Selasa, 28 Januari 2020

Impeachment Trial LIvestream: Final Day Of Trump's Defense - NPR

Alan Dershowitz, an attorney for President Trump, speaks during the impeachment trial against Trump in the Senate on Monday. Senate Television via AP hide caption

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Senate Television via AP

Shortly before winding down Monday night's arguments in the Senate impeachment trial of President Trump, defense lawyer Alan Dershowitz addressed the elephant in the room: whether potential testimony from former national security adviser John Bolton would alter the course of the proceeding.

Dershowitz was the first member of the president's defense team to directly acknowledge how recent Bolton news had consumed Washington, as speculation raged over the Senate possibly calling him as a witness.

Bolton's possible first-hand account of the events at the heart of the impeachment trial? Not necessary, argued Dershowitz.

"Nothing in the Bolton revelations, even if true, would rise to the level of an abuse of power or an impeachable offense," he said.

Democrats need to convince at least four Republicans to defect from their party's leadership in order to support a subpoena of Bolton, a threshold that Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, said on Monday appeared "increasingly likely."

That assessment comes in light of Bolton reportedly writing in his forthcoming book that Trump directly linked the freezing of $391 million in security assistance to Ukraine launching investigations into Trump's main political rival, Joe Biden, and his son, Hunter Biden.

Also on Monday, Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, told NPR that he too believes the Senate is now inching closer to having enough votes to bring Bolton into the chamber for live testimony.

"I'm already hearing a number of Republicans who are moving toward voting to at least hear from John Bolton, if not other witnesses," he said. "I think there'll be more," said King, referring to the four GOP votes Democrats need to call Bolton. "My bold prediction will be five or 10."

On Tuesday, the Trump team will carry out its final day of the president's defense.

The trial will resume at 1 p.m. ET. Watch live here when it begins.

The House impeached Trump for abuse of power for asking Ukraine to announce investigations into his political rivals, allegedly using $391 million in vital security assistance to pressure the country into launching the probes. House Democrats also impeached Trump for obstruction of Congress for the White House's refusal to cooperate with impeachment investigators.

But on Monday, Trump's defense team offered vastly different version of events, arguing that the president's freezing of military aid was done out of a legitimate concern over corruption in Ukraine, pointing out that the congressionally approved funding was eventually released.

Eric Herschmann, another Trump defense lawyer, maintained that the hold-up in military aid was not as consequential as Democrats have portrayed it to be.

"It is absurd on its face. Not one American life was in jeopardy or lost by the short delay, and they know it," Herschmann said.

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Ken Starr, who is defending Trump and who led the investigation into then-President Bill Clinton that triggered Clinton's impeachment, made the case that Trump's impeachment, the third impeachment trial in American history, shows that "we are living in what aptly can be described as the age of impeachment," adding the process is "filled with acrimony and divides the country like nothing else."

Starr, whose impeachment investigation of Clinton resulted in acquittal, framed impeachment in dramatic terms.

"Like war, impeachment is hell, or at least, presidential impeachment is hell," he said.

The defense team also used Monday to attack the Biden family, playing a television interview with Joe Biden's son, Hunter, answering questions about his time as a board member of the energy company Burisma when his father was vice president.

Trump defense lawyer Pam Bondi, the former attorney general of Florida, ran through a long timeline of events suggesting that Hunter Biden's involvement with Burisma was questionable enough to justify Trump's concerns about possible corruption.

Neither Joe Biden nor his son have been accused of any wrongdoing connected to Ukraine and Burisma.

Yet Bondi cited news outlets that have covered the Bidens and the energy company before saying: "they all thought there was cause to raise the issue about the Bidens and Burisma."

Added Bondi: "The House managers might say, without evidence, that everything we just said has been debunked, that the evidence points entirely and unequivocally in the other direction. That is a distraction," Bondi said. "They don't believe that there was any concern to raise here," she said. "And all we're saying is that there was a basis to talk about this, to raise this issue."

Andrew Bates, a spokesman for Joe Biden, characterized Bondi's presentation as a "conspiracy theory" that has been "conclusively refuted."

"Joe Biden was instrumental to a bipartisan and international anti-corruption victory. It's no surprise that such a thing is anathema to President Trump," Bates said in a statement.

Meanwhile in the Senate, lawmakers struggled on Monday to push through the daylong presentations by Trump's legal team.

