Anonymous ID: 384be8 June 11, 2018, 9:33 p.m. No.1709697   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9712 >>9733 >>9738

Nike won't supply Iran World Cup team with cleats due to U.S. sanctions

 

Nike has canceled an agreement to be the official footwear supplier of the Iranian national soccer team for the 2018 World Cup due to U.S. sanctions against the country.

 

Now, Iran must find a different company to supply the team’s cleats for the tournament before it begins later this week.

 

“U.S. sanctions mean that, as a U.S. company, Nike cannot supply shoes to players in the Iranian national team at this time,” the company said in a statement. “Sanctions applicable to Nike have been in place for many years and are enforceable by law.”

 

President Donald Trump imposed tougher economic sanctions on Iran last month while also pulling out of the Iranian nuclear deal.

 

The World Cup begins Thursday in Russia. Iran’s first match in Group B is Friday against Morocco.

 

Hardly a sporting power on the world stage, this marks the first time Iran will play in consecutive World Cups. The country will be appearing for the fifth time, but has only won one match and has never emerged from the group stage.

 

Despite that history, Iran was one of the top qualifiers from the Asian Football Confederation this time around.

 

https:// www.washingtontimes.com/news/2018/jun/11/nike-wont-supply-iran-world-cup-team-cleats-due-us/

Anonymous ID: 384be8 June 11, 2018, 9:36 p.m. No.1709722   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Kim Jong-un, North Koreans called 'masters at managing the media'

 

There are 3,000 credentialed journalists currently in Singapore to cover the historic and unprecedented meeting between President Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un. Broadcast coverage of the event has been non-stop for the last 24 hours.

 

With his previous reality TV experience and constant media appearances as president, Mr. Trump often has been cited for his ability to manage the close scrutiny of the press and still retain fairly positive favorability ratings.

 

How about the other side?

 

“The North Koreans — and specifically Kim Jong-un — are becoming masters at managing the media, and I suspect will do just fine with all of the intense coverage,” Harry J. Kazianis, director of Defense Studies at the Center for the National Interest and executive editor of The National Interest Magazine, said in a statement to The Washington Times.

 

“In fact, I would suspect they love it. For if they are able to get the ultimate prize — a picture with President Trump and Kim shaking hands — they will have completed an image makeover they have been working towards since January,” Mr. Kazianis said. “For North Korea, the media is a great way to showcase their nation as not the pariah state or rogue nation they are, but a potential partner that seeks detente — and that would be very dangerous.”

 

https:// www.washingtontimes.com/news/2018/jun/11/kim-jong-un-north-koreans-called-masters-at-managi/

Anonymous ID: 384be8 June 11, 2018, 9:42 p.m. No.1709792   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9977 >>0202

Trump and Kim to take a walk around Capella hotel after lunch

 

https:// graphics.straitstimes.com/STI/STIMEDIA/Interactives/2018/06/trump-kim-summit/index.html

Anonymous ID: 384be8 June 11, 2018, 10:02 p.m. No.1709999   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0015 >>0202

Bipartisan support raised for Congressional role in nuclear talks with North Korea

 

Capitol Hill lawmakers are scrambling to prepare for the prospect that the historic summit between President Trump and Kim Jong-un will set in motion a much longer diplomatic process fraught with tense follow-on negotiations and potentially delicate nuclear inspections.

 

Congressional sources say there’s bipartisan support for giving Mr. Trump space to further the dialogue with Pyongyang, but that many lawmakers are wary about allowing negotiations to proceed without serious and formal weigh-in from Capitol Hill.

 

While the Trump administration has signaled its intention to seek at least some form of congressional approval for any final deal with North Korea, several lawmakers want direct oversight of whatever process unfolds toward the achievement of such a deal.

 

House Democrats and Republicans began pushing legislation last week that would require the administration to deliver detailed and regular reports to Congress on the core parameters for measuring progress of future negotiations with North Korea.

 

The bill would order the White House to provide information on “the status of the DPRK’s nuclear program” and update that information every 180 days.

 

“As President Trump advances denuclearization negotiations with North Korea, Congress must provide aggressive oversight,” said the House Homeland Security Committee’s Republican chairman, Rep. Michael McCaul, who co-sponsored the bill.

 

Rep. Eliot Engel, a New York Democrat, who also co-sponsored as ranking member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, added that “successful negotiation with North Korea requires understanding what the country’s capabilities are now.”

 

“Implementation of any potential deal requires tough verification that the Kim Regime is actually dismantling its weapons,” he said. “This bill will establish that baseline and help ensure that we hold Pyongyang to its obligations in any future agreement.”

 

Other co-sponsors included Republican Reps. Ted Yoho and Steve Russell, of Florida and Oklahoma, respectively, and Democrat Reps. Brad Sherman and Ted Lieu California.

 

The bipartisan bill comes amid behind-the-scenes concern that Mr. Trump may be so eager to cut a deal that he offers unwarranted concessions to Mr. Kim. Some lawmakers are also worried about the long-term implications of a major international agreement reached without explicit congressional approval.

