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ترك برس - النشرة 17-08-2019

Posted: 16 Aug 2019 10:15 PM PDT

كشفت تركيا عن حقيقة الأنباء التي انتشرت مؤخراً حول فسخ المجلس العسكري في السودان، الاتفاقية الموقعة بين أنقرة والخرطوم حول جزيرة "سواكن" المطلة على البحر الأحمر.

رصدت صحيفة "العربي الجديد"، في تقرير لها، أبرز العوامل التي تساهم في زيادة إقبال الأجانب، وخاصة العرب، على شراء العقارات في تركيا، خلال الأعوام الأخيرة.

أثارت المعارك العنيفة التي تشهدها إدلب في الآونة الأخيرة، وتقدم النظام السوري في بعض البلدات بدعم من روسيا وإيران، تساؤلات حول مصير نقاط المراقبة التركية في هذه المنطقة، وخيارات أنقرة للتعامل مع التطورات.

استقطبت منطقتي "أماسرا" و"صفران بولو" شمالي تركيا 350 ألف سائح محلي وأجنبي خلال عطلة عيد الأضحى.

محمد صويصال – صحيفة حريت – ترجمة وتحرير ترك برس

اتفقت الولايات المتحدة مع تركيا حول مقترح إنشاء "المنطقة الآمنة". قبلت واشنطن الاتفاق بعدما رأت عزم أنقرة على دخول شرق الفرات وتطهيره، غير أنها تصر على عمق المنطقة الذي تريده.

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http://nakhodka.info/

Posted: 16 Aug 2019 06:48 PM PDT

    http://nakhodka.info/

play subway surfers online

Posted: 16 Aug 2019 06:02 PM PDT

Epstein Bodyguard Cuts Interview Short, Tells Reporter to 'Be Careful'

Posted: 16 Aug 2019 04:15 PM PDT

Epstein Bodyguard Cuts Interview Short When Asked About Teenage Girls, Suicide, Tells Reporter to 'Be Careful'

Previously claimed Epstein received tip-offs ahead of local police visits.

Adan Salazar | Infowars.com

History Is Made! Two Google Engineers Join Forces To Expose Tech Tyranny

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Ben Warren | Infowars.com

Here's Why Trump Wants Greenland

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Mercedes Ad Featuring Muslim Drag Queen Pushes LGBTQ Agenda

Kelen McBreen | Infowars.com

Girl Sues 500-Year-Old Boys' Choir For 'Gender Bias,' Loses

Dan Lyman | Newswars.com

Was 'The Hunt' Cancelled Because The Heroes Are Pro-Trump?

Kit Daniels | Infowars.com

Bus Driver Suspended For Refusing to Operate Pro-LGBT Vehicle

Dan Lyman | Newswars.com

WTF? 'Supervillain' Elon Musk Wants To 'Nuke Mars'

Kelen McBreen | Infowars.com

Did Epstein Base His Life on TV Series 'Fantasy Island?'

Kit Daniels | Infowars.com

Sales of Self-Defense Sprays 'Explode' Amid Sweden Rape Crisis

Dan Lyman | Europewars.com

A death-defying stunt for peace

Posted: 16 Aug 2019 03:16 PM PDT

TicToc Tonight
Bloomberg

TGIF, TicToc readers! Start the weekend in high spirits with these 10 feel-good stories from the past week.

1. One year later, NYU's free-tuition initiative is paying off.
The med school says more diverse applicants are applying and students have less financial stress since the debut of its full-tuition scholarships.

2. An Italian book store is trading trash for knowledge.
It gives kids free books in exchange for plastic bottles and aluminum cans in a bid to raise environmental awareness and foster a love of reading.

3. An urban climber made a death-defying stunt for peace.
Known as the "French Spider-Man," Alain Robert scaled a Hong Kong skyscraper in an "urgent appeal for peace."

4. A Japanese beauty bar is elevating self-care.
The researchers who develop skincare formulas are analyzing customers' individual faces to recommend hyper-personalized products

5. Flying "kites" are generating clean electricity in the ocean.  
In a huge step forward for offshore wind, turbines at sea generated power for the first time and could provide millions with renewable energy.

6. Texas took action to tackle hate.
In response to the El Paso shooting that targeted Hispanics, Gov. Greg Abbott formed a domestic terrorism task force to combat extremism.

7. Secret da Vinci drawings were discovered under a painting.
A series of sketches by the Renaissance man himself were revealed beneath "The Virgin of the Rocks" for the first time in more than 500 years.

