President Biden calls for Congressional support after bridge collapse


President Biden calls for Congressional support after bridge collapse – CBS News

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President Joe Biden has made it clear that he wants the full support of Congress to help Baltimore recover from the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge. The state has already received $60 million in emergency relief funding.

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Republican voters express support for Trump despite legal cases


Republican voters express support for Trump despite legal cases – CBS News

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Many Republican voters in key battleground states are standing behind former President Donald Trump amid his mounting legal troubles. With the “hush money” trial set to start April 15, the presumptive GOP nominee will spend a lot of time in the courtroom ahead of November. CBS News’ Major Garrett, Fin Gómez and Katrina Kaufman join with more.

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Putin is likely counting on Trump or another Republican to win the 2024 election in hopes that the US will cut support to Ukraine, officials say


  • US officials are concerned Putin is prolonging efforts in Ukraine in hopes Trump wins in 2024, CNN reported.

  • Putin likely believes Trump in the White House would mean dwindling US support for Ukraine.

  • But whether Putin can maintain his war effort for another 15 months is increasingly questionable.

Western officials are increasingly worried that Russian President Vladimir Putin is prolonging his efforts in Ukraine in the hopes that former President Donald Trump or another Republican candidate will take the White House in 2024 and cut US funding to Ukraine, CNN reported this week, citing four US officials.

The US has not received specific information about whether Putin is factoring the 2024 election into his long-term plans in Ukraine, government officials told the outlet, but the coming election is nonetheless top-of-mind for national security officials and diplomats.

“Putin knows Trump will help him. And so do the Ukrainians and our European partners,” one unnamed source told CNN. “So even though we haven’t seen anything explicitly to that effect, you have to assume, I believe, that everyone is thinking it.”

Another US official told CNN they have “no doubt” that Putin is “trying to hold out” until the next election, while a European official said they think allowing the war to wage on until the election is “exactly Putin’s plan.”

As Ukraine continues to execute its much-anticipated counteroffensive to slow and stunted effect, there are no indications that the war is slowing. Some analysts have projected that the conflict could continue in some way for years.

If Putin is waiting on Trump, or a like-minded politician to win in November 2024, that means he is planning on seeing Russia through at least 15 more months of war. But that strategy in reality could be logistically challenging given Russia’s mounting manpower problems, the growing dysfunction within its depleted ranks, and Putin’s own waning power following the Wagner Group uprising earlier this summer.

Still, officials told CNN they believe Putin may see another Trump presidency as a saving grace for Russia, a likely safe bet given Trump’s repeated defenses of Putin in the year-and-a-half since Russia invaded Ukraine. Following the invasion, Trump called Putin’s justification for beginning the conflict “genius,” and later blamed the US for the war, accusing American politicians of “almost forcing” Putin to invade.

Polls suggest Trump is the clear GOP frontrunner despite his myriad legal troubles, which included a third criminal indictment handed down this week. The former president has not definitively said whether he would continue to support Ukraine should he win, but he called on Republican lawmakers this week to withhold military aid to the country until President Joe Biden agrees to congressional probes into his son Hunter Biden.

“The election next year complicates things because the Russians think they have a light at the end of the tunnel. It encourages Putin to think that they can outlast the Americans because political support for Ukraine will be compromised if Trump wins,” Daniel Fried, a former US ambassador to Poland, told CNN.

Putin’s possible long-game makes ongoing US assistance to Ukraine all the more important in the meantime, officials told the outlet.

But a CNN poll conducted by SSRS and released this week suggested support for Ukraine is dwindling among the American electorate. Fifty-five percent of the Americans polled responded that they believe Congress should not approve more funding to support Ukraine.

The Biden administration, however, has no plans to stop supporting Ukraine anytime soon, US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said in comments last month, telling NBC’s Meet the Press that Putin will be disappointed if he hangs his hopes on the 2024 election.

“If in fact, he is betting on American resolve to falter or fail, he is going to continue losing that bet,” Sullivan said.