Senators appeared more worn down than last week, giving way to yawns, or strolls into the cloakroom for extended breaks.

Once Trump's legal team rests, the trial will then move to the questions phase in which senators submit in writing questions to the prosecution or defense that the Chief Justice John Robert will read aloud.

After the questions wrap up, senators will then take up whether to call witnesses.

Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., the lead Trump prosecutor, has said that the White House's attempt to block witnesses from the impeachment process is proof of a cover-up. On Monday, Schiff added to those contentions, saying on CNN that lawmakers interested in fully assessing the impeachment charges should want to hear Bolton's side of the story.

"I don't know how you can explain that you wanted a search for the truth in this trial and say you don't want to hear from a witness who had a direct conversation about the central allegation in the articles of impeachment," Schiff said.

NPR's Scott Detrow and Claudia Grisales contributed to this report.

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2020-01-28 10:01:00Z
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Taliban repel Afghan forces' bid to reach U.S. plane crash site - Reuters

KABUL (Reuters) - Afghan forces and Taliban fighters clashed in a central region where a U.S. military aircraft crashed, officials said on Tuesday, as the government tried to reach the wreckage site in a Taliban stronghold.

The wreckage of an airplane is seen after a crash in Deh Yak district of Ghazni province, Afghanistan January 27, 2020.

On Monday, the U.S. military said an E-11A aircraft crashed in the province of Ghazni, but disputed Taliban claims to have brought it down, without saying how many were aboard or if any had been killed.

Security forces were sent to the site immediately after receiving a report of the crash in the Deh Yak district, but were ambushed by Taliban fighters, Ghazni provincial police chief Khalid Wardak told Reuters.

“As per our information, there are four bodies and two onboard were alive and they are missing,” Wardak said, adding that the forces subsequently received an order to retreat and airborne action is to be taken instead.

Zabiullah Mujahid, a Taliban spokesman, said Afghan forces backed by U.S. military support had tried to capture the area around the crashed aircraft and clashed with fighters of the Islamist militant group.

The attempt was repelled, however, he told Reuters, but added that the Taliban would allow a rescue team access to recover bodies from the crash site.

“Taliban fighters on the ground counted six bodies at the site of the U.S. airplane crash,” he said, adding that while there could have been more, the militant group could not be certain, as fire had reduced everything to ashes.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, U.S. officials said the plane was carrying fewer than five when it crashed, with one official saying initial information showed there were at least two.

The site has not been visited by U.S. officials or any other members of the international force in Afghanistan, but the Taliban claim to have brought down the plane is misleading, a U.S. defense official told Reuters on Tuesday, adding that a preliminary probe showed there was a mechanical error.

The crashed aircraft, built by Bombardier Inc, is used to provide communication capabilities in remote locations.

Additional reporting by Rumpam Jain; Writing by Gibran Peshimam; Editing by Clarence Fernandez

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2020-01-28 08:09:00Z
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Afghan plane crash: US jet comes down in Taliban territory - BBC News

The US military has confirmed one of its planes crashed in eastern Afghanistan on Monday.

Col Sonny Leggett said: "While the cause of crash is under investigation, there are no indications the crash was caused by enemy fire."

The aircraft crashed in Deh Yak district, Ghazni province, an area with a strong Taliban presence.

It is unclear how many people were on board.

Col Leggett denied Taliban claims that additional aircraft had crashed.

Taliban social media accounts have posted unverified footage showing a burnt-out plane with US Air Force markings.

The video shows a Bombardier E-11A - the type of jet used by the US Air Force for electronic surveillance over Afghanistan.

Afghan authorities had initially said the crash plane belonged to state-owned airline Ariana, but the company quickly said all its planes were accounted for.

While helicopters have proven vulnerable and accident-prone in Afghanistan, the loss of a US fixed-wing aircraft is relatively rare.

But the Taliban are not believed to have the sorts of anti-aircraft missiles needed to bring down a high-flying aircraft.

The plane involved is an E-11A, one of only four in the whole US Air Force.

Essentially it is an adapted Bombardier executive jet, chosen for its ability to fly at high altitude and with extended range. It is packed with electronics: its job is to enable better communications between air and ground forces, and between different types of aircraft operating in difficult terrain or using incompatible data links.

