapped resources to regain control of a neck-and-neck race for the top.

    Arsenal travel to Manchester with a five-point lead at the summit but, given their opponents have two games in hand, anything bar a win would make City favourites to pull clear by the end of the season. Three straight draws have squandered much of Arsenal’s advantage but Arteta praised his side for staying with Pep Guardiola’s team and urged them to hit the heights required for a successful conclusion.

    “A beautiful experience tomorrow night, that is what I want them to take,” he said, when asked what Arsenal’s squad might glean from such a high-pressure occasion. “A beautiful experience where we do what we have to do to win the game. For us to have been able to go toe-to-toe with [City] is great. But it’s not enough because we want to win it, so we have to find a different edge [so] now that we are here we are going to win it. And to do that, excellence is the only thing that is going to take you where we want to go.”

    Arteta worked as Guardiola’s assistant at City for three and a half years before taking the Arsenal job in December 2019. The usually pragmatic manager allowed himself a brief reflection on the pace at which his life has changed since then. “It is the beauty of football,” he said. “Five years ago if somebody told me we would be in this position, him at City and me at Arsenal, and going toe-to-toe with them … ”

    City were 3-1 victors at the Emirates two months ago, winning 11 and drawing three of their 14 matches in all competitions since. They are in searing form but Arteta was bullish when it was put to him that his team might have had a greater chance of winning at the Etihad earlier in the campaign. “They’ve been in incredible form but look where we are in the table,” he said. “That means we’ve been in incredible form as well. That’s why we are where we are.

    Granit Xhaka (left) in training last week
    Mikel Arteta will hope to be able to call upon Granit Xhaka (left) in Manchester. Photograph: Stuart MacFarlane/Arsenal FC/Getty Images

    “It’s going to be a tough night and challenge but the opportunity is incredible for us. We knew from the beginning, if you want to win a Premier League, you have to go to Spurs and beat them. You have to go to Chelsea and you have to beat them. You have to go away from home and win. This is what we’ve been doing. This is why we’re here. Now you have to go to City and you have to beat them.”

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    Any hopes that William Saliba might make a miraculous recovery to reassume his place in Arsenal’s defence appear to have been dashed, Arteta suggesting the centre-back would be absent into next week because of a back injury that could curtail his season. They have struggled to keep things tight without Saliba and a lack of security was doubly pronounced when Granit Xhaka missed Friday’s 3-3 draw against Southampton through illness. Xhaka is doubtful again and Arteta will be desperate for his most experienced player to recover in time.

    “Injuries for us in the wrong moments, losing three or four players, is not great, but we have to adapt,” he said. “If you want to win the championship you have to go through those moments and somehow overcome that situation. We have to show that now.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Pep Guardiola admits Manchester City will be scared before Arsenal title clash

    Pep Guardiola admits Manchester City will be scared before Arsenal title clash

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    Pep Guardiola has admitted he and his players will be scared before Manchester City’s title showdown with Arsenal on Wednesday night at the Etihad Stadium.

    Guardiola is vastly experienced and one of the most decorated managers in history, with 30 major trophies, but says he will still feel anxious before facing the leaders.

    “I manage well but it is a good sign, being a little bit nervous,” he said. “So the people in society, the teenagers, all of them are psychologists for mental health because they don’t accept that being nervous is part of our lives, being anxious is part of our lives, being scared is part of our lives, and nothing happens. We don’t have to be perfect. When we educate our kids, they have to be perfect for Instagram and TikTok and this kind of thing – they have to be a genius.”

    Guardiola relishes the apprehension that characterises his match buildup. “When I feel that feeling I know it’s normal,” he said. “The problem would be if I didn’t have that feeling. I like to live this kind of adrenaline … but in the end I sleep quite well. That is not a problem.”

    His team will also be nervous. The manager said: “They have experience, too. Everyone has to find his own meditation to prepare himself for what they need, either with music or whatever they need to prepare for the game. But the team is ready for a big battle – I know how difficult it will be.”

    Arsenal have taken only three points from the previous possible nine, reducing their advantage to five points. City, who have two matches in hand, will retain the Premier League title if they win their remaining eight games. They are unbeaten in 16 matches but Guardiola insisted he would prefer Arsenal to be in better form.

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    “After three games dropping points it will be much, much more difficult,” he said. “I would have preferred it if they had come here with better results than the last three.”

    City knocked Bayern Munich out of the Champions League 4-1 on aggregate last week but Guardiola thinks they will have to be better to defeat first Arsenal and then their semi-final opponents, Real Madrid.