8. More millennials are investing with a conscience
A peek at the portfolios of the U.S.'s largest generation shows they're buying into environmentally friendly, socially responsible companies.

9. NASA satellite data is making bridges safer.
Scientists developed a technique for analyzing imagery that reveals structural changes in infrastructure too subtle for the human eye. 

10. An English cathedral installed a giant spiral slide.
This 50-foot, Sistine Chapel-inspired ride at Norwich Cathedral is meant to give visitors an up-close look at its medieval architecture and art. 

Have a great weekend! Watch your inbox for more good news every week. And send us your positive stories to amach6@bloomberg.net.

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https://yogiakalacademy.com/

Posted: 16 Aug 2019 02:16 PM PDT

Canada's vacant home rate is 5 times the U.S., and rising

Posted: 16 Aug 2019 02:09 PM PDT

The recovery won’t die naturally. It will be killed.

Posted: 16 Aug 2019 01:56 PM PDT

Bloomberg Opinion Today
Bloomberg

Today's Agenda

Choose Your Recession Adventure

The term "business cycle" makes it sound as if the economy is a big washing machine built to endlessly follow a series of steps: expansion, recession, recovery, rinse, spin. In fact, it's unlikely developed economies are doomed to recession: Some outside force usually must slow them down.

This is relevant today because people are suddenly worried about a U.S. recession, thanks to the bond market doing that freaky thing where long-term interest rates flip lower than short-term rates. This "inversion" of the "yield curve" has been a solid recession indicator for decades. At the same time, economic numbers still seem fine, making one wonder how this expected downturn might happen.

The obvious answer is President Donald Trump's trade war with China (and sometimes Europe, Canada and Mexico). But Noah Smith writes the cause may be more complex than that: The trade war is accelerating a process that's been ongoing for a while now, in which the global-trade paradigm of the past few decades — China makes, the world takes — is collapsing and turning into something new.

This shift will be neither quick nor painless. It could also make trouble for the investors rushing into Treasury debt, warns Conor Sen. Either we come out of this with globalization on the rebound, lifting economic growth and interest rates, or markets will be less correlated after the next recession ends, making Treasuries an iffier bet. Be safe out there.

Central Bankers Pushing on a String

Whatever the cause of the downturn, the Fed has already started cutting its own target interest rates to soften the blow. Other central bankers around the world are doing the same. And with rates so low to begin with, we're already talking about doing wild stuff like having the ECB buy stocks. Such promises didn't help markets much yesterday, notes Robert Burgess, suggesting investors fear central bankers are "pushing on a string" – meaning cutting rates has no impact.

One worrisome sign of this is in the U.S. mortgage market, notes Justin Fox. Rates are drilling back toward the Earth's core, but refinancing hasn't really picked up much. That's mainly because rates have been pretty low for much of the past decade. There aren't many mortgages left that need much refinancing.

Tellingly, stocks rallied today partly on hopes Germany might actually spend money on its economy. When monetary policy fails, fiscal policy must come to the rescue.

Further Interest-Rate Reading: The inverted British yield curve is a much poorer signal than the American one. – Marcus Ashworth 

Netanyahu Bows to Trump

The on-again, off-again visit of U.S. Representatives Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib to Israel is now officially off again (pending further notice). Israel had suggested it would let Tlaib visit her grandmother in the West Bank, but she objected to the terms and said she wouldn't go. Zev Chafets points out Benjamin Netanyahu had been prepared to let both Omar and Tlaib into the country, which probably would have been better for everybody involved. But Trump put his foot down, and Netanyahu's re-election campaign depends on showing undying fealty to Trump, so here we are.

Telltale Charts

India is supposed to be the promised land for coal for the next decade, but there are many signs the fuel's economics are collapsing even there, writes David Fickling.

Further Reading

Gibraltar's release of a tanker carrying Iranian crude shows Europe isn't toeing America's line. – Julian Lee 

Russia and China are rushing to launch floating nuclear power plants. What could possibly go etc.? – Adam Minter 

Scandal has stalled the Defense Department's JEDI cloud-computing project; we need to settle this quickly. – James Stavridis 

We may have gone a little too far with the touch screens in our cars. – Nathaniel Bullard

ICYMI

Hedge funds loaded up on General Electric Co. stock just before it crumbled. 

(Brooke Sutherland breaks down the GE debacle in her weekly newsletter; sign up here.)

How the world's richest family invests.

Greenland isn't interested in selling to Trump.

Kickers

Human-size penguin fossil found in New Zealand. (h/t Zoe DeStories)

Gay penguins adopt an egg. (h/t Ellen Kominers)

California farmers turn to solar farming.