It is a bit like the wi-fi range extender that you install in a room with a poor signal. The aircraft - along with similar electronics mounted on unmanned systems - have played an important role in the Afghan conflict, where the mountainous landscape is a major problem for modern military communications.

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2020-01-28 03:34:54Z
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Senin, 27 Januari 2020

Plane crashes in Afghanistan's Ghazni province: Officials - Al Jazeera English

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2020-01-27 12:58:26Z
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Three rockets hit US Embassy compound in Baghdad, US official says - CNN

The official said the injury was minor and the individual had since returned to duty.
A State Department spokesperson said Sunday evening that they "are aware of reports of rockets landing in the International Zone," but did not address the US embassy itself. The State Department did not respond to a query as to whether any embassy employees were injured.
"We call on the Government of Iraq to fulfill its obligations to protect our diplomatic facilities," the spokesperson said.
There have been numerous rocket attacks on Baghdad's Green Zone, where the embassies of the US and several other western countries are located, and the area surrounding it in recent months. However, the whole of Iraq is on a heightened state of alert as tensions between the US and Iran have dramatically increased in recent weeks after the US killing of key Iranian general Qasem Soleimani and Iran's retaliatory missile attack on an Iraqi base housing US troops.
The State Department did not directly blame Tehran for the rocket strikes in the Iraqi capital, but the spokesperson's statement made reference to Iranian threats in the region and past attacks by Iranian-backed militias on US interests. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack.
"The security situation remains tense and Iranian-backed armed groups remain a threat. So, we remain vigilant," the spokesperson said. Since September there have been more than 14 attacks by Iran and Iranian-supported militias on US personnel in Iraq, according to the State Department.
The spokesperson said the State Department would not comment further on the security situation in Baghdad.
Rep. Michael McCaul, the lead Republican on the House Foreign Affairs committee, said in a tweet Sunday that he is "closely monitoring reports of a rocket attack targeting the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad."
"Violent acts against our diplomatic facilities are simply unacceptable. We must ensure the safety of American diplomats, troops and other Americans in Iraq."
Adil Abdul Mahdi, the prime minister of Iraq, condemned the attack and said Iraqi forces have been ordered to "deploy, search, and investigate to prevent the recurrence of such attacks, and to arrest those who launched these rockets so that they can be punished."
The Prime Minister said the Iraqi government is "committed to protecting all diplomatic missions and taking all necessary measures to achieve this."

Escalating tensions

Baghdad's Green Zone was initially carved out of central Baghdad by US-led forces after their invasion of Iraq in 2003 and is largely viewed as a safe location, despite frequently being the target of rocket attacks.
Earlier this month, the US embassy was the site of mass protests in response to US airstrikes on an Iranian-backed militia group at the end of December.
Those strikes were launched in retaliation to attacks by an Iranian-backed Shia militia group known as Kataib Hezbollah, which had injured numerous American military personnel, according to US officials.
In early January, Iran fired a number of missiles at two Iraqi bases housing US troops in retaliation for the American strike that killed Soleimani in a drone strike at Baghdad International airport.
On Friday the Pentagon revealed that 34 US service members have been diagnosed with traumatic brain injuries following the Iranian missile attack.
This story has been updated with additional details.

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2020-01-27 12:08:00Z
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Coronavirus: Death toll rises to 81 as China extends holiday - BBC News - BBC News

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2020-01-27 10:35:49Z
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Worries grow that quarantine in China not enough to stem increasingly virulent coronavirus - The Washington Post

Li Yun AP In this Jan. 26, 2020, photo released by Xinhua News Agency, a member of a military medical team takes over the work from a medical worker at Wuhan Jinyintan Hospital in Wuhan, central China's Hubei province.

Even as China takes more stringent measures to limit the movement of the vast country’s population during the biggest travel period of the year, there are increasing fears that the quarantine won’t be enough to stop the spread of the coronavirus. Here’s what we know:

● The government in Beijing broadened an extraordinary quarantine to more than 50 million people, but the mayor of the Wuhan epicenter said 5 million people succeeded in leaving the city already.

● China’s health minister said the coronavirus is increasing in virulence and now could be contagious even before people exhibit symptoms making perfectly healthy-seeming people possible carriers.

● A scientific assessment of the disease spread assuming an optimistic 90 percent quarantine still predicted more than 59,000 infections and 1,500 deaths — twice that of the 2002-3 SARS outbreak.