 

Analysts have drawn comparisons to the Iran nuclear deal, which the Obama administration pushed through with other world powers — including China, Russia and the European Union — without a vote of approval by the U.S. House or Senate.

 

The result saw 2015 accord as an executive agreement rather than a treaty, which would have required a two-thirds vote by the Senate to achieve ratification. The absence of such ratification contributed to the relative ease with which Mr. Trump was recently able to withdraw the U.S. from the deal just three years after it got reached.

 

Several lawmakers and analysts maintain a lack of rigorous input from Congress allowed the Obama administration to embrace a bad deal with Iran to begin with — something Mr. Trump has emphasized as justification for his pullout from the accord.

 

With that as a backdrop, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has said the administration is “hoping to submit a document that Congress would have a say in” with regard to any deal with Pyongyang. He added congressional approval would give “comfort” to Mr. Kim that the deal won’t be easily overturned by a future administration.

 

Mr. Pompeo’s comments came after Sen. James Risch, Idaho Republican, said he was given personal assurances from Mr. Trump, Vice President Mike Pence and Mr. Pompeo that “it is there intent to craft this in such a way that it is a treaty” that will be submitted for Senate verification.

 

https:// www.washingtontimes.com/news/2018/jun/11/bipartisan-support-raised-for-congressional-role-i/

Anonymous ID: 384be8 June 11, 2018, 10:06 p.m. No.1710044   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Air Force grounds all F-15 fighters in Pacific after recent jet crash

 

Command officials at an Air Force combat wing in the Pacific have suspended all flight operations in the wake of an F-15C crash off the coast of Okinawa, according to a unit statement issued Monday.

 

Members of the 14th Air Wing based at Kadena Air Base in Okinawa announced the stand down of its F-15 training operations to allow wing and squadron commanders “reviews operational, maintenance and safety procedures” tied to its air operations in the region, says the statement.

 

Aside from that overall review, Air Force commanders at the base will convene a review board to “conduct a thorough investigation, examining the facts and circumstances that led up to the accident to determine the cause,” of the crash, Air Force officials added.

 

An F-15C Eagle fighter jet attached to the 18th Air Wing’s 44th Fighter Squadron crashed off the southern coast of Okinawa, during a routine training operation early Monday morning. The pilot, whose identity has yet to be released, successfully ejected from the jet and was rescued by members of the Japanese Self-Defense Forces’ Naha Rescue Squadron, says the Air Force statement.

 

“The pilot has been transferred to the U.S. Naval Hospital at Camp Foster, where he is in serious condition,” service officials said.

 

While F-15 training operations have been suspended, airmen with the 18th Air Wing will continue flight operations for its fleet of KC-135 aerial refuelers, C-130 cargo aircraft and the air service’s HH-60 Pave Hawk Combat Search and Rescue helicopters, as well as a handful of F-22 Raptor fighter jets visiting the unit, air wing spokeswoman Capt. Katy Blessing said in an email to the Washington Times Monday.

 

Monday’s crash is the 12th such incident to involve American military aircraft this year.

 

In May, nine U.S. service members killed in a fiery plane crash near Savannah, Georgia. Air National Guard Majors José Román Rosado, Carlos Pérez Serra and 1st Lt. David Albandoz, the pilot, navigator and co-pilot of the Lockheed Martin-built WC-130 Hercules cargo aircraft that careened into Georgia Highway 21 near Savannah, were killed along with six other senior enlisted officers in the incident.

 

Senior Master Sgt. Jan Paravisini, Master Sgts. Jean Audriffred, Mario Braña, Víctor Colón, Eric Circuns and Senior Airman Roberto Espada all died instantly upon impact.

 

Federal lawmakers in March pumped a total $130 million into the services’ operations, maintenance and training accounts — an investment that comes after a slew of training accidents that left numbers of U.S. service members dead — into the Omnibus spending bill.

 

But the lack of those federal dollars over the last several years, as a result of massive, across-the-board military spending cuts under the Obama-era Budget Control Act, has contributed to the recent spate of deadly incidents, says the Pentagon.

 

https:// www.washingtontimes.com/news/2018/jun/11/air-force-grounds-all-f-15-fighters-pacific-after-/

Anonymous ID: 384be8 June 11, 2018, 10:12 p.m. No.1710093   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0113

Signing ceremony between Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un to begin shortly

 

https:// graphics.straitstimes.com/STI/STIMEDIA/Interactives/2018/06/trump-kim-summit/index.html

Anonymous ID: 384be8 June 11, 2018, 10:19 p.m. No.1710191   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Update on history of the table being used for the Signing Ceremony

 

This table was once used by Singapore's Chief Justices. It is part of a suite of bespoke furniture designed in 1939 by local craftsmen for the former Supreme Court building. It is now on loan to the US Embassy for the summit.