The impact of daily meditation.

Note: Please send solar panels and complaints to Mark Gongloff at mgongloff1@bloomberg.net.

New to Bloomberg Opinion Today? Sign up here and follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

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The ‘Trump recession’

Posted: 16 Aug 2019 01:48 PM PDT

Evening Briefing
Bloomberg

Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan channeled President Franklin D. Roosevelt when it came to assessing predictions that the recovery is ending and a downturn beginning. Moynihan cautioned that stirring up fear of what Democrats are already calling the Trump recession may make it actually come to pass. Moynihan's words of warning came two days after he and other bank chiefs discussed the economy, and the market's sharp drop, in a teleconference with President Donald Trump. —David E. Rovella

Here are today's top stories

Republicans and independents are losing faith in the economy at the steepest rates of Trump's presidency, a consumer sentiment index shows.

U.S. stocks rose for a second day as investors speculated that Europe would roll out a stimulus package if the region's growth continued to falter.

For the first time, the owner of the New York Stock Exchange will allow investors to buy derivatives that pay out in Bitcoin.

China's biggest energy firm is backing away from direct purchases of Venezuelan crude as Trump tightens sanctions against that country.

Buried under six-figure student debt? Think you'll eventually pay it off? Well, Bloomberg Businessweek reports that it's just as likely you'll die before that happens.

Farmers are increasingly planting crops you may not like but are really good at fighting global warming. One of the biggest fuels of global warming, meanwhile, is industrial meat production, and plant-based substitutes are popping up everywhere. Don't believe us? Check the Bloomberg Impossible Burger Stalker, and you'll see.

What's Luke Kawa thinking about? The Bloomberg cross-asset reporter is thinking about how low Treasury yields have to go in order to protect investors once the next bear market arrives.

What you'll need to know tomorrow

What you'll want to read tonight in Hyperdrive

Virgin Unveils Fancy Space Base, But No Flights

Champagne, caviar and seared tuna will be on the menu for Virgin Galactic astronauts-in-training when they arrive at the company's new home in the desert scrublands of southern New Mexico. A master of the espresso arts will dose out shots from a barista island, accompanied by multiple forms of dairy and dairy alternatives, including oat milk. As for when the actual flights will begin, no one's saying yet.

Like Bloomberg's Evening Briefing? Subscribe to Bloomberg.com. You'll get our unmatched global news coverage and two premium daily newsletters, The Bloomberg Open and The Bloomberg Close, and much, much more. See our limited-time introductory offer.

The global economy is at an inflection point. Sign up for the Turning Points newsletter and receive weekly insights—and solutions—on climate, tech and trade.

Download the Bloomberg app: It's available for iOS and Android.

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Ryan Reynolds shares the 'greatest present' wife Blake Lively has ever given him

Posted: 16 Aug 2019 01:33 PM PDT

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8/16/19
 
"If there's ever a fire, I'm grabbing this first," Ryan Reynolds said of the gift he received from wife Blake Lively. "I'll come back for Blake."
 
SO THOUGHTFUL
Ryan Reynolds Shares the 'Greatest Present' Wife Blake Lively Has Ever Given Him
 
"If there's ever a fire, I'm grabbing this first," Ryan Reynolds said of the gift he received from wife Blake Lively. "I'll come back for Blake."
 
 
<p>From Hollywood to New York and everywhere in between, see what your favorite stars are up to</p>
 
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Miranda Lambert & Brendan McLoughlin Grab Dinner in N.Y.C., Plus Chrissy & John, Kylie Jenner & More
 
From Hollywood to New York and everywhere in between, see what your favorite stars are up to
 
 
 
Kristen Wiig and longtime boyfriend Avi Rothman are engaged, PEOPLE confirmed
 
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The baby boy's mother was found shopping at ROSS and was issued a $250 ticket
 
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EL MOUDJAHID : Lettre d'information du 17/08/2019

Posted: 16 Aug 2019 12:58 PM PDT

Israel Announces New Settlement Units (Makovsky | PolicyWatch 3167)

Posted: 16 Aug 2019 10:06 AM PDT

ISRAEL ANNOUNCES NEW UNITS FOR SETTLERS AND PALESTINIANS
by David Makovsky

PolicyWatch 3167
August 16, 2019

Whether or not Palestinian units are actually built in Area C, the announcement will be a net loss if Israeli construction outside the security barrier becomes the new norm post-election.