● China imposed a ban on the trade of wild animals until the coronavirus epidemic has been eliminated across the country, after evidence emerged that the disease was transmitted to humans through a market in the city of Wuhan that traded in game meat.

● In the United States, health officials confirmed a total of five cases, while further infections have been confirmed in France, South Korea, Japan, Nepal, Thailand, Singapore, Vietnam, Taiwan, the United States and Canada. We’re mapping the spread here.

WHAT WE KNOW ABOU THE CORONAVIRUS | SCENES FROM CHINA’S DEADLY CORONAVIRUS CRISIS

BEIJING — The mayor of Wuhan, the Chinese city at the center of the coronavirus outbreak, announced several stark numbers at a late-night news conference on Sunday, with most focusing on his prediction that there would be at least 1,000 new infections.

But Mayor Zhou Xianwang revealed another number that underscored the metastasizing challenge of the accelerating epidemic: 5 million.

That was the number of people who had emptied out of Wuhan in recent days — and scattered all over the world — as China’s Lunar New Year holiday period approached and authorities announced a lockdown in an urgent bid to contain the outbreak.

So far the virus has infected 2,744 people in China and killed 80, according to numbers provided by the National Health Commission Sunday night.

The effectiveness of an unprecedented quarantine around the viral epicenter in central China’s Hubei Province has become a key question as Chinese and international authorities ponder how to rein in the outbreak — and, at this point, whether it could be contained at all.

“Radical times call for radical measures,” said Dong-Yan Jin, a professor of molecular virology and oncology at Hong Kong University’s School of Biomedical Sciences. “A lot of cities have followed Wuhan in announcing a lockdown, but don’t forget that many potential patients are already out there before such an administrative order. Are we going to shut down the whole country?”

Jin said Chinese authorities had already passed the critical moment to control the epidemic: before the New Year travel rush began a week ago.

“There was a lack of transparency in Hubei and an unwillingness by local governments to face the music; now they tend to overcompensate,” he said. “You cannot expect that to work miracles and stop the outbreak.”

Escalating worldwide concerns, China’s health minister, Ma Xiaowei, said Sunday that people carrying the new coronavirus could infect others even while they do not show any symptoms for as long as 14 days, a period known as incubation. That implies that, unlike SARS, seemingly healthy travelers could have unwittingly infected others.

But international experts, including at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control, say they are still seeking to confirm Ma’s statement. Australia’s chief medical officer, Brendan Murphy, told reporters on Monday that expert panels were not yet convinced that the virus could be spread by people who were still symptom-free.

[Chinese coronavirus infections, death toll soar as fifth case is confirmed in U.S.]

Some researchers say even small degree of porousness in the quarantine effort could have magnified implications for the epidemic’s toll.

In a study published Saturday, Professor Yu Xiaohua at the University of Göttingen in Germany concluded that the epidemic cannot be controlled if the quarantine rate of the infectious population falls below 90 percent.

If 90 percent of patients are quarantined, his modeling suggested, the final number of cases might reach 59,000 with 1,500 deaths. But if only half the infected patients are quarantined, the final number of infected people could approach 5 million, with more than 100,000 deaths.

Cheng Min

AP

In this Jan. 26, 2020, photo released by Xinhua News Agency, members of a military medical team head for Wuhan Jinyintan Hospital in Wuhan, central China's Hubei province.

Yu, who is calling for a stricter polices to reach the 90 percent target, told The Post that the consequences of 5 million people already leaving Wuhan could turn out to be “huge.”

But he is also concerned about migrant workers from around the country returning to the big cities at the end of the New Year break, where they will live and work in close proximity to each other.

“The mobility of this huge population [of migrant workers] will cause the disease to spread again,” he said.

Even Yu’s optimistic scenario would make the current epidemic considerably more deadly than the 2002-3 SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome) outbreak, which infected more than 8,000 people and killed nearly 800.

“Based on the Chinese system, 90 percent quarantine rate can be easily achieved, just by stopping people moving. The Communist Party can reach that goal,” he said, but warned that the economy would take a massive hit. One week's closure of the economy would shave 2 percentage points off the gross domestic product.

“How to balance that — that’s a political decision,” Yu said.

China’s cabinet, the State Council, announced Monday it would extend the Lunar New Year holiday period to reduce the number of travelers. Schools in cities like Beijing delayed the start of the spring semester by as much as two weeks.