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Pediatricians’ group reaffirms support for gender-affirming care amid growing state restrictions



The American Academy of Pediatrics reaffirmed its support for gender-affirming medical care for transgender children on Thursday, even as the treatments face a growing push for bans and restrictions from Republican lawmakers across the U.S.

The board of directors for the group, which represents 67,000 pediatricians, unanimously voted to reaffirm its 2018 position on the treatments. The board also voted to provide additional documents to support pediatricians, including clinical and technical reports, and to conduct an external review of research regarding the care.

“The additional recommendations also reflect the fact that the board is concerned about restrictions to accessing evidence-based health care for young people who need it,” Mark Del Monte, the academy’s CEO, said in a statement released by the group, calling the restrictions enacted by states “unprecedented government intrusion.”

“We therefore need to provide the best and most transparent process possible,” he said.

At least 21 states have now enacted laws restricting or banning gender-affirming medical care for transgender minors, and most of those states face lawsuits. A federal judge struck down Arkansas’ ban as unconstitutional, and federal judges have temporarily blocked bans in Alabama and Indiana.

The judge who struck down Arkansas’ ban cited the position of the groups in his ruling against the ban. Arkansas has appealed the judge’s decision.

People opposed to such treatments for children argue they are too young to make such decisions about their futures.

Every major medical group, including the academy and the American Medical Association, has opposed the bans and has said the treatments are safe if administered properly.

The academy and the AMA support allowing children to seek the medical care, but they don’t offer age-specific guidance.



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Thousands march to support junta


Thousands of people have taken to the streets of Niger’s capital, Niamey, in support of last week’s military coup.

They condemned West African countries who have imposed sanctions on the country, and also demanded the departure of foreign troops.

Both US and France have military bases in the country to help fight Islamist militants.

A similar protest on Sunday led to attacks on the French embassy but Thursday’s demonstration was peaceful.

France, the former colonial power in Niger, had called on the military leader to ensure there was no repeat.

Previous demonstrations had seen some chanting “Long live Russia”, “Long live Putin”, and “Down with France” – the leader of Russia’s Wagner mercenary group has reportedly described the coup as a triumph.

But organisers had asked people not to wave Russian flags this time, and there were far fewer on display compared to Sunday. People had Nigerien flags instead.

It isn’t clear if this was because Russia has issued a statement calling for the return to power of the ousted president, Mohamed Bazoum, and negotiations, or because Thursday is Niger’s Independence Day.

Mr Bazoum, the first democratically elected president to succeed another in Niger, was detained by his own guards last week.

Correspondents in the country say there are also many people who are opposed to the coup.

The Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas), a trade bloc of 15 West African countries, has imposed financial and trade sanctions. It has also threatened to use force if President Bazoum is not reinstated by Sunday.

Senegal on Thursday said it would send troops if the bloc decided on military intervention. Foreign Minister Aissata Tall Sall said there had been one “coup too many” in the region. The army has seized power in neighbouring Mali, Burkina Faso and Guinea in recent years.

“Senegalese soldiers, for all these reasons, will go there,” she said.

Niger’s electricity company says that neighbouring Nigeria has cut electricity supplies, leading to widespread power cuts, although this has not been confirmed by Nigeria.

On Wednesday evening, coup leader Gen Abdourahmane Tchiani warned against “any interference in the internal affairs” of the country.

Gen Tchiani, a former chief of the presidential guard to Mr Bazoum, seized power on 26 July.

In a televised address on Wednesday, Gen Tchiani said the military regime rejected the Ecowas “sanctions as a whole and refuses to give in to any threat, wherever it comes from”.

He labelled the sanctions “cynical and iniquitous” and said they were intended to “humiliate” Niger’s security forces and make the country “ungovernable”.

Hundreds of foreign nationals have been evacuated from Niger. The US has ordered a partial evacuation of its embassy and more than 1,000 French and Europeans have been flown out of the country.