READ THIS ITEM ON OUR WEBSITE


On August 5-6, an Israeli interministerial committee approved two batches of settlement units for the West Bank, some for Israeli settlers and some for Palestinians. Both announcements seem motivated by sundry factors, and their consequences could prove wide ranging. The new Israeli units may be tied to the upcoming do-over elections, but their placement would represent a troubling shift if repeated after the vote. As for the Palestinians, the decision marks the first time in three years they have been granted any units in Area C, the portion of the West Bank where Israel assumed full control after the Oslo Accords. The fact that both announcements were made within a few days of each other is not coincidental.

TROUBLING NEW TREND?

A large majority of Israeli settlers live in units located inside the West Bank security barrier and close to Israeli urban areas. This zone constitutes only 8% of the entire West Bank, either along or adjacent to the 1967 ceasefire lines, and most previous rounds of settlement approvals were located there. This time, however, two-thirds of the units approved or in the penultimate stage of approval—1,609 out of 2,343—are outside the barrier. (For a map and chart illustrating this data, see the web version of this PolicyWatch.)

Restricting new settlements to areas inside the barrier can help maintain the viability of a two-state solution, since these settlements would likely be annexed into Israel as part of a process of territorial exchanges during final-status negotiations. In that sense, at least, such settlements can be viewed as less provocative. Yet adding new units outside the barrier is highly provocative and makes future separation between Israelis and Palestinians more difficult. The question is whether this move is the start of a new trend or a temporary political expedient.

THE PROCESS OF SETTLEMENT APPROVAL

In recent years, Israel has restructured the approval process to reduce the prospects of sudden announcements that may prove politically embarrassing, as happened in 2010 when new East Jerusalem housing units were approved during a visit by Vice President Joe Biden. Today, new unit requests must go through six stages before authorities give final approval. The August 5-6 meetings focused on the last two stages: units approved for immediate construction, and units whose approval is nearly final pending a sixty-day period for legal challenges that are rarely sustained, meaning they can safely be grouped with the first category.

Last week’s tally of approved units was one of the largest in years, though it remains unclear how much the new units will expand the actual footprint of Israel’s presence in the West Bank. In the past, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s governments have established informal understandings with Washington whereby settlement expansion is kept within areas adjacent to built-up units rather than extending to entirely new areas; it is uncertain if these agreements still hold true.

CHANGING DEMOGRAPHIC AND GEOGRAPHIC RATIOS?

Currently, an estimated 448,000 Israeli settlers live in the West Bank—344,000 inside the security barrier and 104,000 outside. Since Israel has nominally annexed East Jerusalem, it does not consider the 320,000 Israelis living there to be settlers, though other countries do. Either way, the percentage of settlers living inside the barrier is high: 86% with East Jerusalem included, 77% without.

In the past, most new settlement units roughly reflected this ratio, but last week’s approvals flipped it entirely—68.7% of the new units are located outside the barrier, and 31.3% inside. Building 1,609 units outside the barrier will mean adding an estimated 6,800 new Israeli settlers there, probably more given the typically larger size of settler families. (For more in-depth data on West Bank demography and geography, including detailed maps, see The Washington Institute’s “Settlements and Solutions” project.)

NETANYAHU’S POLITICAL CALCULUS

Despite his electoral success running at the head of right-wing coalitions, Netanyahu is routinely routed at the ballot box when attempting to woo settler voters who live outside the barrier. Those inside the barrier are more supportive, believing they will be annexed rather than displaced under any two-state arrangement with the Palestinians. In contrast, settlers outside the barrier do not see any way for their lands to be preserved under the two-state approach; they are far more likely to be given away if land swaps occur. Therefore, they are highly suspicious of Netanyahu’s ideological commitment to their welfare, and they have not been not easily swayed by his apparent retreat from the two-state approach in recent years.

Parties to his right have taken advantage of this fact, defeating him by a three-to-one margin among voters outside the barrier. This trend held true even during the April election campaign, when Netanyahu publicly mentioned the possibility of Israel unilaterally annexing portions of the West Bank. By having the government approve more units outside the barrier ahead of next month’s revote, Netanyahu may be trying to show the settlers that he is ideologically reliable. Perhaps unsurprisingly, one of the settlements that garnered the most new units (382) was Beit El. Located outside the barrier, Beit El is an ideological flagship settlement for the movement; it is also beloved by U.S. ambassador David Friedman, former head of the group American Friends of Beit El.