Anonymous ID: 384be8 June 11, 2018, 10:23 p.m. No.1710226   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0238 >>0249

Coordinated attacks in eastern, northern Afghanistan shatter tenuous cease-fire

 

A string of coordinated suicide bombings and attacks rocked government forces in eastern and northern Afghanistan, as well as a devastating strike in the country’s capital, shattering the hopes for a tenuous peace between Kabul and the Taliban on Monday.

 

The attacks in eastern Afghanistan’s Nangarhar and Ghazni provinces, as well as a strike against government position’s in the country’s northern province of Kunduz, killed 33 people and injured scores more, said provincial government officials.

 

The attacks came less than a week after American commanders in country agreed to abide by an unprecedented week-long cease fire with the Taliban, beginning Tuesday, called for by Afghan President Ashraf Ghani last Thursday.

 

The deadliest of Monday’s series of attacks took place in Kunduz, where Taliban gunmen struck a security outpost in the province’s Qala-e Zal district, killing 15. The attack took place as Afghan troops were settling in for their predawn Ramadan meal, Kunduz provincial council member Aminullah Ayaddin told Radio Free Europe. A roadside bomb in eastern Afghanistan’s Ghazni province struck a minibus, ending with six dead, RFE reported.

 

Afghan forces and their American counterparts agreed to halt operations against the Taliban until June 14, the Muslim holiday of Eid-al-Fitr, which marks the end of Ramadan. A Taliban spokesman said the group was not responsible for the Kunduz strike, The New York Times reported Monday.

 

The Kunduz attack has called into question Mr. Ghani’s latest gambit to bring the Taliban to the negotiation table, which officials in Kabul, the Pentagon and NATO headquarters in Brussels had hoped would mark a turning point in the 17-year war. The slew of attacks Monday is also raising concerns over whether the Afghan insurgency is cohesive enough to make peace talks a reality.

 

In Washington, Defense Secretary James N. Mattis said Monday’s attacks were the actions of an insurgency “who cannot win at the ballot box, so they turn to bombs.”

 

“The [Afghan] government is offering an open hand right now” to the Taliban, the Pentagon chief told reporters Monday. “This is how they have responded.”

 

While American forces have thus far refrained from taking action against the Taliban, U.S. troops are pressing operations against Islamic State’s Afghan faction, known as Khorasan Group in Iraq and Syria and remaining al Qaeda elements.

 

Outside of Kunduz, militants also reportedly launched a mass attack against government forces in Jalalabad City, the provincial capital of Nangarhar province. Provincial officials could not confirm casualty counts from the attack, while provincial leaders have laid the blame for the attack on Islamic State, Nangarhar Police Chief Ghulam Sanai Stanikzai told the Times.

 

U.S. and Afghan forces are in the midst of a massive offensive — dubbed Operation Hamza — against Islamic State in Nangarhar, a known Islamic State redoubt in the country. Gen. John Nicholson, the head of all American forces in Afghanistan, said his forces planned to ramp up operations against the Islamic State in the country during the anticipated lull in fighting against the Taliban.

 

In response, the Islamic State claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing in Kabul, targeting the Ministry of Rural Rehabilitation and Development. Roughly 12 people were killed and more than 30 were wounded in the attack, which took place as ministry employees were leaving work early for Ramadan, Kabul police spokesman Hashmat Stanikzai told local media outlets Monday.

 

https:// www.washingtontimes.com/news/2018/jun/11/coordinated-attacks-afghanistan-shatter-cease-fire/

Anonymous ID: 384be8 June 11, 2018, 10:30 p.m. No.1710296   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0363

Sen. Bill Cassidy stands with Trump's trade stance

 

Louisiana Sen. Bill Cassidy stood with President Trump’s hard-line trade policies after Sunday’s conclusion of the G-7 summit.

 

While Mr. Cassidy did not necessarily support placing tariffs on certain allies, he did agree with the president that the U.S. is at a disadvantage.

 

The Republican senator explained that the president was attempting to change policies rooted in the fallout of World War II. These trade agreements set up relationships that minimized U.S. exports on behalf of imports from allies — which was aimed to contain the USSR, which “doesn’t exist anymore.”

 

Mr. Cassidy did not agree with the president’s rhetoric following the summit, but agreed with an old saying “nothing is accomplished by a reasonable man.”

 

“I don’t know if we’re going to be able to readjust long-standing agreements without a certain amount of tension,” he said.

 

Mr. Cassidy denied that the president is bringing the U.S. closer to Russia than our European allies. The senator pointed out that U.S. troops were fighting Russia, but cooperating with Germany.

 

“That is a seeming that is not true,” Mr. Cassidy said on CNN Monday morning, “Seeming is not reality.

 

https:// www.washingtontimes.com/news/2018/jun/11/bill-cassidy-stands-with-donald-trumps-trade-stanc/

Anonymous ID: 384be8 June 11, 2018, 10:33 p.m. No.1710327   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0366

>>1710290

All of these places have been Clown Playground for years, none of these problems would have existed without them, makes one wonder how much better off we all would have been today.