    “I don’t know if the [performance in the] games against Bayern will be enough to win tomorrow or to get to the final of the Champions League,” the manager said. “In some departments, we have to improve.”

    Nathan Aké is ruled out with a hamstring injury so Aymeric Laporte may replace him at left-back.

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Jamie Vardy salvages draw for dogged Leicester to leave Leeds frustrated

    Jamie Vardy salvages draw for dogged Leicester to leave Leeds frustrated

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    As the final whistle blew Jamie Vardy could not stop smiling but Patrick Bamford looked consumed by mental anguish.

    Leicester’s former England striker had stepped off the substitutes’ bench to score a potentially season‑changing equaliser before Leeds’s centre‑forward missed a late, albeit potentially offside, sitter and decidedly mixed emotions swirled in the cool West Yorkshire air.

    Some home fans called for the head of Victor Orta, Leeds’s director of football, but frustration was mixed with pride at the end of an evening in which Javi Gracia’s side had taken the lead through Luis Sinisterra as they arrested a dramatic recent slump.

    Leeds are now two points and two places above the bottom three and their hopes of avoiding relegation seem touch and go but they could at least reflect on a resilient performance which prevented Leicester from making their technical superiority count.

    “After competing as we did it is hard to get only one point,” Gracia said. “The players and all the people who love this club are suffering; it’s difficult to manage at this moment.”

    VAR rules out Youri Tielemans’ strike owing to an offside from Boubakary Soumaré
    VAR rules out Youri Tielemans’ strike owing to an offside from Boubakary Soumaré. Photograph: Paul Greenwood/Colorsport/Shutterstock

    One point and one place beneath Leeds, Dean Smith’s men are in even deeper trouble and face a potential watershed home date with Everton on Monday night. Yet despite an enduring inability to keep clean sheets they should draw hope from the manner in which they forced Leeds ever deeper during a nervy second half.

    Gracia’s players still arrested a losing run which had seen them concede 13 goals in three games. The interim manager resisted a considerable clamour to drop Illan Meslier, following a string of recent errors on the 23-year-old Frenchman’s part and was rewarded with a fine performance from a goalkeeper whose once seemingly superhuman confidence had latterly appeared shot to pieces.

    Meslier certainly could not have been expected to save the rising 20‑yard Youri Tielemans shot which whizzed past him in the sixth minute. He and Leeds looked crestfallen but they were rescued by a VAR review which detected an offside against Boubakary Soumaré during the fallout from the improperly cleared James Maddison corner prefacing Tielemans’ disallowed rocket.

    Maddison’s deliveries are often integral to Leicester successes and the same goes for Leeds’s Jack Harrison. Sure enough from Weston McKennie’s clever reverse pass Harrison sent a wonderful cross curving towards the onrushing Sinisterra.

    Thanks partly to Bamford’s smart decoy manoeuvre Sinisterra lost Timothy Castagne as he outleapt all comers to direct a header beyond Daniel Iversen’s reach. As Elland Road celebrated Gracia stood still with his arms folded and his impression impenetrable.

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    With Harvey Barnes subjecting Luke Ayling to an exacting workout and Sinisterra limping off after a tangle with Caglar Soyuncu, tempting fate certainly seemed unwise.

    Happily for Gracia, Ayling, Liam Cooper, McKennie and company had remembered how to tackle and, protecting Meslier admirably, answered most questions Maddison and friends asked them. Both Rodrigo, deployed in the No 10 role, and Bamford proved impressive when it came to defending from the front.

    Although Smith’s side shaded possession, Leeds’s new‑found capacity for making things scrappy dictated they could not do too much with it.

    Or at least not until Vardy assumed centre stage and began raging against the dying of the light. Shortly after Vardy’s introduction Kelechi Iheanacho forced Meslier into a brilliant double save, involving the goalkeeper repelling his initial shot before keeping out the substitute Patson Daka’s follow‑up from the rebound. No matter that a linesman flagged the second effort offside, many spectators at Elland Road were on their feet and applauding. “All players have ups and downs,” Gracia said. “But Illan’s a great keeper.”

    Luis Sinisterra receives medical attention
    Luis Sinisterra opened the scoring before being forced off with injury. Photograph: Phil Noble/Reuters

    Meslier saved smartly again from Iheanacho before the striker, Maddison and Vardy combined superbly to silence the stadium. Stealing in from the inside left channel, Vardy lost Robin Koch before placing a right‑foot shot across the helpless Meslier. It was his second goal of the season and first in six months.