On Monday, numerous Chinese city governments posted statements urging citizens who had recently traveled to the epidemic regions to quarantine themselves on their own accord.

[China’s coronavirus lockdown — brought to you by authoritarianism]

But already, stories are emerging of just how difficult it will be to enforce the quarantine.

Taiwanese authorities on Saturday fined an infected man who had traveled to Wuhan — and then hid his symptoms to enter Taiwan before going dancing in a nightclub. Eighty people were identified as coming into contact with the infected traveler, including a nightclub employee who showed symptoms of illness, Taiwanese state media reported.

Last week, a tourist from Wuhan boasted on Chinese social media that she took anti-fever pills to enter France and dine at an upscale Lyon restaurant. Over the weekend, Malaysian police detained a Chinese couple who were traveling with a child who showed influenza-like symptoms and refused to be quarantined.

Some medical experts warn that the number of cases may be higher than the authorities know or admit, and that the mass lockdown and efforts to quarantine patients are already too late due to the government's handling of the outbreak.

In a remarkable interview with the Chinese state broadcaster on Tuesday, Zhou, the Wuhan mayor, acknowledged that his city government had not disclosed information about the epidemic in a “timely and satisfactory” manner but appeared to blame the Chinese governance system.

“I hope everyone can understand that this is an infectious disease and infectious diseases must be disclosed according to law,” he said. “We can only disclose information after we receive authorization.”

He defended the decision to lock down the city.

“To seal a city of more than 10 million people has never been done before in human history,” he told CCTV. “We are willing to be removed from office to apologize to the world if that meant we could save people’s lives.”

Frustration was mounting among Wuhan residents, who said life and commerce had all but ground to a standstill inside the metropolis. A resident surnamed Zhang who lived on the Luoyu Road, a major Wuhan artery, said nearly all restaurants were closed and the streets were completely devoid of pedestrians.

AP

AP

In this Sunday, Jan. 26, 2020 photo, an ambulance drives along a street in Wuhan in central China's Hubei Province.

Daily shipments of fresh groceries to a supermarket that remained open were sold out by midday, he said.

Jan Renders, a Belgian Ph.D. student in Wuhan, said many pharmacies around the city were closed. A pharmacist that was still open sounded apologetic for charging him far higher prices than normal — about $16 — for two bottles of antibiotics and disinfectant, he said.

Chinese officials have acknowledged that a challenge remains providing medical supplies and care to the Hubei province countryside, where the disease could be spreading unabated.

[In Wuhan’s virus wards, plenty of stress but shortages of everything else]

A Chinese volunteer based in Sichuan province who has been coordinating nationwide donations to 130 hospitals in Hubei said the “lion’s share” of state resources have gone to Wuhan but smaller towns and rural villagers were in urgent need of masks and protective gear.

Huangmei County, located in Huanggang and with a population of a million, reported being short of a million face masks and a million surgical masks, said the volunteer, who asked to be identified by his surname, Luo.

“All of them are grappling with a rising number of patients and are running of supplies very soon,” Luo said.

In Hong Kong, everyone arriving from the mainland will have to sign a health declaration and could be subject to a penalty of six months in jail or a fine of about $650 for giving false information.

As the territory confirmed its eight case of the virus, authorities say they are considering stronger measures and have opened the possibility of a fuller ban on all mainland residents. Hong Kong this weekend has banned all Hubei residents from entering the territory, unless they are also Hong Kong residents.

“We have to consider whether it’s practical for us to ban all mainland residents from entering and leaving Hong Kong, and whether we can implement such a measure promptly,” said Health Secretary Sophia Chan.

In the United States, health officials confirmed three new cases — one in Arizona and two in California — bringing the total to five. The patients — in Southern California, Chicago, Arizona and Washington state — had traveled from Wuhan, officials with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said. All are hospitalized.

Health officials expect more American cases, Nancy Messonnier, director of the CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, told reporters. But the virus is not believed to be spreading from person to person in the United States, she said.

Patients also have been confirmed in France, South Korea, Japan, Nepal, Thailand, Singapore, Vietnam, Taiwan and Australia.

Lyric Li in Beijing and Shibani Mahtani in Hong Kong contributed to this report.

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2020-01-27 10:21:00Z
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