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Bahamas promises to join Kenya in security force in Haiti as support grows


(Reuters) -The Bahamian government on Tuesday welcomed Kenya’s decision to lead a multinational force in Haiti and committed 150 people to support the effort if the United Nations authorizes the force.

The announcement from the Bahamas’ foreign ministry follows a request on Monday from U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres that Haiti’s neighbors join forces with Kenya, which last week said it was willing to send 1,000 police officers to Haiti to help stem gang violence.

“The Bahamas has committed 150 persons to support the multi-national force once authorized by the United Nations Security Council,” the ministry said in a statement.

The Bahamas’ statement echoed comments from Kenyan Foreign Minister Alfred Mutua, who described the security intervention as an opportunity to stand “with persons of African descent across the world.”

It added the Bahamas looks “forward to cooperating with hemispheric partners including the United States and Canada.”

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Tuesday commended Kenya for “considering to serve as the lead nation” for the multinational force and expressed support for its authorization from a UN Security Council Resolution.

In a statement on Tuesday, the Washington-based Organization of American States said the group’s general secretariat “welcomes with appreciation” Kenya’s announcement.

Haiti’s government requested international security assistance last year, attracting the UN’s support for a security force to be deployed by member states, but no country had been willing to lead such an effort until Kenya’s commitment.

Regional governments have been reluctant to support the unelected administration of Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry, who has said fair elections cannot be held with the current insecurity.

(Reporting by Brendan O’Boyle and Jasper Ward; Editing by Anthony Esposito and Chris Reese)



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Niger crisis deepens as France plans evacuation and coup leaders get support from neighboring juntas


NIAMEY, Niger (AP) — France prepared to evacuate French and other European nationals from Niger on Tuesday, telling them to carry no more than a small bag, after a military coup there won backing from three other West African nations ruled by mutinous soldiers.

The French Foreign Ministry in Paris cited recent violence that targeted the French Embassy in Niamey, the capital, as one of the reasons for the decision.

The closure of Niger’s airspace also “leaves our compatriots unable to leave the country by their own means,” the ministry said.

The evacuation comes during a deepening crisis sparked by the coup last week against Niger’s democratically elected president, Mohamed Bazoum.

The evacuation was starting Tuesday for French and other European citizens who wish to leave, the French ministry said in a statement. It gave no other details. It estimates that several hundred French citizens are in Niger at the moment.

In hotels in the capital, French and other European citizens, including some who have worked in the country for years, packed their bags awaiting news of where and when the evacuation would happen.

“My job is not finished, I hope the situation will finish and one day soon we can come back,” a former French military official who is now training the Nigerien army as a civilian told The Associated Press. “This happened very quickly and no one saw this coming. I was really surprised,” he said, speaking on condition of anonymity for security reasons.

The West African regional body known as ECOWAS announced travel and economic sanctions against Niger on Sunday and said it could use force if the coup leaders don’t reinstate Bazoum within one week. Bazoum’s government was one of the West’s last democratic partners against West African extremists.

In a joint statement, the military governments of Mali and Burkina Faso said that “any military intervention against Niger will be considered as a declaration of war against Burkina Faso and Mali.”

Col. Abdoulaye Maiga, Mali’s state minister for territorial administration and decentralization, read the statement on Malian state TV Monday evening. The two countries also denounced the ECOWAS economic sanctions as “illegal, illegitimate and inhumane” and refused to apply them.

ECOWAS suspended all commercial and financial transactions between its member states and Niger, as well as freezing Nigerien assets held in regional central banks. Niger relies heavily on foreign aid, and sanctions could further impoverish its more than 25 million people.

Mali and Burkina Faso have each undergone two coups since 2020, as soldiers overthrew governments claiming they could do a better job fighting increasing jihadi violence linked to al-Qaida and the Islamic State group. ECOWAS has sanctioned both countries and suspended them from the bloc, but never threatened to use force.

Also on Sunday, Guinea, another country under military rule since 2021, issued a statement in support of Niger’s junta and urged ECOWAS to “come to its senses.”