NEW PALESTINIAN UNITS IN AREA C

In addition to Israeli settlements, the government approved 715 new units for Palestinians in Area C, a zone that constitutes 60% of the West Bank and remains very politically sensitive. The Palestinian Authority holds various levels of control in Area A (Palestinian urban zones) and Area B (the environs of these urban zones), which total 40% of the West Bank. Israel has full security control of Area C, but the two parties have yet to agree on the status of this zone beyond that fact, making it a central arena for political combat.

The Palestinians often point to the zone’s economic value—in 2016, for example, a World Bank study concluded that the PA’s lack of economic access to Area C reduced its GDP by 35%. In Israel, however, a right-wing party led by former justice minister Ayelet Shaked and former education minister Naftali Bennett has dedicated itself to ensuring that Israel does not yield an inch of Area C. Among other measures, they engineered procedures in which no land in that area can be designated for the Palestinians without approval from the security cabinet. Both men are very explicit in calling for Israel to annex all of Area C.

This political pressure explains why Israel approved so few Palestinian units in Area C prior to last week. From 2000 to 2016, it reportedly green-lit only 226 such units altogether, and none after 2016. So why 715 now?

For one thing, last week’s announcement came just as White House envoy Jared Kushner was traveling throughout the Middle East. Netanyahu may have believed that the Area C approvals would help Kushner as he toured Arab capitals and came under attack for the lack of details regarding the administration’s long-delayed peace plan. Yet the announcement of new Palestinian units received no attention in the Arab world, where governments instead focused on the new Israeli units outside the barrier. Other potential explanations include Israel’s embarrassment over recent home demolitions in areas under PA control, and its desire to blunt international objections to the large number of new Israeli units.

The exact location of these Palestinian units is unclear, and some have speculated they may never be built. In 1997, during Netanyahu’s first term as premier, he made a similar dual announcement, approving Israeli units in the East Jerusalem district of Har Homa at the same time as new Palestinian units; the latter were never built. Today, some housing in Palestinian villages at the edge of Area B has spilled over into Area C, so they are a possible venue for the 715 new units.

CONCLUSION

Despite growing skepticism, President Trump’s advisors insist they will still present their peace plan in the near future, even if not until after Israel’s September 17 elections. Yet if building two-thirds of new Israeli settlement units outside the security barrier is the new norm rather than just a pre-election aberration, it will sharply erode any remaining confidence in U.S. peace efforts. Since skepticism also abounds regarding the new Palestinian units in Area C, the Trump administration may be tempted to insist that these units will be built. In both cases, Washington should be guided by an understanding of where demography meets geography in the West Bank, and curtail excessive demands on both sides accordingly.

David Makovsky is the Ziegler Distinguished Fellow and director of the Project on Arab-Israel Relations at The Washington Institute, and coauthor with Dennis Ross of the soon-to-be-published book Be Strong and of Good Courage: How Israel’s Most Important Leaders Shaped Its Destiny (PublicAffairs/Hachette).



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Most Social: Dale Earnhardt Jr. hospitalized after his private plane crashes at Tennessee airport

Posted: 16 Aug 2019 10:01 AM PDT

Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s private plane crashed on Thursday at a Tennessee airport, and the former NASCAR driver was transported to an area hospital. ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ 
usatoday.com

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Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s private plane crashed on Thursday at a Tennessee airport, and the former NASCAR driver was transported to an area hospital.
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More Google Engineers Joining The Info War

Posted: 16 Aug 2019 09:42 AM PDT

Tune into the Live Show

Hey, it's me, Alex Jones! I'm Back!

More Google engineers are coming forward to Infowars.com to deliver bombshell revelations you can only find here! Watch today's LIVE BROADCAST to hear the darkest secrets the tech giant does not want you to hear! Also, joining today’s LIVE BROADCAST is my lawyer Norm Pattis and Vatican insider Leo Zagami! Do not miss this!

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Tune into infowars.com/show Monday-Friday from 11AM-3PM Central and Sunday 4-6 PM Central to watch the most banned broadcast in the world with breaking news and commentary exclusively from me and other great Infowars hosts and guests!

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Posted: 16 Aug 2019 08:50 AM PDT

News Alert: President Trump to meet today with senior advisers to begin planning for step-by-step withdrawal from Afghanistan

Posted: 16 Aug 2019 08:01 AM PDT

The meeting follows months of diplomatic outreach by Trump's special envoy, former U.S. ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad, and military plans to begin a phased withdrawal of U.S. forces and end the longest U.S. war. The Trump administration would withdraw thousands of troops from Afghanistan in exchange for concessions from the Taliban, including a renunciation of al-Qaeda, as part of an initial deal to end the nearly 18-year-old war.
 
