Wednesday, January 1, 2020

Today's Headlines: Protesters Attack U.S. Embassy in Iraq, Chanting ‘Death to America’

Science Panel Staffed With Trump Appointees Says E.P.A. Rollbacks Lack Scientific Rigor
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Wednesday, January 1, 2020

Top News

Protesters Attack U.S. Embassy in Iraq, Chanting 'Death to America'

Protesters Attack U.S. Embassy in Iraq, Chanting 'Death to America'

By FALIH HASSAN, BEN HUBBARD and ALISSA J. RUBIN

President Trump blamed Iran after demonstrators breached the compound's outer wall. Tensions are high after American airstrikes killed members of an Iran-backed militia.

Science Panel Staffed With Trump Appointees Says E.P.A. Rollbacks Lack Scientific Rigor

Science Panel Staffed With Trump Appointees Says E.P.A. Rollbacks Lack Scientific Rigor

By CORAL DAVENPORT and LISA FRIEDMAN

The Trump administration staffed an E.P.A. advisory panel with its choice of scientists, but they concluded that three significant regulatory rollbacks broke with established science.

Carlos Ghosn's Escape: A Lawyer in Beirut, a French Passport and a Lot of Mystery

Carlos Ghosn's Escape: A Lawyer in Beirut, a French Passport and a Lot of Mystery

By BEN DOOLEY and MICHAEL CORKERY

The prominent former auto executive eluded authorities and the news media to flee while awaiting trial, setting off a flurry of speculation.

For more top news, go to NYTimes.com »
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Editors' Picks

New Year's Eve 2020: Pictures From Around the World

World

New Year's Eve 2020: Pictures From Around the World

By SARAH ECKINGER

Confetti is flying as the new year makes its way across the globe.

Where Are All the Women Coaches?

Opinion

Where Are All the Women Coaches?

By CAROL HUTCHINS, EDNIESHA CURRY and MEREDITH FLAHERTY

Title IX got women playing college sports. Now it's time to let them lead.

Today's Videos

Scenes From Attack on U.S. Embassy in Iraq

VideoVideo: Scenes From Attack on U.S. Embassy in Iraq

By THE NEW YORK TIMES

Protesters attacked the United States Embassy in Baghdad in response to American airstrikes on an Iranian-backed militia in Iraq. Many of the demonstrators were members of that militia and others.

Where Are All the Women Coaches?

VideoVideo: Where Are All the Women Coaches?

Title IX got women playing college sports. Now it's time to let them lead.

Secret Video Offers Rare Look Inside Chinese Labor Program

VideoVideo: Secret Video Offers Rare Look Inside Chinese Labor Program

By MUYI XIAO, CHRISTOPH KOETTL, NATALIE RENEAU and DREW JORDAN

China is relocating Uighurs and other Muslim minorities to urban areas as part of a contentious labor program. The Times obtained rare footage taken inside one.

Opinion

Protect Veterans From Fraud

Protect Veterans From Fraud

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

Congress could do much more to protect Americans who have served their country from predatory for-profit colleges.

Republican Women Are in Crisis

Republican Women Are in Crisis

By NANCY L. COHEN

In the past 10 years, they have become an endangered species on the political stage.

The Year in Charts

The Year in Charts

By STEVEN RATTNER

Tweets, trade wars, impeachment. Will all the commotion affect Trump's re-election chances in 2020?

No More Phones and Other Tech Predictions for the Next Decade

No More Phones and Other Tech Predictions for the Next Decade

By KARA SWISHER

Despair not. What's coming in the next few years might be a lot better than you expect.

Doctors, Nurses and the Paperwork Crisis That Could Unite Them

Doctors, Nurses and the Paperwork Crisis That Could Unite Them

By THERESA BROWN and STEPHEN BERGMAN

They don't always get along. But they are both under siege by the bureaucracy of a failing health care system.

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Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Secretary Michael R. Pompeo With Major Garrett of CBS Evening News

You are subscribed to Secretary's Remarks for U.S. Department of State. This information has recently been updated, and is now available.

12/31/2019 08:45 PM EST

Michael R. Pompeo, Secretary of State

QUESTION:  Also today, North Korea's Kim Jong-un issued a new warning to the United States.  We spoke about that and the developments in Iraq with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in a broadcast network exclusive.