    Suddenly Leeds were on the ropes and looked mighty relieved when Vardy had a second “goal” disallowed for offside before Iversen quite brilliantly repelled Marc Roca’s header from a corner and then an unmarked Bamford sidefooted wide with the keeper wrongfooted. Gracia’s insistence a VAR review would have ruled any goal out for offside was kind and quite possibly accurate but probably proved scant consolation.

    “I’m a tad disappointed,” Smith said. “We could have lost it at the end but it’s nice to have Jamie Vardy scoring again.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Tyrone Mings keeps Aston Villa on track for Europe with Fulham winner

    Tyrone Mings keeps Aston Villa on track for Europe with Fulham winner

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    Seconds after the final whistle Unai Emery marched down the touchline with the demeanour of an office worker clocking off for the day, high‑fived a handful of young, ecstatic Aston Villa supporters and then disappeared down the tunnel. His work at Villa, who extended their unbeaten run to 10 games with victory against Fulham, is akin to something of a magic act.

    Since Emery’s first Villa game in November no Premier League team have picked up more wins and only Arsenal, the Premier League leaders, have registered more points. A spectacular finish to a wonderfully lopsided season is in store.

    Emi Martínez threw his gloves into the crowd as the Holte End crooned to the beat of Jeff Beck.

    Quite where Villa’s journey goes from here with five games to play remains to be seen but their unexpected and extraordinary gallop towards achieving a top‑six finish continues to gather pace. For the first time since 1998 Villa, who now occupy fifth, have won five successive league games at home. Fulham’s season, meanwhile, appears to be petering out after so much early promise. Next up? The visit of the champions Manchester City. And then a trip to Anfield.

    The last time these teams met, in October, Villa succumbed to a 3-0 defeat in what proved to be Steven Gerrard’s final game in charge. Tyrone Mings, who grabbed the winner here with a clever backward header from a corner, scored an own goal that night. Villa were woeful and supporters made their anger plain after a loss that left them outside the relegation zone only on goals scored.

    Six months on the mood around the club could scarcely be more different. Emery has given Villa’s players a shot in the arm and while his methods have hardly been radical he has the fanbase dreaming of European nights for the first time in 13 years. “We have to be ambitious, realistic and play under pressure,” Emery said afterwards. “I like playing under pressure. If we are playing under pressure, we have something to do. We are candidates. Our commencing matches will be key to get the European positions. Our dreams, they are here.”

    Fulham gave Villa an early fright in this contest when Andreas Pereira’s acrobatic effort from Harrison Reed’s cross rattled the side netting inside 21 seconds but the hosts slowly asserted their authority. Ashley Young saw an effort from the edge of the box diverted wide by Reed and Ollie Watkins then led Tosin Adarabioyo into conceding another corner. Fulham dealt with the first set piece but not the second. Mings beat his marker, Tim Ream, to the punch and the Villa centre-back’s back header from John McGinn’s inswinging corner looped in at the far post.

    Eight of Villa’s starting lineup here also began that miserable autumn night at Craven Cottage, though this team are almost unrecognisable. Fulham, by contrast, had six survivors from that October contest though Willian, who started the reverse fixture, was injured in the warmup at Villa Park and replaced by Manor Solomon. Harry Wilson, who scored in Fulham’s recent wins against Everton and Leeds, was forced off after 17 minutes and replaced by Bobby Decordova-Reid. Perhaps those changes disrupted Fulham, who struggled to test the returning Martínez.

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    Fulham manager Marco Silva (left) walks off the pitch after losing at Aston Villa
    Marco Silva (left) ponders his side’s defeat at Aston Villa. Photograph: Shaun Botterill/Getty Images

    Marco Silva, hands clasped behind his back and alone with his thoughts, pondered how his toothless Fulham side could find a way back into the game. They offered little in attack without Aleksandar Mitrovic, who still has three games of an eight-match suspension to serve. Silva had seen enough midway through the second half and made a triple substitution, with Carlos Vinícius replacing Pereira, who operated up front alongside Daniel James. The injuries to Willian and Wilson did not help but Silva was reluctant to make excuses. “If you compare with the first game against Villa, when we played at the Cottage [in October], our frontline was completely different and I believe that made a huge impact in our threat that we didn’t show tonight in our attacking line,” the Fulham manager said.

    Jacob Ramsey released Watkins through on the Fulham goal but Antonee Robinson did enough to kill Villa’s attack, allowing his goalkeeper, Bernd Leno, to claim the ball.