“The sanctions measures advocated by ECOWAS, including military intervention, are an option that would not be a solution to the current problem, but would lead to a human disaster whose consequences could extend beyond Niger’s borders,” said Ibrahima Sory Bangoura, general of the brigade, in a statement from the ruling party. He added that Guinea would not apply the sanctions.

Niger’s coup will embolden jihadi violence, increase recruitment across the country and threaten regional stability, a former jihadi member said last week.

Boubacar Moussa, a former member of an al-Qaida linked group known as JNIM, said the military overthrow is exactly what the jihadis want because it will distract and weaken the army. “Jihadis are very supportive of this coup that happened in Niger, because it will allow them to become very strong,” he said.

Moussa, who spoke to the AP in Niamey, is part of a nationwide program to bring back jihadis, reintegrate them into society and use their help in counterterrorism efforts. It was spearheaded by Bazoum when he was minister of interior and is intended as an alternative to a military solution to stem violence across the country. The AP cannot verify that Moussa actively fought for JNIM.

In anticipation of the ECOWAS decision Sunday, thousands of pro-junta supporters took to the streets in Niamey, denouncing France, waving Russian flags along with signs reading “Down with France” and supporting Russian President Vladimir Putin and telling the international community to stay away.

There has been no clear explanation of the references to Russia, but some demonstrators regard the country as symbolizing their anti-Western feelings.

Protesters also burned down a door and smashed windows at the French Embassy before the Nigerien army dispersed them.

The evacuation was announced by France’s embassy in an email sent to French nationals in Niamey. The message said the evacuation would be an airlift and that the spouses and children of French nationals were also eligible. It asked people to pack one small bag per person and to also take water, a bit of food, phones and batteries.

Niger could be following in the same footsteps as Mali and Burkina Faso, both of which saw protesters waving Russian flags after their coups, analysts say. After the second coup in Burkina Faso in September, protesters also attacked the French Embassy in the capital, Ouagadougou, and damaged and ransacked the Institut Francais, France’s international cultural promotion organization.

If ECOWAS uses force, it could also trigger violence between civilians supporting the coup and those against it, Niger analysts say.

While unlikely, “the consequences on civilians of such an approach if putschists chose confrontation would be catastrophic,” said Rida Lyammouri, senior fellow at the Policy Center for the New South, a Morocco-based think tank.

Lyammouri does not see a “military intervention happening because of the violence that could trigger,” he said.

But a Western diplomat in Niamey, who did not want to be identified for security reasons, said the first sanctions used against the coup plotters haven’t worked so there is resolve to use military force, which could include troops from Nigeria, Benin and Ivory Coast. Niger is being squeezed and if imports are cut off, gas and food could run out quickly, the diplomat said.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Sunday commended the resolve of the ECOWAS leadership to “defend constitutional order in Niger” after the sanctions announcement, and joined the bloc in calling for the immediate release of Bazoum and his family.

Also Sunday, junta spokesman Col. Maj. Amadou Abdramane banned the use of social media to put out messages he described as harmful to state security. He also claimed without evidence that Bazoum’s government had authorized the French to carry out strikes to free Bazoum.

The human rights group Amnesty International urged the new authorities to release Bazoum and his family as well as the minister of the interior and all others who have been detained. Since seizing power, the junta has arrested several government officials and political leaders, said Habibatou Gologo, the group’s deputy regional director for West and Central Africa.

Observers believe Bazoum is being held at his house in Niamey. The first photos of him since the coup appeared Sunday evening, sitting on a couch smiling beside Chad President Mahamat Deby, who had flown in to mediate between the government and the junta.

Both the United States and France have sent troops and hundreds of millions of dollars of military and humanitarian aid in recent years to Niger, which was a French colony until 1960. The country was seen as the last working with the West against extremism in a Francophone region where anti-French sentiment opened the way for the Russian private military group Wagner.

After neighboring Mali and Burkina Faso ousted the French military and began working with Wagner mercenaries, Blinken visited Niger in March to strengthen ties and announce $150 million in direct assistance, calling the country “a model of democracy.”