What is the situation at the embassy right now?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  So the embassy is being monitored.  It's safe.  The actions that we took today were prudent.  Under President Trump's direction, our team worked together today to quickly, decisively, prudently take the appropriate responses to keep our American people safe.

QUESTION:  How close were we to either evacuating any part of the embassy or repelling the protesters or militants by force?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  So we never contemplated evacuating the facility today.  But the American people should know that President Trump and our team are working diligently to make sure that we keep this facility secure.

QUESTION:  To what degree were we caught off guard?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  We've known for a long time that there was this risk.  It's been 40 years that the Islamic Republic of Iran has been at this, and we've watched them continue to take actions.  We saw them take actions that killed an American in Iraq just this past week.  We saw the United States act decisively to respond to that in a way to signal to them that we would do precisely what I've said, precisely what President Trump said we would do, when American interests and American lives were at stake.

QUESTION:  To what degree did the Iraqi Government let us down, letting them get as close as they got to the compound of the embassy?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  So early this morning, I made clear when I spoke with the Iraqi leadership that the Iraqis have the responsibility to keep our facilities safe.

QUESTION:  Did they live up to that?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  They have responded.  They brought counterterrorism forces to bear.  We reminded them throughout the day of their continued responsibility, and we told them where we thought there was risk that things weren't happening the way we needed it to happen.  And so we'll make sure they continue to live up to their obligation to help keep our facilities safe.

QUESTION:  Does that mean we will not see a repeat of this tomorrow or the next day or the next day?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  It's a serious situation.  We're watching.  We'll make sure that we're doing all the things that we need to do, and we'll continue to ask the Iraqi Government to do the things that they have a responsibility to do.

QUESTION:  Should the American people contemplate being on a war footing in 2020 where Iran is concerned?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  This is state-sponsored terror.  This is Iranian-backed terrorism that took place that threatened American interests.  We've taken a fundamentally different approach.  We have starved them of resources, we have denied them access, we have put pressure on the Iranian leadership, and I think you see that.

QUESTION:  Let me move you to North Korea, because just before you came in, Mr. Secretary, a couple of things were announced by the state media in North Korea.  One, that, according to Kim Jong-un on the state media, the world will, quote, "witness a new strategic weapon to be possessed by the DPRK," meaning North Korea, in the near future, and that North Korea is ending its moratorium on nuclear and ballistic missile testing.

Have you ever been more concerned about the future of U.S.-North Korean relations than you are right now?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  I was more concerned about it when this administration took office.  We were in a place where it was very likely that we would have ended up in a war with the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, North Korea.  President Trump has taken an approach where we've tried to develop a diplomatic pathway.  We hope that the North Koreans will reconsider, that they'll continue down that pathway.  It's important.  It's the right solution.  We want peace, not confrontation.

QUESTION:  These two announcements do not alarm you?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  I'm concerned about a lot of things every day, Major.

QUESTION:  Right.  But I mean —

SECRETARY POMPEO:  I'll be honest.  I saw this —

QUESTION:  — does it strike you as a turnaway from where you were, where the U.S. and North Korea were?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  If Chairman Kim has reneged on the commitments he made to President Trump, that is deeply disappointing.  I was there when Chairman Kim made the commitment that said he would not engage in intercontinental missiles or test-firing of their nuclear weapons, testing their nuclear weapons systems.  He made those commitments to President Trump in exchange for President Trump agreeing not to conduct large-scale military exercises.  We've lived up to our commitments.  We continue to hold out hope that he'll live up to his as well.

QUESTION:  Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, thank you so much for your time.

SECRETARY POMPEO:  Thank you very much, Major.

QUESTION:  Good to see you.

SECRETARY POMPEO:  Good to see you as well, sir.

 


This email was sent to stevenmagallanes520.nims@blogger.com using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of: U.S. Department of State · 2201 C Street NW · Washington, DC 20520 GovDelivery logo

Secretary Michael R. Pompeo With Major Garrett of CBS Evening News

You are subscribed to Press Releases for U.S. Department of State. This information has recently been updated, and is now available.