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
News Alert Aug 16, 10:59 AM
 
 
President Trump to meet today with senior advisers to begin planning for step-by-step withdrawal from Afghanistan

The meeting follows months of diplomatic outreach by Trump's special envoy, former U.S. ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad, and military plans to begin a phased withdrawal of U.S. forces and end the longest U.S. war.

The Trump administration would withdraw thousands of troops from Afghanistan in exchange for concessions from the Taliban, including a renunciation of al-Qaeda, as part of an initial deal to end the nearly 18-year-old war.

Read more »
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إسرائيل تسمح لرشيدة طليب بزيارة أسرتها في الضفة الغربية والنائبة ترفض

Posted: 16 Aug 2019 07:57 AM PDT

وزارة الداخلية: إسرائيل ستسمح للنائبة الأمريكية طليب بزيارة أسرتها في الضفة الغربية...
نسخة على الإنترنت
نسختك الخاصة من أخبار يورونيوز – 08/16/19
نشرتك اليومية من الأخبار المختلفة المتنوعة
إسرائيل تسمح لرشيدة طليب بزيارة أسرتها في الضفة الغربية والنائبة ترفض
وزارة الداخلية: إسرائيل ستسمح للنائبة الأمريكية طليب بزيارة أسرتها في الضفة الغربية...   إقرأ أكثر، للمزيد
 
 
 
 
 
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World Alert: A bid to allow married priests in the Amazon ignites debate about celibacy

Posted: 16 Aug 2019 07:15 AM PDT

In the sprawling Amazon region, the Catholic Church is severely short on priests. One new proposal would allow older, married men in the region to be ordained. But a vocal band of conservatives says permitting married priests in the Amazon could alter — and undermine — the priesthood globally, weakening the church requirement of celibacy.
 
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
World Alert Aug 16, 10:15 AM
 
 
A bid to allow married priests in the Amazon ignites debate about celibacy

In the sprawling Amazon region, the Catholic Church is severely short on priests. One new proposal would allow older, married men in the region to be ordained. But a vocal band of conservatives says permitting married priests in the Amazon could alter — and undermine — the priesthood globally, weakening the church requirement of celibacy.

Read more »
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News Alert: Rep. Tlaib says she will not go to Israel after the country initially rejected her request for a visit, then reversed course

Posted: 16 Aug 2019 06:34 AM PDT

Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) said in a statement she will not visit Israel "under these oppressive conditions," even though her humanitarian request to visit her grandmother, who lives in the occupied West Bank, had been approved. Tlaib's decision comes a day after Israel had barred her and another congresswoman from entering the country.
 
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
News Alert Aug 16, 9:33 AM
 
 
Rep. Tlaib says she will not go to Israel after the country initially rejected her request for a visit, then reversed course

Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) said in a statement she will not visit Israel "under these oppressive conditions," even though her humanitarian request to visit her grandmother, who lives in the occupied West Bank, had been approved. Tlaib's decision comes a day after Israel had barred her and another congresswoman from entering the country.

Read more »
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The Daily Report

Posted: 16 Aug 2019 06:29 AM PDT

Friday, August 16, 2019

Must-reads from across Asia - directly to your inbox
Xi given a Trump card to play against Hong Kong
Myanmar's military takes a strike to the heart
Gibraltar defies US, releasing Iranian oil tanker
North Korea slams Moon's peace offerings
No need for PLA, we can handle crisis: HK police
The developing world's water crisis has arrived
China plans another round of 'belt-tightening'
With Epstein dead, Saudi links become a black hole
Thunder of protest echoes across Seoul – but voices mixed
Excessive use of tear gas poses public health risk
Hong Kong tycoon calls for an end to violence
Shannon Lee to Quentin Tarantino: 'Shut up'
Indian truck makers discount as sales dip
Shanghai police arrest 16 in driving offence scam
Helmets, goggles and gas masks selling well
What's up with Kim Jong Un's Trump timing?
JD Logistics posts break-even result in 2Q 2019
Australia dilutes Pacific leaders' climate warning
Hero pilot lands stricken Airbus in corn field
First Chinese-made trains hit Boston's tracks
Clooney in-law hit with new drunk-driving charge
European films are boffo in China: report
China's Liu Yang and Chen Dong to visit Namibia
'Shared dream' honored by Flying Tiger families
Israeli attacks in Iraq driving Trump's anti-Iran campaign
Israeli attacks in Iraq driving Trump's anti-Iran campaignWhen it comes to 'maximum pressure,' the international reaction is 'include me out' – except in Israel, and therein lies the danger for the US government and the American people
South Korea should not bow to Trump's demands
South Korea should not bow to Trump's demandsThe US president's insistence that Seoul pay $5 billion annually to keep American troops in the country is unreasonable, and paying it would be politically untenable
Why quantum physics needs Asian philosophy
Why quantum physics needs Asian philosophyDespite a century of trying, physicists have yet to reconcile the standard atomic model with Einstein's Relativity Theory
Receding sovereignty in Bangladesh
Receding sovereignty in BangladeshSheikh Hasina has never denied her gratitude to India, but in return her country's giant neighbor has usurped Bangladeshi sovereignty
Cambodia: Don't cry for me
Cambodia: Don't cry for meWhile Australia and other countries chattered with faux concern over the plight of Cambodians, Hun Sen sold off part of its sovereignty to China
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Friday Morning Briefing: Inside the Hong Kong protesters' anarchic campaign against China