    At the other end the 37-year-old Young, who departed to a standing ovation, cut out a dangerous cross just before it could reach the lurking James at the back post. If, and it is a big if, this in-form Villa side can beat Manchester United at Old Trafford on Sunday, they could yet muscle in on the conversation for the Champions League places. Gerrard’s largely joyless reign feels a lifetime ago.

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • If China invaded Taiwan it would destroy world trade, says James Cleverly

    If China invaded Taiwan it would destroy world trade, says James Cleverly

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    A Chinese invasion of Taiwan would destroy world trade, and distance would offer no protection to the inevitable catastrophic blow to the global economy, the UK’s foreign secretary, James Cleverly, warned in a set piece speech on Britain’s relations with Beijing.

    In remarks that differ from French president Emmanuel Macron’s attempts to distance Europe from any potential US involvement in a future conflict over Taiwan, and which firmly support continued if guarded engagement with Beijing, Cleverly said “no country could shield itself from the repercussions of a war in Taiwan”.

    He added that he shuddered to think of the financial and human ruin that would ensue.

    Urging no side to take unilateral action to change the status quo, he asserted the relevance of Taiwan to UK interests saying: “About half of the world’s container ships pass through these vital waters [the Taiwan Strait] every year, laden with goods bound for Europe and the far corners of the world. Taiwan is a thriving democracy and a crucial link in global supply chains, particularly for advanced semi-conductors.

    “A war across the Strait would not only be a human tragedy, it would destroy world trade worth $2.6 trillion, according to Nikkei Asia. No country could shield itself from the repercussions.

    “Distance would offer no protection from this catastrophic blow to the global economy – and to China most of all.”

    He added: “As we watch new bases appearing in the South China Sea and beyond, we are bound to ask ourselves: what is it all for? Why is China making this colossal investment?

    “If we are left to draw our own conclusions, prudence dictates that we must assume the worst.”

    Overall Cleverly set himself apart from advocates of economic decoupling including some of his own backbenchers saying he wanted Britain to “engage directly with China, bilaterally and multilaterally, to preserve and create open, constructive and stable relations, reflecting China’s global importance”.

    Although he said the mass incarceration in Xinjiang cannot be ignored or brushed aside, he said: “We believe in a positive trade and investment relationship, whilst avoiding dependencies in critical supply chains.

    “We want British companies to do business in China – just as American, ASEAN, Australian and EU companies do – and we will support their efforts to make the terms work for both sides, pushing for a level playing field and fairer competition.”

    China he acknowledged represented a ruthlessly authoritarian tradition utterly at odds with Britain’s own. “But we have an obligation to future generations to engage because otherwise we would be failing in our duty to sustain – and shape – the international order. Shirking that challenge would be a sign not of strength but of weakness.”

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    Invasion of Taiwan would be a ‘horror scenario’, says German foreign minister – video

    At the same time he balanced this by saying: “The UK had a right to protect core interests too, and one of them is to promote the kind of world that we want to live in, where people everywhere have a universal human right to be treated with dignity, free from torture, slavery or arbitrary detention.”

    He insisted, without going into details: “We are not going to be silent about interference in our political system, or technology theft, or industrial espionage. We will do more to safeguard academic freedom and research.” He did not repeat the promise by Rishi Sunak, the prime minister, to close Chinese-controlled Confucius Institutes at British universities.

    He also urged China in its relations with Russia over Ukraine not to allow Vladimir Putin to trample upon China’s own stated principles of non-interference and respect for sovereignty.

    He told China: “A powerful and responsible nation cannot simply abstain when this happens, or draw closer to the aggressor, or aid and abet the aggression. The rights of a sovereign nation like Ukraine cannot be eradicated just because the eradicator enjoys a ‘strategic partnership’ with China.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • (Renewed) Redmi Note 7 Pro (Neptune Blue, 128GB, 6GB RAM)

    (Renewed) Redmi Note 7 Pro (Neptune Blue, 128GB, 6GB RAM)

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    (Renewed) Redmi Note 7 Pro (Neptune Blue, 128GB, 6GB RAM)
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  • Joe Biden’s 2024 enthusiasm gap

    Joe Biden’s 2024 enthusiasm gap

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    There’s an almost obsessive preoccupation with Biden’s age. And in his video, Biden sought to portray himself as an ageless champion who will “battle for the soul of America” by taking on conservatives who are banning books, making it more difficult to vote and meddling in women’s health care decisions.

    This campaign, though, will be far different than the socially distanced one he successfully navigated in 2020 with few public appearances during the height of the pandemic.