12/31/2019 08:45 PM EST

Michael R. Pompeo, Secretary of State

QUESTION:  Also today, North Korea's Kim Jong-un issued a new warning to the United States.  We spoke about that and the developments in Iraq with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in a broadcast network exclusive.

What is the situation at the embassy right now?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  So the embassy is being monitored.  It's safe.  The actions that we took today were prudent.  Under President Trump's direction, our team worked together today to quickly, decisively, prudently take the appropriate responses to keep our American people safe.

QUESTION:  How close were we to either evacuating any part of the embassy or repelling the protesters or militants by force?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  So we never contemplated evacuating the facility today.  But the American people should know that President Trump and our team are working diligently to make sure that we keep this facility secure.

QUESTION:  To what degree were we caught off guard?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  We've known for a long time that there was this risk.  It's been 40 years that the Islamic Republic of Iran has been at this, and we've watched them continue to take actions.  We saw them take actions that killed an American in Iraq just this past week.  We saw the United States act decisively to respond to that in a way to signal to them that we would do precisely what I've said, precisely what President Trump said we would do, when American interests and American lives were at stake.

QUESTION:  To what degree did the Iraqi Government let us down, letting them get as close as they got to the compound of the embassy?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  So early this morning, I made clear when I spoke with the Iraqi leadership that the Iraqis have the responsibility to keep our facilities safe.

QUESTION:  Did they live up to that?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  They have responded.  They brought counterterrorism forces to bear.  We reminded them throughout the day of their continued responsibility, and we told them where we thought there was risk that things weren't happening the way we needed it to happen.  And so we'll make sure they continue to live up to their obligation to help keep our facilities safe.

QUESTION:  Does that mean we will not see a repeat of this tomorrow or the next day or the next day?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  It's a serious situation.  We're watching.  We'll make sure that we're doing all the things that we need to do, and we'll continue to ask the Iraqi Government to do the things that they have a responsibility to do.

QUESTION:  Should the American people contemplate being on a war footing in 2020 where Iran is concerned?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  This is state-sponsored terror.  This is Iranian-backed terrorism that took place that threatened American interests.  We've taken a fundamentally different approach.  We have starved them of resources, we have denied them access, we have put pressure on the Iranian leadership, and I think you see that.

QUESTION:  Let me move you to North Korea, because just before you came in, Mr. Secretary, a couple of things were announced by the state media in North Korea.  One, that, according to Kim Jong-un on the state media, the world will, quote, "witness a new strategic weapon to be possessed by the DPRK," meaning North Korea, in the near future, and that North Korea is ending its moratorium on nuclear and ballistic missile testing.

Have you ever been more concerned about the future of U.S.-North Korean relations than you are right now?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  I was more concerned about it when this administration took office.  We were in a place where it was very likely that we would have ended up in a war with the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, North Korea.  President Trump has taken an approach where we've tried to develop a diplomatic pathway.  We hope that the North Koreans will reconsider, that they'll continue down that pathway.  It's important.  It's the right solution.  We want peace, not confrontation.

QUESTION:  These two announcements do not alarm you?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  I'm concerned about a lot of things every day, Major.

QUESTION:  Right.  But I mean —

SECRETARY POMPEO:  I'll be honest.  I saw this —

QUESTION:  — does it strike you as a turnaway from where you were, where the U.S. and North Korea were?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  If Chairman Kim has reneged on the commitments he made to President Trump, that is deeply disappointing.  I was there when Chairman Kim made the commitment that said he would not engage in intercontinental missiles or test-firing of their nuclear weapons, testing their nuclear weapons systems.  He made those commitments to President Trump in exchange for President Trump agreeing not to conduct large-scale military exercises.  We've lived up to our commitments.  We continue to hold out hope that he'll live up to his as well.

QUESTION:  Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, thank you so much for your time.

SECRETARY POMPEO:  Thank you very much, Major.

QUESTION:  Good to see you.

SECRETARY POMPEO:  Good to see you as well, sir.

 


This email was sent to stevenmagallanes520.nims@blogger.com using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of: U.S. Department of State · 2201 C Street NW · Washington, DC 20520 GovDelivery logo

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