Posted: 16 Aug 2019 05:44 AM PDT

Hong Kong

Special Reports: Chanting slogans like 'Hong Kong is not China,' young protesters in the former British colony are directly challenging Beijing. Their leaderless structure is frustrating efforts by the authorities to stymie them - but it could also undermine their movement.

To the outside world, China’s ruling Communist Party - faced with an expanding trade war crimping an already slowing economy and spiraling protests in Hong Kong - is confronting some of its strongest political and economic headwinds in decades.

World

Not for sale: Danish politicians poured scorn on the notion of selling Greenland to the United States following reports that President Donald Trump had privately discussed the idea of buying the world’s biggest island with his advisers.

An Iranian tanker whose detention exacerbated frictions between Tehran and the West could sail free from British territory Gibraltar, though a U.S. request to halt its passage could drag the saga back into court. Gibraltar lifted the detention order on Thursday after it said Tehran had given written assurances that the ship would not discharge its oil in Syria. But the United States is still seeking to detain the vessel on grounds it believes it was helping Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

'Nobody is not afraid': More than three decades after he flew his helicopter above the radioactive volcano that was Chernobyl’s nuclear reactor number four, the site of the world’s worst nuclear accident, Mykola Volkozub recalls how he feared for his life.

Shared Afghanistan interests create opening for U.S.-Iran back channel. Western intermediaries are trying to persuade arch foes Iran and the United States to cooperate on bolstering security in Afghanistan as Donald Trump seeks to extract America from its longest war, according to three source familiar with the efforts.

U.S.

Trump defended his handling of the U.S. economy and trade war with China as recession fears have suddenly cast doubt on his central claim for re-election - that he has made the economy great again. Trump spoke at a packed campaign rally in Manchester, New Hampshire, a state that was pivotal to his winning the Republican presidential nominating race in 2016 and could prove important to his re-election chances in 2020.

Democratic presidential candidate Beto O’Rourke unveiled a plan to classify white supremacist violence as an organized crime problem and to create federal domestic terrorism offices, in a bid to combat hate crimes and gun violence in the United States.

Israel decided to allow U.S. congresswoman Rashida Tlaib - a critic of Israeli policy toward the Palestinians - to visit family in the occupied West Bank on humanitarian grounds after barring her from making an official visit to Israel. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Thursday he would not allow Tlaib and congresswoman Ilhan Omar, both Democrats, to make a planned trip to Israel.

‘This was surf city’: Strict environmental rules and steep labor costs have sent scores of Southern California surfboard manufacturers to China. Southern California spawned a billion-dollar international surfboard business, but Trump’s growing trade war with China still has local companies searching for factories overseas.

Business

Exclusive: China-owned oil tanker changes name in apparent effort to evade U.S. sanctions

While in the Indian Ocean heading toward the Strait of Malacca, the very large crude carrier Pacific Bravo went dark on June 5, shutting off the transponder that signals its position and direction to other ships, ship-tracking data showed.

5 min read

Exclusive: China set to deepen Argentine trade ties with bid for grains 'superhighway'

Chinese state-owned construction giant CCCC is preparing a bid to dredge Argentina’s Parana River, the country’s main cargo superhighway that takes soy and corn from the Pampas farm belt to the shipping lanes of the south Atlantic and the world.

5 min read

Alibaba and the $15 billion question: Amid Hong Kong's protests, when to list?

Hong Kong’s political unrest is posing a dilemma for Alibaba on the timing of its planned $15 billion listing in the city, with sources saying China’s biggest e-commerce company is now considering several timetables.