The U.S. will consider cutting aid if the coup is successful, the State Department said Monday. Aid is “very much in the balance depending on the outcome of the actions in the country,” said department spokesman Matt Miller. “U.S. assistance hinges on continued democratic governance in Niger.”

The sanctions could be disastrous and Niger needs to find a solution to avoid them, Prime Minister Ouhoumoudou Mahamadou told French media outlet Radio France Internationale on Sunday.

“When people say there’s an embargo, land borders are closed, air borders are closed, it’s extremely difficult for people. … Niger is a country that relies heavily on the international community,” he said.

In the capital, many people live in makeshift shelters tied together with slats of wood, sheets and plastic tarps because they can’t pay rent. They scramble daily to make enough money to feed their children.

Since the 1990s, the 15-nation ECOWAS has tried to protect democracies against the threat of coups, with mixed success.

Four nations are run by military governments in West and Central Africa, where there have been nine successful or attempted coups since 2020.

___

AP journalist John Leicester in Paris contributed to this report.

___

This story corrects the name order and affiliation of jihadi member to Boubacar Moussa, a former member of an al-Qaida linked group known as JNIM.



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Polls show Trump with majority support for GOP nomination


Polls show Trump with majority support for GOP nomination – CBS News

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According to a recent poll by the New York Times, former President Donald Trump is 37% ahead of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in the race for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination. The nearly dozen other candidates still poll at 3% or less. CBS News chief Washington correspondent Major Garrett joined to discuss how Trump’s dominance in the polls is impacting the race.

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Putin election candidates avoid mentioning Ukraine as war support plummets


Support for Vladimir Putin’s war in Ukraine is faltering in Russia

Support for Vladimir Putin’s war in Ukraine is faltering in Russia – Mikhail Metzel/Pool via AP

Vladimir Putin’s candidates for local elections in Russia are avoiding talking about the war in Ukraine amid fears that it could lose them votes, according to opposition media.

United Russia party sources in the Urals region told Verstka website they had shredded pro-war campaign leaflets.

“There is not a single person here who supports the war. There are no Z-machines here,” the source in Putin’s party said. “If you support the war, you will not be elected.”

Verstka reported that high-profile candidates in the elections, being held on Sept 10, still had to support the conflict publicly, but more low-profile hopefuls were shying away from the subject.

“The reaction is too unpredictable,” said Stanislav Andreychuk, the co-chairman of Golos, a Russian vote-monitoring NGO.

He described how Sergei Sokol, a United Russia MP who has served in a VIP battalion in occupied Ukraine, has toned down his comments on the war and has stopped wearing his camouflage military jacket since he was nominated to contest the governorship of the Khakassia region in Siberia.

Verstka’s report is an insight into how support for Putin’s war in Ukraine is faltering in Russia, 17 months after the president ordered his full-scale invasion.

Western analysts have said that more than 200,000 Russians have been killed or injured in the war. This week, another Russian opposition website reported that overworked doctors in regional hospitals were resigning because of the stress of having to treat so many mentally and physically broken soldiers.

“There are almost no doctors left, and now the last ones are leaving because of unrealistic requirements on them,” a source in the Kemerovo region of Siberia told the New Tablet.

Citizens are also feeling the economic pain. This month, the Russian Central Bank raised interest rates for the first time in a year, warning of inflation linked to a sharp drop in Russia’s labour force.

Ozon, a Russian online retailer, has said it will follow car manufacturer AvtoVAZ and hire convicts to plug shortages. The 500 convicts will pack boxes in its warehouses but, Ozon insisted, will not courier products to customers.

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Thousands of pro-Russia protesters march through Niger capital in support of coup


Demonstrators hold a Russian flag and banners during the gathering in support of the putschist soldiers in the capital Niamey

Demonstrators hold a Russian flag and banners during the gathering in support of the putschist soldiers in the capital Niamey – REUTERS

Supporters of the coup in Niger attempted to storm the French embassy on Sunday after marching through the capital waving Russian flags and chanting the name of Vladimir Putin.

