Wednesday, Feb 20, 2019 | |
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We start today with a Times investigation of President Trump's efforts to end the inquiries surrounding him, a look at Americans who want to return home after joining ISIS, and a dispute over California's high-speed rail project. |
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By Chris Stanford |
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Mr. Trump's public campaign to discredit the investigations that have ensnared his presidency is well known. But an examination by The Times has revealed a sustained, secretive assault on federal law enforcement. |
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The efforts have exposed the president to accusations of obstruction of justice in the special counsel's inquiry. |
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The details: One of our findings is that Mr. Trump wanted to put an ally in charge of a federal inquiry in New York related to hush money payments by his former personal lawyer. Mr. Trump called that account "fake news." Here are four takeaways from our report. |
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How we know: Times reporters interviewed dozens of current and former government officials and others close to Mr. Trump, and reviewed confidential White House documents. |
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Hoda Muthana with her son in Syria. Ms. Muthana, from Alabama, joined the Islamic State in 2014. Ivor Prickett for The New York Times |
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At least 59 Americans traveled to Syria to join ISIS, according to the George Washington University Program on Extremism. Of the Americans captured, nearly all the men have been repatriated, but at least 13 women and their children have not. |
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Response: A spokesman for the State Department on Tuesday described the situation as "extremely complicated." An official with the George Washington program said there were "thousands of legitimate reasons to question the sincerity" of those asking to return. |
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Related: The British government has told the family of Shamima Begum, 19, who traveled to Syria four years ago to marry an ISIS militant, that it intends to revoke her citizenship, according to a family lawyer. |
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Gov. Gavin Newsom, who scaled back plans for the project last week, accused the administration of retaliating for California having joined a lawsuit challenging President Trump's emergency declaration on the southwestern border. |
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Tank Battalion 414 is the first battalion in the European Union made up of soldiers from two countries. Laetitia Vancon for The New York Times |
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It's an idea as old as the European Union itself, but the notion of a European army has taken on a new urgency because of the Trump administration's threat to reduce support if the Continent doesn't increase military spending. |
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Quote of note: "The life we have had for the last 70 years is possible because of the American security guarantees we have had, largely for free," said an official with the German Marshall Fund in Berlin. |
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Karl Lagerfeld, pictured in 1985, once said, "I would like to be a one-man multinational fashion phenomenon." Pierre Guillaud |
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The luxury fashion designer, who died on Tuesday, was one of the most recognizable faces in an industry he helped define. He was generally thought to be 85, although his birth year was a matter of dispute. |
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Mr. Lagerfeld, with his signature dark glasses and powdered white ponytail, was the longtime creative director at both Chanel and Fendi. He also had his own line. |
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Remembrances: Mr. Lagerfeld's peers, including Giorgio Armani and Donatella Versace, offered reflections. "Today, the world has lost an icon and a genius," Ms. Versace said. |
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John Olson/The LIFE Images Collection, via Getty Images |
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In February 1968, as U.S. and South Vietnamese forces fought desperately to counter a surprise onslaught that became known as the Tet offensive, John Olson took a picture of a gravely wounded infantryman surrounded by his brothers-in-arms. |
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Reconsidering libel: Justice Clarence Thomas has urged the Supreme Court to revisit its landmark ruling in New York Times v. Sullivan, which made it difficult for public officials to win libel suits. Justice Thomas said the 1964 decision had no basis in the text and history of the Constitution. |
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Gilles Sabrié for The New York Times |
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Snapshot: Above, the Forbidden City in Beijing on Tuesday. For the first time since 1925, when the former home of the emperors of the Ming and Qing dynasties became a museum, it opened to the public at night. |
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In memoriam: Don Newcombe, one of the first black pitchers in Major League Baseball, played for the Brooklyn Dodgers and won the first Cy Young Award. He died on Tuesday at 92. |
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Late-night comedy: With glasses, a wig and a Brooklyn accent, Jimmy Fallon said, "Hello, I'm Bernie Sanders, and I'm yelling for president of the United States." |
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What we're reading: This Atlas Obscura article. Michael Roston, a science editor, writes: "There are many great stories about the mating behaviors of animals confounding scientific expectations, and this tale of two nonagenarian tortoises who can no longer stand the sight of each other after a lifetime hit me in both the heart and the funny bone." |
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Jim Wilson/The New York Times |
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Watch: The final season of "Game of Thrones" is coming in April. We'll be rewatching the first seven seasons. Join us. |
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See: Look behind the scenes at a day of rehearsals and costume fittings for New York City Ballet's "Sleeping Beauty." |
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But an insider could always write a tell-all book. In 2015, the longtime secretary of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, Geir Lundestad, did just that, infuriating the committee. |
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Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan with President Trump at the White House in June. Shawn Thew/EPA, via Shutterstock |
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Among his revelations: The decision to honor Barack Obama just months into his presidency was intended to strengthen his campaign to rid the world of nuclear weapons. And Mr. Obama considered not going to Norway to accept the award, but realized that would only create more uproar. |
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The recipient will be announced in October. |
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That's it for this briefing. |
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Thank you
To our stalwarts, Eleanor Stanford and James K. Williamson, for the break from the news. Andrea Kannapell, the briefings editor, wrote today's Back Story. You can reach the team at briefing@nytimes.com. |
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