6 Min Read

Cathay Pacific Airways CEO Rupert Hogg resigns amid mounting Chinese scrutiny

Hong Kong flag carrier Cathay Pacific Airways said CEO Rupert Hogg had resigned and named Augustus Tang as the new chief, following a week of scrutiny by the Chinese aviation regulator that has hurt its reputation in the mainland.

2 min read

Top Stories on Reuters TV

'Hollywood ripper' found guilty of two murders

Beto reboots campaign as crusade against Trump

من ديوان

Posted: 16 Aug 2019 05:23 AM PDT

 
مركز الأبحاث العالمي
 
 
ديوان - مركز كارنيغي للشرق الأوسط - مؤسسة كارنيغي للسلام الدولي
Aug 16, 2019
 
إرث السبسي
08 15 2019 | جايك والاس
يتحدّث سفير أميركي سابق لدى تونس عمّا يعنيه الرئيس الراحل لبلاده.
اضغط هنا لمتابعة القراءة
المزيد
 
08 08 2019 | مايكل يونغ
ما تأثير الاتصالات التي جرت مؤخراً بين الإمارات العربية المتحدة وإيران؟
08 08 2019 | ه هيليير
تجربةٌ صعبة
08 07 2019 | حارث حسن
أوتار عراقية حول المقدس
08 06 2019 | عمر بن درة, دالية غانم
أزمة في الأفق
08 05 2019 | ليديا أسود
التقشّف ليس الحل
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Democratic presidential hopeful O'Rourke back on campaign trail; Hickenlooper drops out

Posted: 16 Aug 2019 05:01 AM PDT

Reuters.com Newsletter

Democratic presidential hopeful O'Rourke back on campaign trail; Hickenlooper drops out

Democratic presidential candidate Beto O'Rourke said on Thursday he was resuming his campaign with a new sense of focus after a mass shooting in his Texas hometown, while rival John Hickenlooper ended his bid to take on President Donald Trump.

Democrat O'Rourke proposes domestic terrorism agencies to combat hate, gun massacres

Democratic presidential candidate Beto O'Rourke unveiled a plan on Friday to classify white supremacist violence as an organized crime problem and to create federal domestic terrorism offices, in a bid to combat hate crimes and gun violence in the United States.

'Hollywood Ripper' found guilty of murdering two women, including Ashton Kutcher's date

A jury found a man nicknamed the "Hollywood Ripper" guilty on Thursday of knifing to death two women, including actor Ashton Kutcher's date, and attempting to murder a third victim during a seven-year span.

'Creating Woodstock': how festival came together, and almost fell apart

Mick Richards was among the 450,000 people at Woodstock in 1969, but he did not think much about his "uneventful" 24 hours there until years later, when his teenage son started asking about the festival.

'Jimmy Kimmel Live' hit with $395,000 fine over emergency tones in skit

Simulated wireless alert tones used in a "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" skit making fun of a presidential alert test have cost Walt Disney Co's ABC $395,000 in civil fines with the U.S. Federal Communications Commission.

Students caught in visa sting at fake university may sue U.S., court rules

A federal appeals court said foreign-born students may sue the U.S. government over claims it wrongfully canceled their visas, following a sting where it set up a fake university to entrap corrupt visa brokers.

Lawyer Avenatti seeks to end 'vindictive' Nike prosecution he blames on Trump feud

Lawyer Michael Avenatti asked a federal judge to dismiss an indictment accusing him of trying to extort Nike Inc, saying he was targeted in a "vindictive and selective prosecution" because of his feud with U.S. President Donald Trump.

Thirteen U.S. states sue over new rule to limit legal immigration

A coalition of 13 U.S. states sued President Donald Trump's administration on Wednesday, seeking to block a new rule that would drastically reduce legal immigration by denying visas to poor migrants.

Trump blames mass shootings on mentally ill, calls for more mental institutions

President Donald Trump said on Thursday he supports meaningful background checks for gun buyers, but he said that those responsible for recent mass shootings were mentally ill and the United States should build more mental institutions.

Tennessee executes man convicted of killing teenage girl, her mother in 1986

A man convicted of raping a 15-year-old girl and stabbing her and her mother to death in their home with a teenage accomplice more than 30 years ago was executed in Tennessee on Thursday, officials said.

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It's a Danish territory, Michael. What could it cost, $10?

Posted: 16 Aug 2019 04:52 AM PDT

Insurance companies are paying cops to investigate their own customers, Trump's new immigration policy could make American children less healthy, and Trump reportedly wants to buy Greenland.

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Posted: 16 Aug 2019 03:56 AM PDT

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