Thousands of backers of the military junta gathered outside the diplomatic mission of former colonial power France, stoning the premises and setting the door on fire.

As crowds chanted “long live Putin” and “down with France”, some supporters attempted to storm the entrance, before the crowd was dispersed by Nigerien soldiers firing tear gas.

Emmanuel Macron warned that anyone who attacked French nationals or diplomats would meet “immediate and intractable” retaliation.

Niger had been seen as the last reliable partner for the West in efforts to battle the jihadists in Africa’s Sahel region, where Russia and Western countries have vied for influence. France has 1,500 soldiers in the country who conduct joint operations with the Nigeriens.

Protesters cheer Nigerien troops as they gather in front of the French Embassy in Niamey

Protesters cheer Nigerien troops as they gather in front of the French Embassy in Niamey – AFP

In the third coup to fell a leader in Africa’s the Sahel in as many years, Mohamed Bazoum, Niger’s elected president, has been held by the military since Wednesday.

General Abdourahamane Tchiani, the head of the powerful presidential guard, has declared himself leader.

On Sunday at an emergency meeting in Abuja, Nigeria, the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas) said it was suspending relations with Niger and authorised the use of force if the president was not reinstated within a week.

“In the event the authorities’ demands are not met within one week, take all measures necessary to restore constitutional order in the Republic of Niger. Such measures may include the use of force. To this effect, the chiefs of defence staff of Ecowas are to meet immediately,” Omar Alieu Touray, president of the Ecowas commission, said after the meeting.

Last year, Ecowas leaders agreed to create a regional security force to intervene against jihadists and prevent military coups, but details on the force and its funding are still unclear.

Any intervention would mark the first time Ecowas has turned to military action in its history.

In a statement read out on national television on Saturday evening, Niger junta member Amadou Abdramane said the summit’s aim was to “approve a plan of aggression against Niger, in the form of an imminent military intervention in Niamey”.

The intervention would be “in co-operation with African countries who are not members of the regional body and certain Western nations”, he added.

Demonstrators gather in support of the army coup in Niamey, the capital city of Niger

Demonstrators gather in support of the army coup in Niamey, the capital city of Niger – REUTERS

President Mohamed Bazoum was democratically elected two years ago in Niger’s first peaceful transfer of power since independence from France in 1960.

The coup leaders said they overthrew him because he wasn’t able to secure the nation against growing jihadi violence.

But some analysts and Nigeriens say that was a pretext for a takeover that is more about internal power struggles than securing the nation.

“Everybody is wondering: why this coup? That’s because no one was expecting it. We couldn’t expect a coup in Niger because there’s no social, political or security situation that would justify that the military take the power,” Prof Amad Hassane Boubacar, who teaches at the University of Niamey, told the Associated Press news agency.

He said Mr Bazoum wanted to replace General Tchiani, who is now in charge of the country.

Nigeriens holding a Russian flag and placards reading ‘France kills Niger’ and ‘For a new Niger long live CNSP’

Nigeriens holding a Russian flag and placards reading ‘France kills Niger’ and ‘For a new Niger long live CNSP’ – Sam Mednick/AP

While Niger’s security situation is dire, it is not as bad as neighbouring Burkina Faso or Mali, which have also been battling an Islamic insurgency linked to al-Qaeda and the Islamic State group.

On Saturday, Josep Borrell, the European Union diplomatic chief said the EU would not recognise the putschists, and announced the indefinite suspension of security cooperation with Niger with immediate effect, as well as budgetary aid.

The United States – which has about 1,000 troops in Niger – has offered Mr Bazoum Washington’s steadfast support and warned those detaining him that they were “threatening years of successful co-operation and hundreds of millions of dollars of assistance”.

Landlocked Niger often ranks last in the United Nations’ Human Development Index, despite vast deposits of uranium.

It has had a turbulent political history since gaining independence in 1960, with four coups as well as numerous other attempts – including two previously against Mr Bazoum.

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