    There’s a perceived dearth of enthusiasm for his campaign, with many Democratic activists resigned to the fact Biden is their best chance to stop Republicans from reclaiming the presidency. And the reality for Biden is many activists — natural surrogates to bolster his message — are growing weary. Many see themselves as loyal foot soldiers in the fight against culture war battles being waged in conservative legislatures which are pushing for stricter laws targeting abortion and voting.

    Many don’t view Biden himself as a galvanizing force in 2024.

    “It’s not going to be him energizing the base,” Cliff Albright, executive director of Black Voters Matter Fund, told The Recast newsletter with a hint of a chuckle.

    “It’s obviously going to have to be surrogates to do the energizing part, but he’s got some achievements, including some that influence Black folks directly that he can craft a message around.”

    Albright says the relaunch video was strong and that he was glad to see Biden lean so heavily into voting rights, an issue he says he is key for Black voters — even though Democrats were unsuccessful in enacting federal protections when the party held a governing trifecta.

    “Sometimes all Black folks want to see is, ‘We want to see you fight,’” Albright says. “We’re not naive. We’re used to being in fights we know we can’t win because we don’t have the votes … but we want people to fight for us.”

    Many Democratic strategists and activists give the Biden administration high marks for stabilizing the economy following the pandemic shutdowns, passing bipartisan infrastructure legislation and nominating Ketanji Brown Jackson as the first Black woman to the Supreme Court.

    Those, they say, are achievements Biden should be touting.

    They also hope the Biden administration can craft a coherent campaign message, one that showcases his achievements but also serves as a clarion call for the battles ahead that still require a united front of elected officials and activists to achieve. Keeping the activist class engaged and energized is key, but there’s also a hard truth being spoken amongst grassroots organizers.

    “I think what you’re seeing is that we’re burnt out,” says longtime Democratic political strategist and activist Nina Smith, who worked on Pete Buttigieg’s presidential campaign last cycle.

    “There are a lot of folks right now that are just tired and they’ve stepped away. Folks that I worked alongside with in 2020 have stepped away and they are not as engaged anymore.”

    “That’s the real danger here,” she adds.

    Activists note that if the Biden campaign invests in and engages community organizers early on, this early fatigue can be overcome.

    Many also say that Biden should rely on a new class of elected officials, including freshman Rep. Maxwell Frost (D-Fla.) and Tennessee state Reps. Justin Pearson and Justin Jones, to help elevate his campaign to a weary progressive base.

    The “two Justins” as they are sometimes referred to, are both young Black men who were each expelled from the GOP-led Tennessee Legislature, before being reinstated the following week.

    Together with state Rep. Gloria Johnson, who is white and survived an expulsion vote, they form the “Tennessee Three.” On Monday, they met with Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris at the White House to push the administration to declare gun violence a public health emergency.

    Still, activists on the left may be looking past Biden, who will be 82 years old should he be sworn in for another term. Instead, they say, they are inspired by the woman who is leading his campaign: Julie Chávez Rodríguez. She’s a senior White House adviser and the granddaughter of Cesar Chavez, famed labor leader and Chicano icon.

    Not everyone agrees it’s enough.

    “That alone is not going to be something that is going to [bring] Latino voters out for President Biden,” says Mayra López-Zuniga, a political strategist with the progressive group Mijente. “I think we need a little bit more substance.”

    As she sees it, many Latino voters don’t feel their lives have changed for the better during the Biden administration. Huge wage gaps persist between Latinas and non-Hispanic men. By one measure from the Justice for Women report, Latinas make 54 cents for every dollar a white man makes.

    Then there’s immigration, which was not mentioned in the president’s campaign video relaunch and is seen as a potential liability for Biden heading into 2024.

    “The president hasn’t been able to deliver on immigration, no asylum reform, DACA is still up in the air,” López-Zuniga tells The Recast. “So I don’t know, at this point, that there’s a huge energy for what 2024 is going to look like.”

    While Biden and his advisors seek to project the image of a spry commander in chief, questions about his vitality will hover over his reelection prospects — as are concerns that voters just aren’t that into him. The latest datapoint underscoring that came in an NBC News poll released Sunday.

    It found a whopping 70 percent of Americans say Biden should not run — including 51 percent of Democrats. That is compared to just 26 percent who said he should run. Of those who said he shouldn’t run, a combined 69 percent cited his age as a reason.

    Still: A lot can happen in a campaign over the course of 18 months. If anyone knows this, it’s Biden himself.

    This article first appeared in an edition of The Recast newsletter.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )